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ITS 835 enterprise risk management
Chapter 22
ERM - JAA Inc. –A Case Study in Creating Value from Uncertainty
University of Cumberlands
1
introduction
Business background
Initial steps
Evolution of Risk Management
Introduction of ISO 31000 and HB 436 to JAA
Bringing everything together
University of Cumberlands
2
Business background
JAA is a clothing wholesaler and retailer
Founded in 1972
Went public in 1998
Three operating segments
U.S. wholesale
U.S. retail
International (wholesale and retail)
57 retail stores in 10 countries
University of Cumberlands
3
Initial steps
Strategic objectives
Maintain market leadership
Sustain technology leadership
Strengthen global presence
Deliver quality service
A leader in compliance with all laws and regulation
Establish a governance system
Multiple committees, each with specific responsibilities
University of Cumberlands
4
Governance framework
University of Cumberlands
5
Evolution of risk management
Lack of strategic risk management led to many problems
Communication
Missed/lost opportunities
Lack of commitment to objectives
Declining quality
Identified gaps in risk management
Engaged in aggressive internal training
Soft skills
Team building
Management planning
University of Cumberlands
6
Introductions of iso 31000 and hb 436
JAA adopted ISO 31000
HB 436 provided extensive implementation guidance
ISO 31000 was basically an upgrade of the framework JAA was already using
ISO 31000 framework formalized JAA’s ERM
Defined organization and process
University of Cumberlands
7
Using context for risk criteria
University of Cumberlands
8
Bringing everyone together
University of Cumberlands
9
Risk map
University of Cumberlands
10
Risk attitude
University of Cumberlands
11
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Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and.
BUSB342 - International BusinessCore Concepts· International.docxjasoninnes20
BUSB342 - International Business
Core Concepts
· International Business
· International Strategy
· Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
· Sustainable strategies
· International Market research
· Cultures
· Brick-and-mortar
· Pull Strategy
· Entrepreneurs
· Creating Value
· Profit Growth
· Common Laws
· Political Risk
· Supply Chain Management
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this book should dispel
any doubt that the d ...
BUSB342 - International BusinessCore Concepts· International.docxfelicidaddinwoodie
BUSB342 - International Business
Core Concepts
· International Business
· International Strategy
· Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
· Sustainable strategies
· International Market research
· Cultures
· Brick-and-mortar
· Pull Strategy
· Entrepreneurs
· Creating Value
· Profit Growth
· Common Laws
· Political Risk
· Supply Chain Management
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this book should dispel
any doubt that the d.
Rukmini Akula D-12COLLAPSETop of FormNow a days various to.docxhealdkathaleen
Rukmini Akula
D-12
COLLAPSE
Top of Form
Now a days various tools are very commonly used for the aid designers, and some of the additional theories will also offer some of the analytical rigorous report to all the engineering designs, and concurrent engineering would be the one of the most practical method in order to improve the design process, and there are also some of the common tools, that are usually used in order to obtain the input from the stakeholders or from the business team in the organization, in the design process, in this process, some of the methods may be like pugh method, quality function, deployment, decision matrix techniques, and the analytical hierarchy process, and these are some of the methods in order to build the design process in the organization or in the company. And these tools also include relatively some of the high levels of the subjective judgement(K, 2017). Some of the additional set of tools also addresses the variability, quality, and also the uncertainty in the design process, and these tools are more analytical and are also typically combined to these processes which are used to produce the products(S, 2016). Still there are some other tools that are also used to generate the alternate designs for the designers who are working for the web application design for their organization or for their companies.
References:
Eades, K. (2017), "General Motors: 1991 Equity Financing", Darden Business Publishing Cases. https://doi.org/10.1108/case.darden.2016.000131.
Bongoni, R. and Basu, S. (2016), "A multidisciplinary research agenda for the acceptance of Golden Rice", Nutrition & Food Science, Vol. 46 No. 5, pp. 717-728.
Bottom of Form
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http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Ri ...
Grading Rubric
F
F
C
B
A
0
1
2
3
4
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The reference list is incomplete.
The reference list contains references, but there are APA format issues.
The reference list is complete and APA format is correct, but include references older than five years.
The reference list is complete, formatted correctly in APA, and the references are within the past five years.
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The reference list contains little relevant quality management references.
The reference list contains an adequate amount of relevant quality management references, but all sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains adequate amount of relevant quality management references, but some sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains substantial (6+) quality management references of high credibility.
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The reference list contains few relevant quality measure references.
The reference list contains an adequate amount of relevant quality measure references, but all sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains adequate amount of relevant quality measure references, but some sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains substantial (6+) quality measure references of high credibility.
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The submission contains a loose description explaining the process used.
The submission contains a minimal description explaining the process used and some search criteria descriptors.
The submission contains a good description explaining the process and search criteria descriptors.
The submission contains a clear description including fully showcased and explained search criteria descriptors.
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http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Manageme ...
Week 5 Post-Course Assessment Quiz
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http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this book should dispel
any doubt that the discipline is here to stay! The broad collection of practices is
insightful for students, academics, and executives, as well as seasoned risk man-
agement professionals.”
—Carol Fox, ARM, director of Strategic and Enterprise Risk Practice, RIMS
“Managing risk across the enterprise is the new frontie ...
Running Head: FOOTPRINT
1
FOOTPRINT 2
Footprint
Data
Course
Date of Submission
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT
Hectares:
2
# Earths:
1
Top 3 Consumption Categories:
Processed meat
Car use
Flight hours
CARBON FOOTPRINT
Carbon Emissions (lbs):
0.524
WATER FOOTPRINT
Gallons per day:
90
Top 3 Contributors:
Meat
Soybean
Rice
As I conducted my research on ecological footprint, I realized that my consumption way high than it should be. From the research, I realized that I require an approximate of 10 GHA to aid me in realizing what requires to be carried out to lead to a reduced footprint. Carrying out the assignment helped me to realize that I personally have a huge impact on the environment and the resultant effects of environmental degradation. The most shocking I learned through this project is the fact that consuming processed foods played a huge role in increasing my footprint. I will embrace using local foods and prepare my own meat and beer instead of buying the processed ones. The research made me believe that as humans, we should use more of the products based on animals instead of depending on the processed ones. To get the most suitable and accurate calculations, I will keep a close track of my usage of the meat and other locally produced products. The research made me think that we, as humans, are failing at protecting the environment. If we fail to be keen at protecting it, the earth will not b enough for us to live in.
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable ...
Running Head: FOOTPRINT
1
FOOTPRINT 2
Footprint
Data
Course
Date of Submission
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT
Hectares:
2
# Earths:
1
Top 3 Consumption Categories:
Processed meat
Car use
Flight hours
CARBON FOOTPRINT
Carbon Emissions (lbs):
0.524
WATER FOOTPRINT
Gallons per day:
90
Top 3 Contributors:
Meat
Soybean
Rice
As I conducted my research on ecological footprint, I realized that my consumption way high than it should be. From the research, I realized that I require an approximate of 10 GHA to aid me in realizing what requires to be carried out to lead to a reduced footprint. Carrying out the assignment helped me to realize that I personally have a huge impact on the environment and the resultant effects of environmental degradation. The most shocking I learned through this project is the fact that consuming processed foods played a huge role in increasing my footprint. I will embrace using local foods and prepare my own meat and beer instead of buying the processed ones. The research made me believe that as humans, we should use more of the products based on animals instead of depending on the processed ones. To get the most suitable and accurate calculations, I will keep a close track of my usage of the meat and other locally produced products. The research made me think that we, as humans, are failing at protecting the environment. If we fail to be keen at protecting it, the earth will not b enough for us to live in.
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable .
Weekly Article #3
77 unread replies.77 replies.
Class -
You are required to analyze an online research and select any article related to the following topics,
- A comprehensive model of entrepreneurship- Five entrepreneurial strategies
Each student will locate and review an article relevant to the topic of the class. The review is between 400-to-550 words and should summarize the article. Please include how it applies to our topic, and why you found it interesting. Please post the text in the Discussion Board by Friday . No attachments, please.
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http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incent ...
BUSB342 - International BusinessCore Concepts· International.docxjasoninnes20
BUSB342 - International Business
Core Concepts
· International Business
· International Strategy
· Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
· Sustainable strategies
· International Market research
· Cultures
· Brick-and-mortar
· Pull Strategy
· Entrepreneurs
· Creating Value
· Profit Growth
· Common Laws
· Political Risk
· Supply Chain Management
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this book should dispel
any doubt that the d ...
BUSB342 - International BusinessCore Concepts· International.docxfelicidaddinwoodie
BUSB342 - International Business
Core Concepts
· International Business
· International Strategy
· Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
· Sustainable strategies
· International Market research
· Cultures
· Brick-and-mortar
· Pull Strategy
· Entrepreneurs
· Creating Value
· Profit Growth
· Common Laws
· Political Risk
· Supply Chain Management
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this book should dispel
any doubt that the d.
Rukmini Akula D-12COLLAPSETop of FormNow a days various to.docxhealdkathaleen
Rukmini Akula
D-12
COLLAPSE
Top of Form
Now a days various tools are very commonly used for the aid designers, and some of the additional theories will also offer some of the analytical rigorous report to all the engineering designs, and concurrent engineering would be the one of the most practical method in order to improve the design process, and there are also some of the common tools, that are usually used in order to obtain the input from the stakeholders or from the business team in the organization, in the design process, in this process, some of the methods may be like pugh method, quality function, deployment, decision matrix techniques, and the analytical hierarchy process, and these are some of the methods in order to build the design process in the organization or in the company. And these tools also include relatively some of the high levels of the subjective judgement(K, 2017). Some of the additional set of tools also addresses the variability, quality, and also the uncertainty in the design process, and these tools are more analytical and are also typically combined to these processes which are used to produce the products(S, 2016). Still there are some other tools that are also used to generate the alternate designs for the designers who are working for the web application design for their organization or for their companies.
References:
Eades, K. (2017), "General Motors: 1991 Equity Financing", Darden Business Publishing Cases. https://doi.org/10.1108/case.darden.2016.000131.
