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Highly practical and useful for practitioners - cuts through a
highly technical and complex subject in a useable and easy to
follow way but without 'dumbing down'. Focuses on the facilitation
of risk management, an area that is glossed over or simply ignored
in other books on risk management. Brand new chapters on virtual
facilitation and the role of group bias in the assessment of risk.
***BUSINESS BOOK AWARDS 2022 SHORTLISTED TITLE*** Disruption is
everywhere: it presents both great opportunities and significant
threats. Do you know how to shape your strategy to respond? What if
you had a game plan to navigate disruption? The Disruption Game
Plan presents a tried and tested framework to help senior leaders
think differently about disruptive trends and emergent risks, and
to act differently when making decisions, joining up thinking on
innovation, risk, sustainability and strategy. By revealing how we
can more effectively deal with challenging business environments,
this book will help any curious and ambitious senior leader to go
beyond a short-term, fire-fighting response, and instead set out to
'change the game'. Ruth Murray-Webster is a consultant and expert
in risk and organizational change. A former head of the Risk in the
Boardroom practice for a major consultancy with extensive senior
practitioner experience, Ruth now works with a wide range of
public, private and third sector clients through her consultancy
Potentiality UK to unlock the potential performance from
uncertainty and change. Eleanor Winton is a consultant and expert
in disruption, innovation and foresight and the former head of the
Future Institute for a major consultancy. She has extensive
experience of working with senior teams to stimulate creative
thought and action. Through her consultancy Foresightfully, Eleanor
works with organizations to understand what the future might hold
for them and to develop innovative strategies in response.
This book offers a practical insight to leaders who need to make
good decisions in risky and important situations. The authors
describe a process for making risk-intelligent decisions,
explaining complex ideas simply, and mapping a route through the
myriad interrelated influences when groups make decisions that
matter. The approach puts the decision maker-you-at the center and
explains how you can think and act differently to make better
decisions more of the time. The book shows how to Determine the
appropriate level of risk Make decisions in uncertain and turbulent
conditions Understand how risks are perceived to identify them
accurately Develop new behaviors to improve decision-making Making
Risky and Important Decisions: A Leader's Guide builds on earlier
ground-breaking publications from these two recognized thought
leaders. Their first book together, Understanding and Managing Risk
Attitude, brought together the language of risk and risk-taking
with the language of emotional intelligence and emotional literacy.
Managing Group Risk Attitude followed, and focused on
decision-making groups, creating new insights and frameworks. Both
books are positioned as specialist textbooks, despite their
relevance to real-world situations. A Short Guide to Risk Appetite
brought together the concepts of risk appetite and risk attitude
into one place for the first time, cutting through confusing
terminology and confused thinking to create a practical way of
understanding "how much risk is too much risk." This latest
installment from Ruth Murray-Webster and David Hillson takes the
breadth of their previous work, adds new insights and thinking, and
distills it into a highly usable guide for hard-pressed leaders.
Highly practical and useful for practitioners - cuts through a
highly technical and complex subject in a useable and easy to
follow way but without 'dumbing down'. Focuses on the facilitation
of risk management, an area that is glossed over or simply ignored
in other books on risk management. Brand new chapters on virtual
facilitation and the role of group bias in the assessment of risk.
How much risk should we take? A Short Guide to Risk Appetite sets
out to help all those who need to decide how much risk can be taken
in a particular risky and important situation. David Hillson and
Ruth Murray-Webster introduce the RARA Model to explain the
complementary and central roles of Risk Appetite and Risk Attitude,
and along the way they show how other risk-related concepts fit in.
Risk thresholds are the external expression of inherent risk
appetite, and the challenge is how to set the right thresholds. By
progressively deconstructing the RARA Model, the authors show that
the essential control step is our ability to choose an appropriate
risk attitude. The book contains practical guidance to setting risk
thresholds that take proper account of the influences of
organisational risk culture and the individual risk preferences of
key stakeholders. Alongside this, individuals and organisations
need to choose the risk attitude that will optimise their chances
of achieving the desired objectives.
