The 3 Essential Capabilities Needed For Operational Risk Management
The 3 Essential Capabilities Needed For Operational Risk Management
The 3 Essential Capabilities Needed For Operational Risk Management
Peter Bussey
Operational risks are defined by their ability to lead to adverse events anywhere in
an organization’s sphere of operations. The term ORM was first used widely in the
financial services sector, and then popularized starting about 2009 to describe the
set of risks in industrial operations that could harm people, production, or the
environment.
Operational risks are tough to identify, and even harder to control. Evidence of
this is exposed in the decades-long string of high-profile industrial process safety
accidents, as well as the massive ongoing cost of occupational injuries and
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Although the standards adequately define what should be done overall to manage
risks proactively, it's up to each organization to work out the details. A useful
framework for ORM programs and processes is to think about the sources or types
of activities that create risk or identify it.
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Historically these ORM processes have typically been managed with paper- and
spreadsheet-based manual processes and home-grown solutions even in large
organizations. Over the past decade, there has been a wide-spread adoption of off-
the-shelf software to streamline and automate them. Regrettably, many of these
efforts have resulted in point solutions for IM, MOC, and RA siloed inside
organizations and business functions.
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Innovative technologies can make the integrated application platform even more
powerful. Mobile apps can help capture (and deliver) more data and information
to improve and speed up ORM processes. The Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)
can help capture large volumes of operational data, which can be leveraged by Big
Data Analytics to provide sharper insights, and help organizations move to a more
predictive mode in reducing operational risks.
The scope of ORM also needs to be considered. Does it go beyond EHS risks to
include other domains such as quality, Asset Performance Management (APM), or
supply chain? Does your organization need separate IM, MOC, and RA systems for
the various domains; or does an integrated management systems approach make
more sense?
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