Bongoni, R. and Basu, S. (2016), "A multidisciplinary research agenda for the acceptance of Golden Rice", Nutrition & Food Science, Vol. 46 No. 5, pp. 717-728.
Bottom of Form
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Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Ri ...
Grading Rubric
F
F
C
B
A
0
1
2
3
4
Not Submitted
No Pass
Competence
Proficiency
Mastery
Not Submitted
The reference list is incomplete.
The reference list contains references, but there are APA format issues.
The reference list is complete and APA format is correct, but include references older than five years.
The reference list is complete, formatted correctly in APA, and the references are within the past five years.
Not Submitted
The reference list contains little relevant quality management references.
The reference list contains an adequate amount of relevant quality management references, but all sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains adequate amount of relevant quality management references, but some sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains substantial (6+) quality management references of high credibility.
Not Submitted
The reference list contains few relevant quality measure references.
The reference list contains an adequate amount of relevant quality measure references, but all sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains adequate amount of relevant quality measure references, but some sources lack credibility.
The reference list contains substantial (6+) quality measure references of high credibility.
Not Submitted
The submission contains a loose description explaining the process used.
The submission contains a minimal description explaining the process used and some search criteria descriptors.
The submission contains a good description explaining the process and search criteria descriptors.
The submission contains a clear description including fully showcased and explained search criteria descriptors.
www.it-ebooks.info
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www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Manageme ...
Week 5 Post-Course Assessment Quiz
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www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this book should dispel
any doubt that the discipline is here to stay! The broad collection of practices is
insightful for students, academics, and executives, as well as seasoned risk man-
agement professionals.”
—Carol Fox, ARM, director of Strategic and Enterprise Risk Practice, RIMS
“Managing risk across the enterprise is the new frontie ...
Running Head: FOOTPRINT
1
FOOTPRINT 2
Footprint
Data
Course
Date of Submission
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT
Hectares:
2
# Earths:
1
Top 3 Consumption Categories:
Processed meat
Car use
Flight hours
CARBON FOOTPRINT
Carbon Emissions (lbs):
0.524
WATER FOOTPRINT
Gallons per day:
90
Top 3 Contributors:
Meat
Soybean
Rice
As I conducted my research on ecological footprint, I realized that my consumption way high than it should be. From the research, I realized that I require an approximate of 10 GHA to aid me in realizing what requires to be carried out to lead to a reduced footprint. Carrying out the assignment helped me to realize that I personally have a huge impact on the environment and the resultant effects of environmental degradation. The most shocking I learned through this project is the fact that consuming processed foods played a huge role in increasing my footprint. I will embrace using local foods and prepare my own meat and beer instead of buying the processed ones. The research made me believe that as humans, we should use more of the products based on animals instead of depending on the processed ones. To get the most suitable and accurate calculations, I will keep a close track of my usage of the meat and other locally produced products. The research made me think that we, as humans, are failing at protecting the environment. If we fail to be keen at protecting it, the earth will not b enough for us to live in.
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable ...
Running Head: FOOTPRINT
1
FOOTPRINT 2
Footprint
Data
Course
Date of Submission
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT
Hectares:
2
# Earths:
1
Top 3 Consumption Categories:
Processed meat
Car use
Flight hours
CARBON FOOTPRINT
Carbon Emissions (lbs):
0.524
WATER FOOTPRINT
Gallons per day:
90
Top 3 Contributors:
Meat
Soybean
Rice
As I conducted my research on ecological footprint, I realized that my consumption way high than it should be. From the research, I realized that I require an approximate of 10 GHA to aid me in realizing what requires to be carried out to lead to a reduced footprint. Carrying out the assignment helped me to realize that I personally have a huge impact on the environment and the resultant effects of environmental degradation. The most shocking I learned through this project is the fact that consuming processed foods played a huge role in increasing my footprint. I will embrace using local foods and prepare my own meat and beer instead of buying the processed ones. The research made me believe that as humans, we should use more of the products based on animals instead of depending on the processed ones. To get the most suitable and accurate calculations, I will keep a close track of my usage of the meat and other locally produced products. The research made me think that we, as humans, are failing at protecting the environment. If we fail to be keen at protecting it, the earth will not b enough for us to live in.
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable .
Weekly Article #3
77 unread replies.77 replies.
Class -
You are required to analyze an online research and select any article related to the following topics,
- A comprehensive model of entrepreneurship- Five entrepreneurial strategies
Each student will locate and review an article relevant to the topic of the class. The review is between 400-to-550 words and should summarize the article. Please include how it applies to our topic, and why you found it interesting. Please post the text in the Discussion Board by Friday . No attachments, please.
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM. Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incent ...
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020Additional As.docxamit657720
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) – Chapter 3
Start Date: 26 April 2020 - 8:00 pm
Due Date: 21 May 2020 - 11:59 pm
(Note: please upload your answer on Moodle using Additional Assessment Submission Link)
Student Name:
Student ID:
Section:
1. Following table shows the sales of smart phones for the past several months. Use this data to answer the following questions.
Month
Products sold
3WMA Forecast
Exp. Smoothing Forecast
1
511
2
524
3
522
4
522
5
533
6
540
7
552
8
a. Find the forecast for month 8 using 3 month weighted moving average (3WMA) with weights (0.5, 0.3 and 0.2). The most recent day having the most weight. (15 Points)
b. Find the forecast for month 8 using exponential smoothing with the smoothing constant 0.2 (20 Points)
c. Compare the two methods using MSE as a measure of error. Which method is better for this data? (15 Points)
2. What does qualitative forecasting mean? When is qualitative forecasting used? Describe two qualitative techniques and indicate at least two advantages and two disadvantages for each technique. (30 Points)
3. Briefly describe the four components of time series data. (20 Points)
The End
1
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) Spring 2020
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a dive.
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020Additional As.docxmccormicknadine86
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) – Chapter 3
Start Date: 26 April 2020 - 8:00 pm
Due Date: 21 May 2020 - 11:59 pm
(Note: please upload your answer on Moodle using Additional Assessment Submission Link)
Student Name:
Student ID:
Section:
1. Following table shows the sales of smart phones for the past several months. Use this data to answer the following questions.
Month
Products sold
3WMA Forecast
Exp. Smoothing Forecast
1
511
2
524
3
522
4
522
5
533
6
540
7
552
8
a. Find the forecast for month 8 using 3 month weighted moving average (3WMA) with weights (0.5, 0.3 and 0.2). The most recent day having the most weight. (15 Points)
b. Find the forecast for month 8 using exponential smoothing with the smoothing constant 0.2 (20 Points)
c. Compare the two methods using MSE as a measure of error. Which method is better for this data? (15 Points)
2. What does qualitative forecasting mean? When is qualitative forecasting used? Describe two qualitative techniques and indicate at least two advantages and two disadvantages for each technique. (30 Points)
3. Briefly describe the four components of time series data. (20 Points)
The End
1
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) Spring 2020
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a dive.
ITS 835 Module Three Essay Guidelines and Rubric Topic .docxvrickens
ITS 835 Module Three Essay Guidelines and Rubric
Topic: Chapter 14 – “A Strategic Approach to Enterprise Risk Management at Zurich Insurance Group”
Overview: This case study focuses on how Zurich uses a variety of methodologies and tools to manage its business risk. Zurich's risk profiling is a
focused and disciplined approach to identifying, assessing, and monitoring holistic risks and improvement actions needed. By embedding this
methodology into its risk culture, this has helped ensure its risk management culture is consistent and effective across its various business units.
More information on Zurich's Strategic Risk Management work can be found at https://www.zurichna.com/en/risk
Review the case study in Chapter 14 of the textbook.
Please explain the following:
1. How do Zurich ERM tools help them better understand their existing and emerging risks?
2. How are Zurich’s risk roles and responsibilities impacting their risk culture?
3. Provide at least two examples of how Zurich has created new value through their ERM program.
Guidelines for Submission: Using APA 6th edition style standards, submit a Word document that is 2-4 pages in length (excluding title page,
references, and appendices) and include at least two credible scholarly references to support your findings. The UC Library is a good place to find
these sources. Be sure to cite and reference your work using the APA guides and essay template that are located in the courseroom.
Required elements:
Please ensure your paper complies APA 6th edition style guidelines. There is an essay template located under the Information link.
APA basics:
o Your essay should be typed, double-spaced on standard-sized paper (8.5" x 11")
o Use 1" margins on all sides, first line of all paragraphs is indented ½” from the margin
o Use 12 pt. Times New Roman font
Follow the outline provided above and use section headers to improve the readability of your paper. If I cannot read and understand it,
you will not earn credit for the content.
https://www.zurichna.com/en/risk
Critical Elements Proficient (100%) Needs Improvement (70%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Zurich ERM tools
Explains how Zurich’s ERM tools
help them better understand their
existing and emerging risks.
Provides short explanation of how
Zurich’s ERM tools help them better
understand their existing and
emerging risks. Explanation lacks
detail.
Does not explain how Zurich’s
ERM tools help them better
understand their existing and
emerging risks.
30
Zurich’s risk roles and
responsibilities
Describes how Zurich’s risk roles
and responsibilities impacting their
risk culture.
Provides short description of how
Zurich’s risk roles and responsibilities
impacting their risk culture.
Explanation lacks detail.
Does not describe how Zurich’s
risk roles and responsibilities
impacting their risk culture.
30
Examples that have created
new value through ERM
Provides example ...
Sources and Resources for RC004Informed Advocacy in Early .docxrosemariebrayshaw
Sources and Resources for RC004
Informed Advocacy in Early Childhood Care and Education: Making a Difference for Young Children and Families, pp. 107-111
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-628&srcou=6738
WEBSITE: KIDS COUNT DATA CENTER
http://datacenter.kidscount.org/topics
KIDS COUNT Data Center
Annie E. Casey Foundation. (2014). KIDS COUNT data center: Data topics. Retrieved from http://datacenter.kidscount.org/topics
WEBSITE: NATIONAL AND STATE FACTS
http://www.cwla.org/our-work/advocacy/
WEBSITE: U.S. CHILD STATE DATA
http://www.cwla.org/our-work/advocacy/
WEBSITE: DATA TOOLS
http://www.nccp.org/tools/
Consider how this information will be beneficial within the context of Part 1 of your Work Product.