This book builds on the authors' previous title Understanding and
Managing Risk Attitude but this time looks exclusively at the
challenges of understanding and managing those attitudes adopted by
groups of people when faced with making decisions that they
perceive as risky and important. The book makes the link between
risk management and decision-making explicit, building on existing
work from the economic and risk psychology schools but taking a
pragmatic, practitioner-focused approach that is relevant to all
decision-making groups in any situation. The insights in Managing
Group Risk Attitude are derived from the authors' own applied
research. Details of the research methods and findings are included
in the book in support of a practical model and steps to manage
risk attitude using applied emotional literacy. Ruth Murray-Webster
and David Hillson have written a practical book for all
decision-makers, supported by actual research by practitioners and
underpinned by the seminal research of leading academics.
This book offers a practical insight to leaders who need to make
good decisions in risky and important situations. The authors
describe a process for making risk-intelligent decisions,
explaining complex ideas simply, and mapping a route through the
myriad interrelated influences when groups make decisions that
matter. The approach puts the decision maker-you-at the center and
explains how you can think and act differently to make better
decisions more of the time. The book shows how to Determine the
appropriate level of risk Make decisions in uncertain and turbulent
conditions Understand how risks are perceived to identify them
accurately Develop new behaviors to improve decision-making Making
Risky and Important Decisions: A Leader's Guide builds on earlier
ground-breaking publications from these two recognized thought
leaders. Their first book together, Understanding and Managing Risk
Attitude, brought together the language of risk and risk-taking
with the language of emotional intelligence and emotional literacy.
Managing Group Risk Attitude followed, and focused on
decision-making groups, creating new insights and frameworks. Both
books are positioned as specialist textbooks, despite their
relevance to real-world situations. A Short Guide to Risk Appetite
brought together the concepts of risk appetite and risk attitude
into one place for the first time, cutting through confusing
terminology and confused thinking to create a practical way of
understanding "how much risk is too much risk." This latest
installment from Ruth Murray-Webster and David Hillson takes the
breadth of their previous work, adds new insights and thinking, and
distills it into a highly usable guide for hard-pressed leaders.
How much risk should we take? A Short Guide to Risk Appetite sets
out to help all those who need to decide how much risk can be taken
in a particular risky and important situation. David Hillson and
Ruth Murray-Webster introduce the RARA Model to explain the
complementary and central roles of Risk Appetite and Risk Attitude,
and along the way they show how other risk-related concepts fit in.
Risk thresholds are the external expression of inherent risk
appetite, and the challenge is how to set the right thresholds. By
progressively deconstructing the RARA Model, the authors show that
the essential control step is our ability to choose an appropriate
risk attitude. The book contains practical guidance to setting risk
thresholds that take proper account of the influences of
organisational risk culture and the individual risk preferences of
key stakeholders. Alongside this, individuals and organisations
need to choose the risk attitude that will optimise their chances
of achieving the desired objectives.
Despite many years of development, risk management remains
problematic for the majority of organizations. One common challenge
is the human dimension, in other words, the way people perceive
risk and risk management. Risk management processes and techniques
are operated by people, each of whom is a complex individual,
influenced by many different factors. And the problem is compounded
by the fact that most risk management involves people working in
groups. This introduces further layers of complexity through
relationships and group dynamics. David Hillson's and Ruth
Murray-Webster's Understanding and Managing Risk Attitude will help
you understand the human aspects of risk management and to manage
proactively the influence of human behaviour on the risk process.
The authors introduce a range of models, perspectives and examples
to define and detail the range of possible risk attitudes; looking
both at individuals and groups. Using leading-edge thinking on
self-awareness and emotional literacy, they develop a powerful
approach to address the most common shortfall in current risk
management: the failure to manage the human aspects of the process.
All this is presented in a practical and applied framework, rather
than as a theoretical or academic treatise, based on the authors'
shared experiences and expertise, rather than empirical research.
Anyone involved in implementing risk management will benefit from
this book, including risk practitioners, senior managers and
directors responsible for corporate governance, project managers
and their teams. It is also essential reading for HR professionals
and others interested in organizational or behavioural psychology.
This second edition is updated to strengthen the understanding of
individual risk attitudes and reinforce what individuals can do to
manage those risk attitudes that are leading them away from their
objectives. For people who want to embrace this subject, the book
highlights ways forward that are proven and practical.
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