The 5 habits of top risk managers

Please note: This item is from our archives and was published in 2017. It is provided for historical reference. The content may be out of date and links may no longer function.

Companies taking the lead in risk management practices are shifting away from protection mode, tying in risk management with strategic initiatives and decision-making, and placing more risk decision-making in the hands of business units.

PwC characterises these risk leaders as Front Liners in a new survey report, which gathered the opinion of nearly 1,600 corporate officers in 80 countries. The report singled out Front Liners as just 13% of respondents globally.

Front Liners are more likely to project revenue and profit growth in the next two years, and they are more resilient in the face of uncertainty. Front Liners say their companies view risk management as a catalyst rather than impediment for growth, and they are more likely to budget adequately for risk and embed risk management in day-to-day operations.

“Creating a viable risk culture may not necessarily mean fewer disruptions, but it will mean a faster bounce-back from risk events,” Brian Schwartz, PwC’s US Financial Services Internal Audit, Compliance, and Risk Management Leader, said in a PwC video accompanying the report.

Across five types of risk management best practices, Front Liners lead lower-performing peers by at least 12 percentage points. For example, 69% of Front Liners say that risk appetite and tolerance has been defined across a number of key risk categories, compared with 53% of others. Sixty-five per cent say their company has a well-defined risk appetite statement and clearly communicated framework, compared with 49% of others.

Another report on risk management shows that some companies have a difficult time embedding risk management into strategic initiatives: Just 45% of companies say that risk exposures are considered mostly or extensively when evaluating new strategic initiatives, according to The State of Risk Oversight: An Overview of Enterprise Risk Management Processes, by North Carolina State University.

The goal of robust risk management is not to eliminate risk but to shrewdly adapt to it.

“We don’t want to stop the risk-taking; we want smart, informed risk-taking that’s done with eyes wide open, and within the overall risk appetite of the company,” Nick Hirons, senior vice president for global ethics and compliance at pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline, said in the PwC report.

About two-thirds of Front Liners said they recovered effectively from disruptions caused by changes in business models or strategy, compared with 48% of other respondents.

The report offered five steps organisations should take to meet the challenges of today’s risk landscape:

  1. Set a strong organisational tone. This should start with the CEO and board and permeate the organisation.
  2. Align risk management with strategy at the point of decision-making. This helps to ensure risk management is embedded into planning and anticipation of business risks when setting tactical priorities.
  3. Recalibrate risk management across all three lines of defence. The first line (senior management and business units) owns business risk decision-making. The second line (risk and compliance functions) monitors the first, and the third line (internal audit) provides objective oversight.
  4. Implement a clearly defined, organisation-wide risk appetite and framework.
  5. Develop risk reporting that enables the C-suite and board to effectively carry out their risk oversight responsibilities.

Neil Amato (Neil.Amato@aicpa-cima.com) is a CGMA Magazine senior editor.

Up Next

With greenhouse gas reporting, sizable gaps persist

By Bryan Strickland
September 5, 2025
Large companies in the UK are making progress as more sustainability reporting requirements approach, but they could face significant challenges when seeking assistance from smaller companies in their supply chain.
Advertisement

LATEST STORIES

With greenhouse gas reporting, sizable gaps persist

Accountability: Inescapable, challenging, and valuable

US business outlook brightens somewhat despite trade, inflation concerns

Elevating productivity through strategic business partnering

Mark Koziel Q&A: Talent, sense of community, profession opportunities

Advertisement
Read the latest FM digital edition, exclusively for CIMA members and AICPA members who hold the CGMA designation.
Advertisement

Related Articles

Image of AI-generated woman's face.
Shadow AI emerges as significant cybersecurity threat