WEBSITE: ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDHOOD EDUCATION INTERNATIONAL
http://www.acei.org/
WEBSITE: DIVISION FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD
http://www.dec-sped.org/
WEBSITE: INTERNATIONAL READING ASSOCIATION
http://www.reading.org/
WEBSITE: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG CHILDREN
http://www.naeyc.org/
WEBSITE: NATIONAL BLACK CHILD DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE
http://www.nbcdi.org/
BOOK EXCERPT: DEVELOPING INITIATIVES
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-640&srcou=6738
The following links lead to early childhood advocacy initiatives that focus on social change on behalf of children, families, and the early childhood field.
WEBSITE: WORLDWIDE TEACHER SHORTAGE: REGIONAL AND GLOBAL IMPLICATIONS
http://www.businessinsider.com/theres-a-massive-global-teacher-shortage-2016-10
WEBSITE: LEGISLATIVE HOT TOPICS
https://www.literacyworldwide.org/
WEBSITE: TAKEN ACTION NOW
http://www.naeyc.org/policy/action
WEBSITE: WHAT WE DO: POLICY
http://www.nbcdi.org/what-we-do/policy
BOOK EXCERPT: COMPREHENSIVE DEVELOPMENTAL SCREENING
As you read this information and the Guided Notes , consider how these apply to Part 2 and Part 3 of your Work Product.
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-647&srcou=6738
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-747&srcou=6738
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-2320&srcou=6738
This information is beneficial in the context of Part 2 and Part 3 of your Work Product.
ARTICLE: HOW TO BE A VOICE FOR BABIES: USING DATA TO ADVOCATE EFFECTIVELY
https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/496-how-to-use-data-to-advocate-effectively
ARTICLE: EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION ABOUT THE EARLY YEARS: UNDERSTANDING THE BASICS OF FRAMING
https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/482-understand-the-basics-of-framing-to-communicate-effectively
ARTICLE: EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION ABOUT THE EARLY YEARS: THE ELEMENTS OF THE FRAME: PART ONE
https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/483-the-elements.
Chukss StrengthsShare your strengths twitterfacebook.docxmccormicknadine86
Chuks's Strengths
Share your strengths
twitter
facebook
Chuks - What makes you unique? Go learn more about your top Strengths below.
RANK
STRENGTH
1
Connectedness
LEARN MORE
RELATIONSHIP BUILDING
People who are especially talented in the Connectedness theme have faith in the links between all things. They believe there are few coincidences and that almost every event has a reason.
2
Includer
LEARN MORE
RELATIONSHIP BUILDING
People who are especially talented in the Includer theme are accepting of others. They show awareness of those who feel left out, and make an effort to include them.
3
Self-Assurance
LEARN MORE
INFLUENCING
People who are especially talented in the Self-Assurance theme feel confident in their ability to manage their own lives. They possess an inner compass that gives them confidence that their decisions are right.
4
Belief
LEARN MORE
EXECUTING
People who are especially talented in the Belief theme have certain core values that are unchanging. Out of these values emerges a defined purpose for their life.
5
Responsibility
LEARN MORE
EXECUTING
People who are especially talented in the Responsibility theme take psychological ownership of w
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www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
...
ITS 835 Module One Essay Guidelines and Rubric Topic C.docxvrickens
ITS 835 Module One Essay Guidelines and Rubric
Topic: Chapter 7 – “Turning the Organizational Pyramid Upside Down Ten Years of Evolution in Enterprise Risk Management at United Grain
Growers”
Overview: Few companies stand out as successful pioneers in enterprise risk management (ERM), especially one that undertook the initiative
almost 15 years ago. One such ERM pioneer was United Grain Growers (UGG), a conservative 100-year-old Winnipeg, Canada– based grain
handler and distributor of farm supplies. Review the case study in Chapter Seven (7) of the textbook to understand the details of their ERM
journey.
Answer the following questions regarding this case study:
1. Why does a more participative management style (“tipping the pyramid over”) lead to greater responsiveness to customers' needs,
increased accountability, and more innovative solutions to challenges than a hierarchical “command and control” structure?
2. Under what circumstances might the hierarchical “command and control” structure produce superior results?
3. What factors do you believe led UGG/ AU to be pioneers in ERM? Was it the industry/ company/ history/ circumstances? Was it a
changed organizational “culture” or perhaps good management? Describe the leading factor(s) in your response.
Guidelines for Submission: Using APA 6th edition style standards, submit a Word document that is 2-4 pages in length (excluding title page,
references, and appendices) and include at least two credible scholarly references to support your findings. The UC Library is a good place to find
these sources. Be sure to cite and reference your work using the APA guides and essay template that are located in the courseroom.
Required elements:
Please ensure your paper complies APA 6th edition style guidelines. There is an essay template located under the Information link.
APA basics:
o Your essay should be typed, double-spaced on standard-sized paper (8.5" x 11")
o Use 1" margins on all sides, first line of all paragraphs is indented ½” from the margin
o Use 12 pt. Times New Roman font
Follow the outline provided above and use section headers to improve the readability of your paper. If I cannot read and understand it,
you will not earn credit for the content.
Critical Elements Proficient (100%) Needs Improvement (70%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Participative management
style
Explains why a participative
management style led to greater
responsiveness to customers’
needs, increased accountability,
and more innovative solutions to
challenges.
Explains why a participative
management style led to greater
responsiveness to customers’ needs,
but does not explain how it
increased accountability, and more
innovative solutions to challenges.
Does not explains why a
participative management style
led to greater responsiveness to
customers’ needs, and does not
explain how it increased
accountability, and more
innovative solutions to
challenges. ...
Top of FormChapter 22 PPT - JAA Inc.–A Case Study in Creating Va.docxjuliennehar
Top of Form
Chapter 22 PPT - JAA Inc.–A Case Study in Creating Value from Uncertainty
1. How high do you assess the knowledge level of the business strategy throughout the company by the average employee? Is it your assessment that there is a robust understanding of JAA’s business strategy? Support your position with examples.
2. As you are aware, effective implementation of ISO 31000 involves effective design and implementation of a risk management framework and effective implementation of the risk management processes. This will be verified by incorporation of 11 key principles. Find an example in the case for each of the 11 principles in action.
3. If you compare the internal audit department at JAA to several that you know of currently in the marketplace, what are some of the major differences that you see at JAA that obviously have contributed to superior performance? What is unique and refreshing about the approach to the external audit as compared to what you have seen in industry?
Top of Form
Chapter 25 - Uses of Efficient Frontier Analysis in Strategic Risk Management
1. How does efficient frontier analysis (EFA) differ from other forms of complex risk assessment techniques?
2. What limitations might an analyst encounter through the use of EFA?
3. How can efficient frontier analysis results be communicated and utilized with nonmathematical decision makers?
Requirements:
· API Format, No Plagiarism, You must also use a scholarly source
· As a reminder, you must list every reference that you used to build your response then cite every reference within every sentence that you used it with a properly APA formatted citation (ABC, 2019). Citation is author last name and year.Bottom of FormBottom of Form
· You have to answer every question, No word limit. I need the answers for each and every question separately with citations matched to the references.
· Provide the answers in a word doc file for chap 22 and chap 25, like question and answers for 6 questions.
· I need the answers for each and every question separately with citations matched to the references.
Chapter 22: JAA Inc.—A Case Study in Creating Value from Uncertainty: Best Practices in Managing Risk. This case has several important take aways as follows.
· To study the importance of the communication process to the overall success of a company’s business objectives
· To understand the relationship of strategic objectives, context, stakeholders, and risk criteria and how these play a critical role in the overall effectiveness of risk management
· To understand the changing role for internal and external audit and the demands that are being placed on both groups to step up to the plateTo understand the role of the board and its various committees in a company’s overall effectiveness of risk managementTo understand the key organizations and materials from around the globe that are playing a profound thought leadership role in risk management to further enhance education/thinki ...
ITS 835Chapters 30, 31, 34Miscellaneous Case Studies on .docxvrickens
ITS 835
Chapters 30, 31, 34
Miscellaneous Case Studies on ERM and RIsk
Enterprise Risk Management
Professor Miguel Buleje
Overview
• Three case studies
• Alleged Corruption at Chessfield
• Bon Boulangerie
• Building an ERM Program at General Motors
• Different scenarios and organizations
• Useful in examining broader implications
• Look for similarities
Alleged Corruption at Chessfield
• Chessfield
• Fictional private American company in sports and entertainment
• HQ in NYC
• “Good ol’ boys” board
• Informal governance
• Whistle-blower
• CEO compensation very high (4x comparable peers)
• Potential environment for excessive risk taking
• Chessfield CEO requested independent governance
review
Chessfield, cont’d.
• Review included
• Document review – minimal documentation
• Interviews – substantial discontent and lack of confidence in
leadership
• CEO compensation
• Limited documentation to support decision
• Basis seemed to be long relationship with decision makers
• Industry standard metrics missing
• Risk management
• Few risk management protocols or controls
• Most processes were manual (i.e. no IT)
Chessfield, cont’d.
• Review resulted in 45 recommendations
• 43 from reviewer
• 2 added by regulator
• All but 2 recommendations were accepted, which were
• 3 longest serving board member resign
• A female be selected for directorship and compensation
committee
• Identify broad implications of this case
Bon Boulangerie
• Bakery in Oakville, Ontario
• When purchased, single site retail and café
• Ray Pane added wholesale operation
• Plan to expand wholesale business
• From 20km to 120km coverage
• Include grocery stores
• Add product line
• Goal: triple profits in 3 years
• What are the operational risks?
