Risk Workspace for the operational risk manager
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Summary of Risk Workspace for the Operational Risk Manager
The Risk Workspace for operational risk managers enables organizations to manage operational risks effectively, which can arise from errors, breaches, or damages due to various factors. This workspace supports operational risk managers in defining risk frameworks, conducting assessments, and communicating risk postures to stakeholders.
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Key Features
- Operational Risk Framework: Establish a robust risk management framework that includes risk identification, measurement, mitigation, and reporting.
- Setup Libraries: Create risk statements and control objectives to ensure a common understanding of risks and their priorities.
- Periodic Risk Assessments: Conduct annual assessments and maintain an up-to-date risk register.
- Risk Event Monitoring: Record and analyze risk events to understand losses and identify areas for improvement.
- Key Risk Indicators: Monitor risk posture continuously by defining and tracking key risk and control indicators.
- Issue and Incident Management: Manage issues and incidents that may threaten operations, ensuring proper tracking and remediation.
- Reporting: Develop dashboards and reports to communicate risk assessments and operational risk posture to executives.
Key Outcomes
By utilizing the Risk Workspace, operational risk managers can effectively manage and mitigate risks, ensuring a clear understanding of their organization’s risk posture. This proactive approach leads to better decision-making, improved compliance, and enhanced organizational resilience against operational risks.
Operational risk managers manage operational risks such as losses due to errors, breaches, or damages that are caused by people, internal processes, systems, or external events. Operational risks range from the small, such as the risk of loss due to minor human errors, to the large, such as the risk of bankruptcy due to serious fraud.
Operational risk manager
- Define the operational risk framework
- Effectively manage the operational risks of an organization by defining a robust risk
management framework. This framework helps to identify risks and to define the control
framework to mitigate those risks. A risk management framework consists of the following
components:
- Risk identification
- Risk measurement or scoring
- Risk mitigation
- Risk reporting and monitoring
- Set up libraries
- Set up comprehensive libraries by doing the following:
- Creating risk statements: A risk statement is used to record a risk in a way that everyone can reach a common agreement on its severity or relative priority.
- Creating control objectives: A control objective defines the aim or purpose of risk-mitigating controls. These controls need continuous monitoring.
- Defining entity classes, entity types, and entities: For more information on entities, see Understanding entities.
- Defining the upstream and downstream entities.
- Conduct risk assessments on a periodic basis
- Perform the annual risk assessments according to your organization's policies. Also, ensure that the risk register is updated and accurate. Create risk assessment scopes and schedule assessments. To learn more about risk registers, see Risk register in the Risk Workspace.
- Record and monitor risk events
- Risk events are potential or actual financial and non-financial losses, near misses, and gains that occur within an organization. To effectively manage risks, it is essential to monitor risk events, perform a root-cause analysis, and track the remedial tasks. Organizations use risk events to understand their losses and analyze areas of improvement to reduce further losses. You must maintain the loss event register to capture complete event information and to suggest additional controls to mitigate risks in the future.
- Define key risk indicators
- Monitor the risk posture of your enterprise on a continuous basis. Continuous monitoring of risks and controls involves identifying and creating key risk and control indicators. Supporting information can be collected for those indicators through automatic data collection or manual tasks. Indicator results are then used to create issues for controls, signal a change in the risk posture, and to provide supporting information for audit activities and control testing. If the indicator thresholds are breached, you must escalate to the respective stakeholders.
- Manage issues and incidents
- An issue is created when there is a change in the environment, process, or system that poses a threat. An issue requires action to prevent an incident or loss. An incident is a successful outcome or event with a negative impact. As the operational risk manager, you can view, create, and manage issues and incidents. Ensure tracking, proper closure, remediation, and monitoring of issues and incidents.
- Communicate the operational risk posture
- Define dashboards to report data effectively and accurately. You must create the required reports which can be shared with the executives and the head of the operational risk team. The reports and dashboards ensure that the aggregated assessment results across the organization help to identify the top operational risks for the enterprise.
| Activity | Task |
|---|---|
| Define the operational risk framework | |
| Communicate the operational risk posture | |
| Monitor the critical incidents and issues | View, create, and manage issues |
| Define the key risk indicators | Risk indicators, control indicators, and indicator templates |
| Conduct the annual risk assessment process | |
| Facilitate recording and learning from loss events | |
| Create aggregated risk reports | Reports in the Risk Management application |