Risk and Contingency Planning

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The mantra of modern management in risk reduction, risk reduction, risk reduction... but what is risk, and how can managers make informed decisions about the hazards they (might) face? This presentation introduces students to some fundamental concepts, and methodologies, making reference to a boardgame that virtually everybody knows.

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Risk and Contingency

Planning

• Richard Farr

Contents

What is risk?

A ‘risk simulator’ you probably already own: Monopoly

Objectives(Just in case you’ve been on Mars since 1933...)

An expert explains...

Risk scenario...you are here what happens if you roll 6, 8 or 9?

The risk scenario

Dice rolls and probability

Probability distribution

Probability...

Reducing risk

Decisiontree...Mean cost of the ‘risk' strategy: £298.38Known cost of the ‘insurance' strategy: £330

The “meta-game”

Coping with risk:

The cost of jet fuel...

Options defined

Strategic risk:

Two views of the future

Losing their nerve?

Losing their nerve?

With the A350 and 747-8...

Coping with risk

Risk prioritisation

Problem Severity Likelihood Prioritised

Robbery 3 2 6

Building fire 5 1 5

Trip hazards 1 4 4

Corporate approaches

One last example

One last example

My blog: http://capacify.wordpress.comOn Twitter: @Capacified - Richard Farr

Tutor notesS.6: If your students think being a Monopoly champion sounds terribly nerdy, inform

them that the Monopoly final is played with real money, and the winner gets to keep it all.

S.10: You may not need this one, depending upon the background of your trainees.

S.15-20: Remember that airlines are very cash-positive businesses – passengers pay

long in advance, so hedging ought to be affordable. The hedging issue cost Ryanair

£92m; locking in fuel prices of $124 a barrel for 80% the airline’s fuel during the third

quarter, when the price of oil collapsed to a low of $33 a barrel.

S.26: Engineers use a three-stage risk prioritisation approach, adding a scale for the

probability of the hazard being detected.

S.28: Charles Darrow didn’t invent Monopoly; Elizabeth Magie created it in 1903, and it

was commercially published as early as 1923, as ‘The Landlords Game’. Charles Darrow

merely drew the board illustrations - some of which still appear in the modern game.

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