Building an ERM Program at General
Motors
• Background
• GM approach to ERM
• Game theory
• Looking forward
ERM at GM Background
• ERM program began in 2010
• ERM to help achieve competitive advantage
• New CEO
• GM bankruptcy in 2009
• CRO appointed
• Financial and Risk Policy Committee formed
• Risk officers identified and aligned to all CEO direct
reports
• GM embraced aggressive ERM
GM Approach to ERM
• ERM built on GM’s vision
• Design, build, and sell the world’s best vehicles
• Identify and manage key risks
• Bottom-up approach
• Focus on “what can go right”
• Lessons learned
• Gave responsibility of assessing risk probability and impact to senior
executives
• Replaced ranked risk list with tiered list
• Implemented a 5 point scale to measure
• Inherent risk
• Current risk
• Residual risk
Game Theory
Looking Forward
• Top risk attention in place
• Ready to add focus on day-to-day operational risks
• Developing program for operational control self-
assessment (CSA)
• Approach is a policy-based CSA
• Starts with simple yes-no questions to line managers
• Benefits of a policy-based program
• Policy can be leveraged to ensure results
• Helps to educ ...
Running head COMPANY SELECTION1COMPANY SELECTION4CO.docxhealdkathaleen
Running head: COMPANY SELECTION
1
COMPANY SELECTION
4
COMPANY SELECTION (Amazon)
Company Selection
Amazon Organization Background
According to the studies, Amazon is one of the multinational companies based in the USA. Its headquarters are located in Seattle, Washington. Amazon operates in the e-commerce business, digital streaming, and cloud computing and artificial intelligence. Recent news indicates that Amazon has had various organizational issues, especially on the leadership aspect (Ott, 2012).
Organization issues in Amazon
Insensitive management. Reports reveal that the employees with different personal hardships such as miscarriages, cancer and other personal problems were significantly faced with unfair judgements. Others were given limited time to recover from their issues, which created a lot of issues for the employees.
Unfair ranking system. The Amazon management holds annual organizational-level reviews to discuss and determine the ranking of the subordinates. The reviews start with a discussion concerning the lower-level employees in front of the senior managers. Consequently, the king of review system employees in the raking system is not correct. It leads to the discrimination of some employees while favoring others.
Lack of benefits. Benefits are essential in any company to boost the motivation of the workers. However, Amazon fails to provide its employees with benefits such as meals, personal wellness and other critical benefits that can motivate the employees. Hence, Amazon gives no priority to its workers. Instead, the new employees are required to repay a share of their signing bonus if one quits before the years’ time. Such acts are discriminative.
Why do such issues hinder Amazon organizational efficiency?
Organizational issues contribute to organization controversies. The organization issues in Amazon provides to workers turn over. Besides, an unfair ranking system contributes to a poor relationship between the management and the workers. Also, the lack of benefits lowers the morale of the workers, thus reducing organizational productivity (Robbins & Judge, 2012). Hence, for an organization to succeed ant attain its set objective organizational issues should be avoided.
References
Ott, J. S. (2012). The organizational culture perspective (pp. 221-243). Chicago: Dorsey Press.
Robbins, S. P., & Judge, T. (2012). Essentials of organizational behavior.
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the ...
ITS 835Chapter 12Measuring Performance at mariuse18nolet
ITS 835
Chapter 12
Measuring Performance at Intuit
Enterprise Risk Management
Dr. James C. Hyatt
Miguel Buleje
Introduction
Intuit’s ERM Journey
ERM Maturity Model
Benefits of Measuring Performance in ERM Models
ERM Performance Measurement and Reporting
Conclusion
Intuit’s ERM Journey
INTRO to Intuit: Biz and Financial Software Corporation. Offerings include QuickBooks, Quicken, Turbo Tax
Began with ad hoc risk management
Very common entry point
Escalated to ERM when seminal event occurred
Desire was to stop firefighting and start prevention.
Proactive approach, as resources were pulled from Operations
Intuit ERM Core Principles
Enterprise-wide risk framework
Risk assessment is ongoing
Focus on most significant risks
Ownership and accountability
Measure and monitor performance
ERM Maturity Model
Risk Management Maturity Model
Stakeholders Value increases as Risk Management Capability Increase
Ad Hoc Risk Management - Starting Point
Targeted Risk Management – progress and next step. More proactive. Organized.
Integrated Risk Framework – Really taking this the next level with formal framework. Value starts to increase
Risk Intelligence - Feedback loop. Really taking advantage to predict, and use intelligence to take action.
Risk Leadership – Move from Reactive to Proactive. Optimize and Capitalize positive outcomes around risk.
4
Benefits of Measuring Performance in ERM Models
Key Performance Indicators (KPI)
Based on business objectives
Quantitative and qualitative KPI
Leading (looking into future/ predictive approach) and
Lagging (trending / historical performance) indicators
Input, process, and output indicators ( optimized for end to end processes).
KPIs must be
Tangible
Flexible
Standardized
Outcome or objective focused
ERM Performance Measurement and Reporting
First evolution - ERM process adoption
Second evolution – Risk Mitigation Process Management
Third Evolution – Multidimensional Risk Management Performance Measurement
Outcome: executive dashboard for reporting.
ERM Process Adoption
7
Risk Mitigation Process Management
Multidimensional Risk Management Performance Measurement
3er Evolution
Culmination of INTUIT enterprise risk management: Dashboards
KPI status by risk.
Clear where attention goes, by Risk .
They do not care about green. Focus on Reds and Yellow.
At a glance exes are able to determine what risk would cause issues.
9
Conclusion
At Intuit, risk management is everyone’s responsibility
ERM must be a core business competency
Coordination is a key to success
ERM Recognizes
Upside opportunity
Downside risk
ERM process is regularly audited
ERM is an integral part of Intuit’s operating model
Sheet1TitleYearLengthViolence timeInjuriesFatal injuriesGood/neutral injuriesGood/neutral fatalitiesBad injuriesBad fatalitiesSnow White and the Seven Dwarfs19375040474211011Fantasia19407200307111100Pinoc ...
For this homework activity, you will find and examine indicators o.docxshericehewat
For this homework activity, you will find and examine indicators of urbanization for your four selected countries. Compile Parts A, B, and C into a single document (Save as a PDF file type)
There are three parts to this exercise:
1. Urban growth trends (Table)
2. Largest cities (List and screen shots)
3. Discussion (written narrative)
Part A: Urban growth trends
Create a table that includes the following 5 urban growth indicators for your four countries. Links to finding the urban growth indicators are outlined below.
My four countries are: Afghanistan, Philippines, Mexico, Japan
Table: Urban growth trends (SAMPLE)
Ireland
Ukraine
Tajikistan
Percentage of population in urban areas
Percentage urban of region or sub-region (please name the region)
Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
1950-1955
Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
1990-1995
Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
2010-2015
Informal Employment (Labor) Share of Total
· Percentage of population in urban and rural areascan be found here https://population.un.org/wup/Country-Profiles/
· Percentage urban by region or subregioncan also be found here https://population.un.org/wup/Country-Profiles/ (please specify the region or sub-region)
· Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
· https://population.un.org/wup/
· Select: Interactive Data
· Select:Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
· Use regional nested lists to select (check box) all four of your countries.
· Click Next
· On the year selection page, select only these three time periods (blue indicates it is selected):
· 1950-1955
· 1990-1995
· 2010-2015
· Click next
· Informal Employment (Labor) Share of Total, Non-Agricultural (Percent)
· This data can be accessed here on Google Public Data:
· https://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=n4ff2muj8bh2a_&ctype=l&strail=false&bcs=d&nselm=h&met_y=LABINFORMSHR&fdim_y=scenario:1&scale_y=lin&ind_y=false&rdim=world&idim=world:world&ifdim=world&ind=false
Part B: Largest Cities
For Part B, create a list of the 5 largest cities for each country, and insert screenshots of the Urban Population by Size Class of Urban Settlement.
Create a list of the five largest cities for your countries.
Option 1:
· https://population.un.org/wup/
· Select: Interactive Data
· Select: Annual Population of Urban Agglomerations with 300,000 or more in 2018 (thousands)
· Use regional nested lists to select (check box) all four of your countries.
· Click Next
· On the year selection page, just click “Next” (this accepts the default selection of every 5 years between 1950 and 2035)
· For each country, list the 5 largest cities and the population in 1950,2015, and 2035. (Some countries will not have 5 cities listed. Others will have numerous cities).
Option 2: (if option 1 does not produce much information)
· Google search: “ largest cities [enter your ...
ITS 835 enterprise risk managementChapter 26-29Review of 4 M.docxvrickens
ITS 835 enterprise risk management
Chapter 26-29
Review of 4 Mini case studies on ERM and Risk
University of Cumberlands
1
overview
Collection of four mini-cases
Leaves open ended questions
Presents real life situations
And needs for ERM
Mini-Cases
BimConsultants Inc.
Nerds Galore
The Reluctant General Counsel
Transforming Risk Management at Akawini Copper
University of Cumberlands
2
Bim Consultants Inc.
Consulting firm
10 offices in Canada
3,000 staff
30 partners
“Customers are number one”
But revenue is stagnant
Opportunity to buy out competitor
Purchase would double size and sales
Negotiations must be kept confidential
University of Cumberlands
3
Nerds galore
Canadian IT service company
12 offices
1,000 employees
Grew from founder’s garage
Shift from small start-ups to medium size customers
High turnover of 20% is causing concern
Decreasing customer satisfaction
Steady revenue (for now)
Strategy from new HR VP
Attract the best talent
Retain good people
Manage talent
Optimize the use of people
Rely on outsourcers
Executive team workshop to explore HR risks
Inability to recruit people with needed skills
Loss of staff with key internal knowledge
Uncompetitive labor production
Increased departures of skilled technical staff
Loss of key business know-how
University of Cumberlands
4
The Reluctant General Counsel
Business Software Corporation (BSC)
Silicon Valley, CA
Annual revenue over $1 billion
Board wants ERM
Upper management supports establishing ERM
EVP of development and general counsel
Doesn’t want to be involved in ERM
Risk discussions could be discoverable in lawsuits
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Requires disclosure of risks
Recommendation is to not formally pursue ERM
University of Cumberlands
5
Transforming Risk Management at Akawini Copper
Akawini Copper
Mining company acquired by larger United Minerals
Single mine and plant • $774 million in revenue
1,500 employees
United Minerals implemented ISO 31000 framework
Substantially more sophisticated than Akawini’s RM
Launched project to transform Akawini RM to ERM
University of Cumberlands
6
Keyword Driven Testing
Dhwani patel
A keyword-driven test is an executable collection of keywords
Keyword-Driven Testing [1]
Type of functional automation testing framework known as table-driven testing or action word based testing.
