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How to Balance Risk and Reward in your Organisation?

Finding the Optimal Balance to make better decisions

Organisations, or more precisely, the employees of organisations, make hundreds, if not thousands of decisions a day.  Some are major, such as deciding on strategy or whether to purchase a new system while many are small, such as whether to take the stairs or elevator or where to place your coffee on your work desk.

The aggregate outcome of all of these decisions is what determines the success or otherwise of the organisation, and more personally, the individual within the organisation.

Making better, more informed decisions, must therefore in the long run, optimise the value of the organisation. We can attempt to program machines to make decisions but the quality of that decision making is still dependent on the logic programmed in, by a human!  Humans make decisions in more complex, and often less logical ways.

Much is written on human decision making covering the drivers of things such as emotion, fear, perception and anchored thinking. I will not focus on these but instead focus on the more logical elements of reward and risk that should be factored into all good decisions.

Optimal decisions involve maximising the reward (reward is taken to mean “net reward” being the net of both positive and negative impact) from the decision over the period that the decision impacts the organisation (its life). 

To better understand this we need to:

  1. Define what we mean by reward.

  2. Determine how reward is affected over the whole of life of the decision and how we can measure reward.

  3. Determine how we can assess whole of life reward at the beginning of the decision’s life.

What is reward? 

Reward should be measured against the objectives that the decision is aiming to achieve. This may include financial and non-financial such as customer service / satisfaction, environmental, social, employee wellbeing and so on. 

This gives rise to the first difficulty, how do we measure non-financial reward? The accounting profession has struggled with this and, as a result, has focussed primarily on financial reward.

More recently developments in “Integrated Reporting” have tried to address this by considering non-financial impacts of an organisation as well as financial.

Until we become more capable of measuring non-financial impacts we must do our best with what we have, which is a combination of quantitative and qualitative measures.

The second issue is determining how reward is affected over the life of a decision. We can split the reward of a decision into three parts. I will focus only on financial impacts to illustrate.

  1. Known reward: This is the income and expense that is known with reasonable certainty. When purchasing a new machine, this would include the capital cost and any known servicing costs etc.

  2. Estimated reward: This is the estimated future expense and income which is not certain. This would include revenue generated from the machine and related running costs which would be dependent on output volume. We usually estimate this using a budget.

  3. The impact of uncertainty on reward: This is the effect of future potential events that are not known with certainty that could have an impact on the budgeted reward. This would include unscheduled outages, unforeseen breakages and other factors affecting the machine such as power failure, fire etc. These are our risks, risks being defined in the ISO 31000 Risk Management standard as “the effect of uncertainty on objectives”. Measuring the risk is not easy. Conceptually we need to consider the range of risks in the decision, assess their probability and impact and apply probability theory and discounting to give a “net present value of risk” or as Protecht refers to it “risk debt”.

We then need to aggregate three parts to determine a whole of life reward to decide whether the decision is worthwhile and/or optimal. 

We generally refer to items a) and b) above as “Reward” and item c) as “Risk”. Whole of life decision making is therefore more commonly known as Risk / Reward decision making. This then brings us to determining how best we can make risk / reward decisions. 

The simplest view is to consider the reward and risk of a decision and apply the following steps:

Step 1:

Assess whether the risk is within the organisation’s risk appetite. This requires a well articulated risk appetite that can be applied to the measurement of the risk in a particular decision. If it is not within appetite we should not proceed further (or we may consider asking the Board for a larger risk appetite). If the decision’s risk is within appetite we should progress to step 2.

Step 2:

Compare the reward against the risk. Where the reward is greater than the risk, do it!  Where the reward is less than the risk, do not do it! Where you are comparing alternatives, select the alternative that has the highest reward to risk.

Example:

Consider the decision as to whether to maintain one of your current IT systems for the next 5 years or invest in a new system. The old system needs substantial maintenance and is fragile meaning that there is substantial risk of outages and failure. The new system requires much less maintenance and is more robust and less likely to fail or have outages. We will assume that the output of each system is the same so we then do not need to assess income, only expense.

Reward component

Current system

New system

Known and estimated

reward (expense)

Capital Cost                        $0k

Operating Cost (5 yrs)         $500k

                                                          $500k

Capital Cost                   $700k

Operating Cost (5 yrs)    $100k

                                    $800k

Risk Debt

$600k

$50k

Total expense + risk debt (whole of life)

$1,100k

$850k

 

A comparison using only known capital and operating cost would favour continuing with the existing system. Taking into account risk, the decision changes in favour of the new system. 

Practical steps for you to improve your decision making

Given that the process set out above is far from exact and that we have a long way to go to be able to quantify all risk in a robust manner, what steps can you take now to move to better decision making? We would suggest the following:

  1. Ensure that risk is considered before a decision is made, not as an afterthought.

  2. Develop a well articulated risk appetite statement at the board level and cascade this through the organisation to allow it be used in step 1 of decision making to compare the risk against appetite.

  3. Get better at identifying, recording and assessing all risks in your decisions and strategy.

  4. Articulate the size of risk better using quantitative and qualitative measures.

  5. Educate your decision makers to ensure they assess risk and reward (whole of life) when making decisions and make decisions on a rational rather than emotional basis.

Last week I did a webinar for NSW Business Chamber about this topic. I invite you to play the recording HERE. 

If you would like to know more about how Protecht can help you turn Risk Management, into Value Adding Management by helping you make better decisions, contact info@protechtgroup.com

About the author

David Tattam is the Chief Research and Content Officer and co-founder of the Protecht Group. David’s vision is the redefine the way the world thinks about risk and to develop risk management to its rightful place as being a key driver of value creation in each of Protecht’s clients. David is the driving force in driving Protecht’s risk thinking to the frontiers of what is possible in risk management and to support the uplift of people risk capability through training and content.