Trying to control the risks taken in the course of business has been around forever. Who knows what the first insurance policy taken out was! However, Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) is a specifically codified set of practices instituted in the United States since the 1990s by which entities set out to manage and control all of the potential risks to their business.
The most common cross-sector definition of ERM is ''a process, effected by an entity's board of directors, management and other personnel, applied in strategy-setting and across the enterprise, designed to identify potential events that may affect the entity, and manage risk to be within its risk appetite, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of entity objectives.''
This post is to introduce the basics of an effective means of risk management. Assessing, managing and minimizing risk is, of course, a huge topic that we can introduce with only the briefest of summaries. For simplicity's sake, we'll break ERM into three of its major components: operations risk, financial risk and strategic risk.
-
Operations Risk Management
-
Financial Risk Management
-
Strategic Risk Management