Is a software testing methodology that separates test design from test development.
A keyword-driven test can be played back just like any other test.
Test case framework division [3]
Test step: description of action going to perform on test object.
Test object: it is the name of the web page object like username and password.
Action: is the name of action, which is going to perform on any action such as click, open browser, input, etc.
Test Data: Data can be any value which is needed by the object to perform any action, like username value for username field.
Project Goa ...
ERM Implementation ERM is essential for organizations.docxelbanglis
ERM Implementation
ERM is essential for organizations in managing risks and improve on opportunities related to the achievement of organizational objectives. Statoil and United Grain Growers have established an enterprise risks management that meets their company goals based on the challenges each of them is facing.
The primary difference between ERM in Statoil and United Grain Growers is that ERM will affect management at the latter. Additionally, ERM at United Grain Growers seeks to retrieve the company from financial constraints while at Statoil, ERM seeks to improve organizational performance. However, ERM at the two companies share some similarities. For instance, ERM at United Grain Growers seeks to identify and access principle risks. The same applies to Statoil which seeks to identify any potential risks during the exercise. Besides, the two companies have a strategic risk plan. A strategic plan is essential as it outlines the role of a manager, CEO and everyone involved in the steps of an ERM (Robert and Liebenberg, 2011). United Grain growers has a strategic plan to improve financial dividends while Statoil has a risk map and committee with outlined roles and responsibilities.
The Statoil ERM seems workable and productive meaning I can implement it is it were up to me. On the contrary, I will not implement the United Grain Growers ERM. In my opinion, the ERM lacks the potential to solve financial constraints that the company is experiencing. However, some parts of it are productive, but a merger comes in with other risks for the struggling company. For instance, a merger will lead to employee layoff which might put the company at a risk of losing some important skills (Chui, 2011). Additionally, the company assets might be miscalculated during financial evaluation leading to more losses.
Generally, the ERM at Statoil might be successful in future because it is based on company goals and values. On the contrary, UGG ERM might not succeed because there are many risks associated with its strategy for implementation.
References
Chui, B.S. 2011. A Risk Management Model for Merger and Acquisition.
Robert, E.H. and Liebenberg, A.P. (2011). The Value of Enterprise Risk Management. The
Journal of Risk and Insurance, 78(4).pp. 795-822.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.15396975.2011.01413.x
According to Brustbauer, 2016 Enterprise risk management help the company prepare for the uncertainties and disasters that may occur all along. Every business must identify the threats likely to face the business and come up with a contingency plan. Different companies faces different threats and uncertainties and therefore while coming up with the risk management plan one must consider the uniqueness of the enterprise and the likely threats to occur. These differences make the companies and business have different hierarchy of risks that are likely to occur. This paper is going to compare and contrast the enterprise risk management of the united g ...
Gandu Discussion-14COLLAPSETop of FormThe ERM implementati.docxshericehewat
Gandu
Discussion-14
COLLAPSE
Top of Form
The ERM implementation at Workers’ Compensation Fund and Zurich Insurance Group are similar in many ways. For example, both organizations have an established Chief Risk Officer (CRO) with distinct roles. The CRO position at Workers’ Compensation Fund was established in 2010, and the purpose of the office was to develop and monitor the organization’s ERM strategy, processes, and policies as directed by the CEO, the Risk Oversight Committee, and the Board (Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez, 2014, p. 209-10). Zurich Insurance Group also has a CRO whose central role is to provide the CEO, the Board, and the Risk Committee with risk-related information (Fraser et al., 2014, p. 258-59). Besides having similar roles, the CROs of both organizations report to the same authorities.
Both organizations also have an independent risk audit. At the Workers’ Compensation Fund, auditing is external, and the CRO introduced it in 2011 as a "third-party review” (Fraser et al., 2014, p. 215). Similarly, Zurich Insurance Group consults external expertise on risk matters. For example, the company seeks external knowledge from the Natural Catastrophe Advisory Council (Fraser et al., 2014, p. 261). Zurich Insurance Group, however, has an internal audit function that forms the "third line of defense" in its risk governance approach (p. 256). Another aspect that is conspicuously similar between the two organizations is the role of the Board in ERM. Both companies have a risk committee made up of board members. Workers’ Compensation Fund, the board’s ERM functions are carried out through the Risk Oversight Committee. At Zurich Insurance Group, a Board-level Risk Committee exists, and it defines the Board's Role in ERM. Also, ERM is considered a part of all business operations, including strategic planning and budgeting.
The implementation of ERM depends on the size of an organization and the level of risks it faces. In implementing an ERM, I would follow the strategies used by these two organizations because they offer a clear path to achieving ERM. A step-by-step process used to implement ERM is depicted, and it is initiated and governed by not only the CRO but also the CEO and the Board. In the future, ERM implementation will get better. New risk assessment matrices will make risk identification more comfortable, and the role of CRO's will become easier when all members of the organization, including CEOs and the Board of Directors, assume active roles in ERM implementation.
Reference
Fraser, J., Simkins, B., & Narvaez, K. (2014). Implementing enterprise risk management: Case studies and best practices. John Wiley & Sons.
Bottom of Form
Thumma
Discussion
COLLAPSE
Top of Form
The initial phase in making a successful hazard the executives framework is to comprehend the subjective differentiations among the kinds of dangers that associations face. Our field explore shows that dangers can be categorized as one of three classificatio ...
Problem 7. Dollars for WaitingJeffrey Swift has been a messenger.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 7. Dollars for Waiting?
Jeffrey Swift has been a messenger used by a couple of the local businesses where the Discrimina, Inc. machine shop is located. Sometimes he has done some extra errands inside the Discrimina building for a couple of hours. For the last several weeks, he has helped package items for shipment on Thursdays. Things have gone well, but Jeffrey is concerned because sometimes he has waited over two hours in the waiting room while waiting for the packaging to begin. He wouldn't mind but Discrimina pays only for packaging time, not for waiting time. He can never be certain when the parts will be ready for packaging because final quality checking time varies wildly.
Jeffrey has his own delivery business, but Discrimina has only paid him cash. Each time, Jeffrey has given the company a receipt for the cash. While he waits, he sometimes goes out for donuts for the crew. At other times, he plays games on his PDA or makes cell calls to friends.
Question
If Jeffrey Swift sues for the waiting time hours, what is the likely result and why? Write your answer in a Word document in 1-2 pages.
.
Problem 8-2B(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanation.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 8-2B
(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanations.
(Note, enter all accounts in one box.
The dates have been included to help with formatting).
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
1
2
3
4
5
(b) Enter the January 1, 2014 balances in Accounts Receivable and Allowance for Doubtful Accounts. Post the transactions to the ledger T Accounts
Be sure to post the amounts to the correct side of the T-Account!
Accounts Receivable
Bal.
(2)
(1)
(3)
(5)
(4)
(5)
Bal.
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts
(4)
Bal.
(5)
Bal.
(c)
Prepare the journal entry to record bad debt expense for 2014, assuming that aging the accounts receivable indicates that expected bad debts are $140,000.
Balance needed
...............................................................................
$
Balance before adjustment [see (b)]
................................................
Adjustment required
.......................................................................
$
The journal entry would therefore be as follows:
(d) Accounts Receivable Turnover Ratios:
Enter your answer here
Average Collection Period:
Enter your answer here
Problem 8-6B
(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanations.
(Note, enter all accounts in one box.
The dates have been included to help with formatting).
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
5
20
Feb
18
Apr
20
30
May
25
Aug
18
Sept.
1
Problem 9-2B
(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanations.
(Note, enter all accounts in one box.
The dates have been included to help with formatting).
If there are two entries for the same day, then you do not need to enter the date again.
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
April
1
May
1
May
1
June
1
Sept
1
PART B
Dec
31
31
(c)
Partial Balance Sheet
TONG CORPORATION
Partial Balance Sheet
December 31, 2014
Assets
Plant assets
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title (or contra account)
Amount
Total plant assets
Amount
Problem 9-7B
(a)
BUS 1
Year
Computation
Accumulated Depreciation
Amount
Amount
Amount
BUS 2
Year
Computation
Accumulated Depreciation
Amount
Amount
Amount
BUS 3
Year
Computation
Accumulated Depreciation
Amount
Amount
Amount
(b)
BUS 2
Year
Depreciation Expense
Amount
Amount
.
More Related Content
Similar to Scanned with CamScannerITS 835 enterprise risk managem.docx
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020Additional As.docxamit657720
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) – Chapter 3
Start Date: 26 April 2020 - 8:00 pm
Due Date: 21 May 2020 - 11:59 pm
(Note: please upload your answer on Moodle using Additional Assessment Submission Link)
Student Name:
Student ID:
Section:
1. Following table shows the sales of smart phones for the past several months. Use this data to answer the following questions.
Month
Products sold
3WMA Forecast
Exp. Smoothing Forecast
1
511
2
524
3
522
4
522
5
533
6
540
7
552
8
a. Find the forecast for month 8 using 3 month weighted moving average (3WMA) with weights (0.5, 0.3 and 0.2). The most recent day having the most weight. (15 Points)
b. Find the forecast for month 8 using exponential smoothing with the smoothing constant 0.2 (20 Points)
c. Compare the two methods using MSE as a measure of error. Which method is better for this data? (15 Points)
2. What does qualitative forecasting mean? When is qualitative forecasting used? Describe two qualitative techniques and indicate at least two advantages and two disadvantages for each technique. (30 Points)
3. Briefly describe the four components of time series data. (20 Points)
The End
1
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) Spring 2020
www.it-ebooks.info
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www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a dive.
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020Additional As.docxmccormicknadine86
Operations Management MGT 320 – Spring 2020
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) – Chapter 3
Start Date: 26 April 2020 - 8:00 pm
Due Date: 21 May 2020 - 11:59 pm
(Note: please upload your answer on Moodle using Additional Assessment Submission Link)
Student Name:
Student ID:
Section:
1. Following table shows the sales of smart phones for the past several months. Use this data to answer the following questions.
Month
Products sold
3WMA Forecast
Exp. Smoothing Forecast
1
511
2
524
3
522
4
522
5
533
6
540
7
552
8
a. Find the forecast for month 8 using 3 month weighted moving average (3WMA) with weights (0.5, 0.3 and 0.2). The most recent day having the most weight. (15 Points)
b. Find the forecast for month 8 using exponential smoothing with the smoothing constant 0.2 (20 Points)
c. Compare the two methods using MSE as a measure of error. Which method is better for this data? (15 Points)
2. What does qualitative forecasting mean? When is qualitative forecasting used? Describe two qualitative techniques and indicate at least two advantages and two disadvantages for each technique. (30 Points)
3. Briefly describe the four components of time series data. (20 Points)
The End
1
Additional Assessment (11.5 %) Spring 2020
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
www.it-ebooks.info
http://www.it-ebooks.info/
Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a dive.
ITS 835 Module Three Essay Guidelines and Rubric Topic .docxvrickens
ITS 835 Module Three Essay Guidelines and Rubric
Topic: Chapter 14 – “A Strategic Approach to Enterprise Risk Management at Zurich Insurance Group”
Overview: This case study focuses on how Zurich uses a variety of methodologies and tools to manage its business risk. Zurich's risk profiling is a
focused and disciplined approach to identifying, assessing, and monitoring holistic risks and improvement actions needed. By embedding this
methodology into its risk culture, this has helped ensure its risk management culture is consistent and effective across its various business units.
More information on Zurich's Strategic Risk Management work can be found at https://www.zurichna.com/en/risk
Review the case study in Chapter 14 of the textbook.
Please explain the following:
1. How do Zurich ERM tools help them better understand their existing and emerging risks?
2. How are Zurich’s risk roles and responsibilities impacting their risk culture?
3. Provide at least two examples of how Zurich has created new value through their ERM program.
Guidelines for Submission: Using APA 6th edition style standards, submit a Word document that is 2-4 pages in length (excluding title page,
references, and appendices) and include at least two credible scholarly references to support your findings. The UC Library is a good place to find
these sources. Be sure to cite and reference your work using the APA guides and essay template that are located in the courseroom.
Required elements:
Please ensure your paper complies APA 6th edition style guidelines. There is an essay template located under the Information link.
APA basics:
o Your essay should be typed, double-spaced on standard-sized paper (8.5" x 11")
o Use 1" margins on all sides, first line of all paragraphs is indented ½” from the margin
o Use 12 pt. Times New Roman font
Follow the outline provided above and use section headers to improve the readability of your paper. If I cannot read and understand it,
you will not earn credit for the content.
https://www.zurichna.com/en/risk
Critical Elements Proficient (100%) Needs Improvement (70%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Zurich ERM tools
Explains how Zurich’s ERM tools
help them better understand their
existing and emerging risks.
Provides short explanation of how
Zurich’s ERM tools help them better
understand their existing and
emerging risks. Explanation lacks
detail.
Does not explain how Zurich’s
ERM tools help them better
understand their existing and
emerging risks.
30
Zurich’s risk roles and
responsibilities
Describes how Zurich’s risk roles
and responsibilities impacting their
risk culture.
Provides short description of how
Zurich’s risk roles and responsibilities
impacting their risk culture.
Explanation lacks detail.
Does not describe how Zurich’s
risk roles and responsibilities
impacting their risk culture.
30
Examples that have created
new value through ERM
Provides example ...
Sources and Resources for RC004Informed Advocacy in Early .docxrosemariebrayshaw
Sources and Resources for RC004
Informed Advocacy in Early Childhood Care and Education: Making a Difference for Young Children and Families, pp. 107-111
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-628&srcou=6738
WEBSITE: KIDS COUNT DATA CENTER
http://datacenter.kidscount.org/topics
KIDS COUNT Data Center
Annie E. Casey Foundation. (2014). KIDS COUNT data center: Data topics. Retrieved from http://datacenter.kidscount.org/topics
WEBSITE: NATIONAL AND STATE FACTS
http://www.cwla.org/our-work/advocacy/
WEBSITE: U.S. CHILD STATE DATA
http://www.cwla.org/our-work/advocacy/
WEBSITE: DATA TOOLS
http://www.nccp.org/tools/
Consider how this information will be beneficial within the context of Part 1 of your Work Product.
WEBSITE: ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDHOOD EDUCATION INTERNATIONAL
http://www.acei.org/
WEBSITE: DIVISION FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD
http://www.dec-sped.org/
WEBSITE: INTERNATIONAL READING ASSOCIATION
http://www.reading.org/
WEBSITE: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE EDUCATION OF YOUNG CHILDREN
http://www.naeyc.org/
WEBSITE: NATIONAL BLACK CHILD DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE
http://www.nbcdi.org/
BOOK EXCERPT: DEVELOPING INITIATIVES
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-640&srcou=6738
The following links lead to early childhood advocacy initiatives that focus on social change on behalf of children, families, and the early childhood field.
WEBSITE: WORLDWIDE TEACHER SHORTAGE: REGIONAL AND GLOBAL IMPLICATIONS
http://www.businessinsider.com/theres-a-massive-global-teacher-shortage-2016-10
WEBSITE: LEGISLATIVE HOT TOPICS
https://www.literacyworldwide.org/
WEBSITE: TAKEN ACTION NOW
http://www.naeyc.org/policy/action
WEBSITE: WHAT WE DO: POLICY
http://www.nbcdi.org/what-we-do/policy
BOOK EXCERPT: COMPREHENSIVE DEVELOPMENTAL SCREENING
As you read this information and the Guided Notes , consider how these apply to Part 2 and Part 3 of your Work Product.
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-647&srcou=6738
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-747&srcou=6738
https://tempolearning.brightspace.com/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/quickLink.d2l?ou=6738&type=lti&rcode=walden-2320&srcou=6738
This information is beneficial in the context of Part 2 and Part 3 of your Work Product.
ARTICLE: HOW TO BE A VOICE FOR BABIES: USING DATA TO ADVOCATE EFFECTIVELY
https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/496-how-to-use-data-to-advocate-effectively
ARTICLE: EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION ABOUT THE EARLY YEARS: UNDERSTANDING THE BASICS OF FRAMING
https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/482-understand-the-basics-of-framing-to-communicate-effectively
ARTICLE: EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION ABOUT THE EARLY YEARS: THE ELEMENTS OF THE FRAME: PART ONE
https://www.zerotothree.org/resources/483-the-elements.
Chukss StrengthsShare your strengths twitterfacebook.docxmccormicknadine86
Chuks's Strengths
Share your strengths
twitter
facebook
Chuks - What makes you unique? Go learn more about your top Strengths below.
RANK
STRENGTH
1
Connectedness
LEARN MORE
RELATIONSHIP BUILDING
People who are especially talented in the Connectedness theme have faith in the links between all things. They believe there are few coincidences and that almost every event has a reason.
2
Includer
LEARN MORE
RELATIONSHIP BUILDING
People who are especially talented in the Includer theme are accepting of others. They show awareness of those who feel left out, and make an effort to include them.
3
Self-Assurance
LEARN MORE
INFLUENCING
People who are especially talented in the Self-Assurance theme feel confident in their ability to manage their own lives. They possess an inner compass that gives them confidence that their decisions are right.
4
Belief
LEARN MORE
EXECUTING
People who are especially talented in the Belief theme have certain core values that are unchanging. Out of these values emerges a defined purpose for their life.
5
Responsibility
LEARN MORE
EXECUTING
People who are especially talented in the Responsibility theme take psychological ownership of w
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Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk practitioners, to pro-
vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership
...
ITS 835 Module One Essay Guidelines and Rubric Topic C.docxvrickens
ITS 835 Module One Essay Guidelines and Rubric
Topic: Chapter 7 – “Turning the Organizational Pyramid Upside Down Ten Years of Evolution in Enterprise Risk Management at United Grain
Growers”
Overview: Few companies stand out as successful pioneers in enterprise risk management (ERM), especially one that undertook the initiative
almost 15 years ago. One such ERM pioneer was United Grain Growers (UGG), a conservative 100-year-old Winnipeg, Canada– based grain
handler and distributor of farm supplies. Review the case study in Chapter Seven (7) of the textbook to understand the details of their ERM
journey.
Answer the following questions regarding this case study:
1. Why does a more participative management style (“tipping the pyramid over”) lead to greater responsiveness to customers' needs,
increased accountability, and more innovative solutions to challenges than a hierarchical “command and control” structure?
2. Under what circumstances might the hierarchical “command and control” structure produce superior results?
3. What factors do you believe led UGG/ AU to be pioneers in ERM? Was it the industry/ company/ history/ circumstances? Was it a
changed organizational “culture” or perhaps good management? Describe the leading factor(s) in your response.
Guidelines for Submission: Using APA 6th edition style standards, submit a Word document that is 2-4 pages in length (excluding title page,
references, and appendices) and include at least two credible scholarly references to support your findings. The UC Library is a good place to find
these sources. Be sure to cite and reference your work using the APA guides and essay template that are located in the courseroom.
Required elements:
Please ensure your paper complies APA 6th edition style guidelines. There is an essay template located under the Information link.
APA basics:
o Your essay should be typed, double-spaced on standard-sized paper (8.5" x 11")
o Use 1" margins on all sides, first line of all paragraphs is indented ½” from the margin
o Use 12 pt. Times New Roman font
Follow the outline provided above and use section headers to improve the readability of your paper. If I cannot read and understand it,
you will not earn credit for the content.
Critical Elements Proficient (100%) Needs Improvement (70%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Participative management
style
Explains why a participative
management style led to greater
responsiveness to customers’
needs, increased accountability,
and more innovative solutions to
challenges.
Explains why a participative
management style led to greater
responsiveness to customers’ needs,
but does not explain how it
increased accountability, and more
innovative solutions to challenges.
Does not explains why a
participative management style
led to greater responsiveness to
customers’ needs, and does not
explain how it increased
accountability, and more
innovative solutions to
challenges. ...
Top of FormChapter 22 PPT - JAA Inc.–A Case Study in Creating Va.docxjuliennehar
Top of Form
Chapter 22 PPT - JAA Inc.–A Case Study in Creating Value from Uncertainty
1. How high do you assess the knowledge level of the business strategy throughout the company by the average employee? Is it your assessment that there is a robust understanding of JAA’s business strategy? Support your position with examples.
2. As you are aware, effective implementation of ISO 31000 involves effective design and implementation of a risk management framework and effective implementation of the risk management processes. This will be verified by incorporation of 11 key principles. Find an example in the case for each of the 11 principles in action.
3. If you compare the internal audit department at JAA to several that you know of currently in the marketplace, what are some of the major differences that you see at JAA that obviously have contributed to superior performance? What is unique and refreshing about the approach to the external audit as compared to what you have seen in industry?
Top of Form
Chapter 25 - Uses of Efficient Frontier Analysis in Strategic Risk Management
1. How does efficient frontier analysis (EFA) differ from other forms of complex risk assessment techniques?
2. What limitations might an analyst encounter through the use of EFA?
3. How can efficient frontier analysis results be communicated and utilized with nonmathematical decision makers?
Requirements:
· API Format, No Plagiarism, You must also use a scholarly source
· As a reminder, you must list every reference that you used to build your response then cite every reference within every sentence that you used it with a properly APA formatted citation (ABC, 2019). Citation is author last name and year.Bottom of FormBottom of Form
· You have to answer every question, No word limit. I need the answers for each and every question separately with citations matched to the references.
· Provide the answers in a word doc file for chap 22 and chap 25, like question and answers for 6 questions.
· I need the answers for each and every question separately with citations matched to the references.
Chapter 22: JAA Inc.—A Case Study in Creating Value from Uncertainty: Best Practices in Managing Risk. This case has several important take aways as follows.
· To study the importance of the communication process to the overall success of a company’s business objectives
· To understand the relationship of strategic objectives, context, stakeholders, and risk criteria and how these play a critical role in the overall effectiveness of risk management
· To understand the changing role for internal and external audit and the demands that are being placed on both groups to step up to the plateTo understand the role of the board and its various committees in a company’s overall effectiveness of risk managementTo understand the key organizations and materials from around the globe that are playing a profound thought leadership role in risk management to further enhance education/thinki ...
ITS 835Chapters 30, 31, 34Miscellaneous Case Studies on .docxvrickens
ITS 835
Chapters 30, 31, 34
Miscellaneous Case Studies on ERM and RIsk
Enterprise Risk Management
Professor Miguel Buleje
Overview
• Three case studies
• Alleged Corruption at Chessfield
• Bon Boulangerie
• Building an ERM Program at General Motors
• Different scenarios and organizations
• Useful in examining broader implications
• Look for similarities
Alleged Corruption at Chessfield
• Chessfield
• Fictional private American company in sports and entertainment
• HQ in NYC
• “Good ol’ boys” board
• Informal governance
• Whistle-blower
• CEO compensation very high (4x comparable peers)
• Potential environment for excessive risk taking
• Chessfield CEO requested independent governance
review
Chessfield, cont’d.
• Review included
• Document review – minimal documentation
• Interviews – substantial discontent and lack of confidence in
leadership
• CEO compensation
• Limited documentation to support decision
• Basis seemed to be long relationship with decision makers
• Industry standard metrics missing
• Risk management
• Few risk management protocols or controls
• Most processes were manual (i.e. no IT)
Chessfield, cont’d.
• Review resulted in 45 recommendations
• 43 from reviewer
• 2 added by regulator
• All but 2 recommendations were accepted, which were
• 3 longest serving board member resign
• A female be selected for directorship and compensation
committee
• Identify broad implications of this case
Bon Boulangerie
• Bakery in Oakville, Ontario
• When purchased, single site retail and café
• Ray Pane added wholesale operation
• Plan to expand wholesale business
• From 20km to 120km coverage
• Include grocery stores
• Add product line
• Goal: triple profits in 3 years
• What are the operational risks?
Building an ERM Program at General
Motors
• Background
• GM approach to ERM
• Game theory
• Looking forward
ERM at GM Background
• ERM program began in 2010
• ERM to help achieve competitive advantage
• New CEO
• GM bankruptcy in 2009
• CRO appointed
• Financial and Risk Policy Committee formed
• Risk officers identified and aligned to all CEO direct
reports
• GM embraced aggressive ERM
GM Approach to ERM
• ERM built on GM’s vision
• Design, build, and sell the world’s best vehicles
• Identify and manage key risks
• Bottom-up approach
• Focus on “what can go right”
• Lessons learned
• Gave responsibility of assessing risk probability and impact to senior
executives
• Replaced ranked risk list with tiered list
• Implemented a 5 point scale to measure
• Inherent risk
• Current risk
• Residual risk
Game Theory
Looking Forward
• Top risk attention in place
• Ready to add focus on day-to-day operational risks
• Developing program for operational control self-
assessment (CSA)
• Approach is a policy-based CSA
• Starts with simple yes-no questions to line managers
• Benefits of a policy-based program
• Policy can be leveraged to ensure results
• Helps to educ ...
Running head COMPANY SELECTION1COMPANY SELECTION4CO.docxhealdkathaleen
Running head: COMPANY SELECTION
1
COMPANY SELECTION
4
COMPANY SELECTION (Amazon)
Company Selection
Amazon Organization Background
According to the studies, Amazon is one of the multinational companies based in the USA. Its headquarters are located in Seattle, Washington. Amazon operates in the e-commerce business, digital streaming, and cloud computing and artificial intelligence. Recent news indicates that Amazon has had various organizational issues, especially on the leadership aspect (Ott, 2012).
Organization issues in Amazon
Insensitive management. Reports reveal that the employees with different personal hardships such as miscarriages, cancer and other personal problems were significantly faced with unfair judgements. Others were given limited time to recover from their issues, which created a lot of issues for the employees.
Unfair ranking system. The Amazon management holds annual organizational-level reviews to discuss and determine the ranking of the subordinates. The reviews start with a discussion concerning the lower-level employees in front of the senior managers. Consequently, the king of review system employees in the raking system is not correct. It leads to the discrimination of some employees while favoring others.
Lack of benefits. Benefits are essential in any company to boost the motivation of the workers. However, Amazon fails to provide its employees with benefits such as meals, personal wellness and other critical benefits that can motivate the employees. Hence, Amazon gives no priority to its workers. Instead, the new employees are required to repay a share of their signing bonus if one quits before the years’ time. Such acts are discriminative.
Why do such issues hinder Amazon organizational efficiency?
Organizational issues contribute to organization controversies. The organization issues in Amazon provides to workers turn over. Besides, an unfair ranking system contributes to a poor relationship between the management and the workers. Also, the lack of benefits lowers the morale of the workers, thus reducing organizational productivity (Robbins & Judge, 2012). Hence, for an organization to succeed ant attain its set objective organizational issues should be avoided.
References
Ott, J. S. (2012). The organizational culture perspective (pp. 221-243). Chicago: Dorsey Press.
Robbins, S. P., & Judge, T. (2012). Essentials of organizational behavior.
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www.it-ebooks.info
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Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten students on the ...
ITS 835Chapter 12Measuring Performance at mariuse18nolet
ITS 835
Chapter 12
Measuring Performance at Intuit
Enterprise Risk Management
Dr. James C. Hyatt
Miguel Buleje
Introduction
Intuit’s ERM Journey
ERM Maturity Model
Benefits of Measuring Performance in ERM Models
ERM Performance Measurement and Reporting
Conclusion
Intuit’s ERM Journey
INTRO to Intuit: Biz and Financial Software Corporation. Offerings include QuickBooks, Quicken, Turbo Tax
Began with ad hoc risk management
Very common entry point
Escalated to ERM when seminal event occurred
Desire was to stop firefighting and start prevention.
Proactive approach, as resources were pulled from Operations
Intuit ERM Core Principles
Enterprise-wide risk framework
Risk assessment is ongoing
Focus on most significant risks
Ownership and accountability
Measure and monitor performance
ERM Maturity Model
Risk Management Maturity Model
Stakeholders Value increases as Risk Management Capability Increase
Ad Hoc Risk Management - Starting Point
Targeted Risk Management – progress and next step. More proactive. Organized.
Integrated Risk Framework – Really taking this the next level with formal framework. Value starts to increase
Risk Intelligence - Feedback loop. Really taking advantage to predict, and use intelligence to take action.
Risk Leadership – Move from Reactive to Proactive. Optimize and Capitalize positive outcomes around risk.
4
Benefits of Measuring Performance in ERM Models
Key Performance Indicators (KPI)
Based on business objectives
Quantitative and qualitative KPI
Leading (looking into future/ predictive approach) and
Lagging (trending / historical performance) indicators
Input, process, and output indicators ( optimized for end to end processes).
KPIs must be
Tangible
Flexible
Standardized
Outcome or objective focused
ERM Performance Measurement and Reporting
First evolution - ERM process adoption
Second evolution – Risk Mitigation Process Management
Third Evolution – Multidimensional Risk Management Performance Measurement
Outcome: executive dashboard for reporting.
ERM Process Adoption
7
Risk Mitigation Process Management
Multidimensional Risk Management Performance Measurement
3er Evolution
Culmination of INTUIT enterprise risk management: Dashboards
KPI status by risk.
Clear where attention goes, by Risk .
They do not care about green. Focus on Reds and Yellow.
At a glance exes are able to determine what risk would cause issues.
9
Conclusion
At Intuit, risk management is everyone’s responsibility
ERM must be a core business competency
Coordination is a key to success
ERM Recognizes
Upside opportunity
Downside risk
ERM process is regularly audited
ERM is an integral part of Intuit’s operating model
Sheet1TitleYearLengthViolence timeInjuriesFatal injuriesGood/neutral injuriesGood/neutral fatalitiesBad injuriesBad fatalitiesSnow White and the Seven Dwarfs19375040474211011Fantasia19407200307111100Pinoc ...
For this homework activity, you will find and examine indicators o.docxshericehewat
For this homework activity, you will find and examine indicators of urbanization for your four selected countries. Compile Parts A, B, and C into a single document (Save as a PDF file type)
There are three parts to this exercise:
1. Urban growth trends (Table)
2. Largest cities (List and screen shots)
3. Discussion (written narrative)
Part A: Urban growth trends
Create a table that includes the following 5 urban growth indicators for your four countries. Links to finding the urban growth indicators are outlined below.
My four countries are: Afghanistan, Philippines, Mexico, Japan
Table: Urban growth trends (SAMPLE)
Ireland
Ukraine
Tajikistan
Percentage of population in urban areas
Percentage urban of region or sub-region (please name the region)
Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
1950-1955
Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
1990-1995
Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
2010-2015
Informal Employment (Labor) Share of Total
· Percentage of population in urban and rural areascan be found here https://population.un.org/wup/Country-Profiles/
· Percentage urban by region or subregioncan also be found here https://population.un.org/wup/Country-Profiles/ (please specify the region or sub-region)
· Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
· https://population.un.org/wup/
· Select: Interactive Data
· Select:Average Annual Rate of Change of the Urban Population (per cent)
· Use regional nested lists to select (check box) all four of your countries.
· Click Next
· On the year selection page, select only these three time periods (blue indicates it is selected):
· 1950-1955
· 1990-1995
· 2010-2015
· Click next
· Informal Employment (Labor) Share of Total, Non-Agricultural (Percent)
· This data can be accessed here on Google Public Data:
· https://www.google.com/publicdata/explore?ds=n4ff2muj8bh2a_&ctype=l&strail=false&bcs=d&nselm=h&met_y=LABINFORMSHR&fdim_y=scenario:1&scale_y=lin&ind_y=false&rdim=world&idim=world:world&ifdim=world&ind=false
Part B: Largest Cities
For Part B, create a list of the 5 largest cities for each country, and insert screenshots of the Urban Population by Size Class of Urban Settlement.
Create a list of the five largest cities for your countries.
Option 1:
· https://population.un.org/wup/
· Select: Interactive Data
· Select: Annual Population of Urban Agglomerations with 300,000 or more in 2018 (thousands)
· Use regional nested lists to select (check box) all four of your countries.
· Click Next
· On the year selection page, just click “Next” (this accepts the default selection of every 5 years between 1950 and 2035)
· For each country, list the 5 largest cities and the population in 1950,2015, and 2035. (Some countries will not have 5 cities listed. Others will have numerous cities).
Option 2: (if option 1 does not produce much information)
· Google search: “ largest cities [enter your ...
ITS 835 enterprise risk managementChapter 26-29Review of 4 M.docxvrickens
ITS 835 enterprise risk management
Chapter 26-29
Review of 4 Mini case studies on ERM and Risk
University of Cumberlands
1
overview
Collection of four mini-cases
Leaves open ended questions
Presents real life situations
And needs for ERM
Mini-Cases
BimConsultants Inc.
Nerds Galore
The Reluctant General Counsel
Transforming Risk Management at Akawini Copper
University of Cumberlands
2
Bim Consultants Inc.
Consulting firm
10 offices in Canada
3,000 staff
30 partners
“Customers are number one”
But revenue is stagnant
Opportunity to buy out competitor
Purchase would double size and sales
Negotiations must be kept confidential
University of Cumberlands
3
Nerds galore
Canadian IT service company
12 offices
1,000 employees
Grew from founder’s garage
Shift from small start-ups to medium size customers
High turnover of 20% is causing concern
Decreasing customer satisfaction
Steady revenue (for now)
Strategy from new HR VP
Attract the best talent
Retain good people
Manage talent
Optimize the use of people
Rely on outsourcers
Executive team workshop to explore HR risks
Inability to recruit people with needed skills
Loss of staff with key internal knowledge
Uncompetitive labor production
Increased departures of skilled technical staff
Loss of key business know-how
University of Cumberlands
4
The Reluctant General Counsel
Business Software Corporation (BSC)
Silicon Valley, CA
Annual revenue over $1 billion
Board wants ERM
Upper management supports establishing ERM
EVP of development and general counsel
Doesn’t want to be involved in ERM
Risk discussions could be discoverable in lawsuits
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
Requires disclosure of risks
Recommendation is to not formally pursue ERM
University of Cumberlands
5
Transforming Risk Management at Akawini Copper
Akawini Copper
Mining company acquired by larger United Minerals
Single mine and plant • $774 million in revenue
1,500 employees
United Minerals implemented ISO 31000 framework
Substantially more sophisticated than Akawini’s RM
Launched project to transform Akawini RM to ERM
University of Cumberlands
6
Keyword Driven Testing
Dhwani patel
A keyword-driven test is an executable collection of keywords
Keyword-Driven Testing [1]
Type of functional automation testing framework known as table-driven testing or action word based testing.
Is a software testing methodology that separates test design from test development.
A keyword-driven test can be played back just like any other test.
Test case framework division [3]
Test step: description of action going to perform on test object.
Test object: it is the name of the web page object like username and password.
Action: is the name of action, which is going to perform on any action such as click, open browser, input, etc.
Test Data: Data can be any value which is needed by the object to perform any action, like username value for username field.
Project Goa ...
ERM Implementation ERM is essential for organizations.docxelbanglis
ERM Implementation
ERM is essential for organizations in managing risks and improve on opportunities related to the achievement of organizational objectives. Statoil and United Grain Growers have established an enterprise risks management that meets their company goals based on the challenges each of them is facing.
The primary difference between ERM in Statoil and United Grain Growers is that ERM will affect management at the latter. Additionally, ERM at United Grain Growers seeks to retrieve the company from financial constraints while at Statoil, ERM seeks to improve organizational performance. However, ERM at the two companies share some similarities. For instance, ERM at United Grain Growers seeks to identify and access principle risks. The same applies to Statoil which seeks to identify any potential risks during the exercise. Besides, the two companies have a strategic risk plan. A strategic plan is essential as it outlines the role of a manager, CEO and everyone involved in the steps of an ERM (Robert and Liebenberg, 2011). United Grain growers has a strategic plan to improve financial dividends while Statoil has a risk map and committee with outlined roles and responsibilities.
The Statoil ERM seems workable and productive meaning I can implement it is it were up to me. On the contrary, I will not implement the United Grain Growers ERM. In my opinion, the ERM lacks the potential to solve financial constraints that the company is experiencing. However, some parts of it are productive, but a merger comes in with other risks for the struggling company. For instance, a merger will lead to employee layoff which might put the company at a risk of losing some important skills (Chui, 2011). Additionally, the company assets might be miscalculated during financial evaluation leading to more losses.
Generally, the ERM at Statoil might be successful in future because it is based on company goals and values. On the contrary, UGG ERM might not succeed because there are many risks associated with its strategy for implementation.
References
Chui, B.S. 2011. A Risk Management Model for Merger and Acquisition.
Robert, E.H. and Liebenberg, A.P. (2011). The Value of Enterprise Risk Management. The
Journal of Risk and Insurance, 78(4).pp. 795-822.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.15396975.2011.01413.x
According to Brustbauer, 2016 Enterprise risk management help the company prepare for the uncertainties and disasters that may occur all along. Every business must identify the threats likely to face the business and come up with a contingency plan. Different companies faces different threats and uncertainties and therefore while coming up with the risk management plan one must consider the uniqueness of the enterprise and the likely threats to occur. These differences make the companies and business have different hierarchy of risks that are likely to occur. This paper is going to compare and contrast the enterprise risk management of the united g ...
Gandu Discussion-14COLLAPSETop of FormThe ERM implementati.docxshericehewat
Gandu
Discussion-14
COLLAPSE
Top of Form
The ERM implementation at Workers’ Compensation Fund and Zurich Insurance Group are similar in many ways. For example, both organizations have an established Chief Risk Officer (CRO) with distinct roles. The CRO position at Workers’ Compensation Fund was established in 2010, and the purpose of the office was to develop and monitor the organization’s ERM strategy, processes, and policies as directed by the CEO, the Risk Oversight Committee, and the Board (Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez, 2014, p. 209-10). Zurich Insurance Group also has a CRO whose central role is to provide the CEO, the Board, and the Risk Committee with risk-related information (Fraser et al., 2014, p. 258-59). Besides having similar roles, the CROs of both organizations report to the same authorities.
Both organizations also have an independent risk audit. At the Workers’ Compensation Fund, auditing is external, and the CRO introduced it in 2011 as a "third-party review” (Fraser et al., 2014, p. 215). Similarly, Zurich Insurance Group consults external expertise on risk matters. For example, the company seeks external knowledge from the Natural Catastrophe Advisory Council (Fraser et al., 2014, p. 261). Zurich Insurance Group, however, has an internal audit function that forms the "third line of defense" in its risk governance approach (p. 256). Another aspect that is conspicuously similar between the two organizations is the role of the Board in ERM. Both companies have a risk committee made up of board members. Workers’ Compensation Fund, the board’s ERM functions are carried out through the Risk Oversight Committee. At Zurich Insurance Group, a Board-level Risk Committee exists, and it defines the Board's Role in ERM. Also, ERM is considered a part of all business operations, including strategic planning and budgeting.
The implementation of ERM depends on the size of an organization and the level of risks it faces. In implementing an ERM, I would follow the strategies used by these two organizations because they offer a clear path to achieving ERM. A step-by-step process used to implement ERM is depicted, and it is initiated and governed by not only the CRO but also the CEO and the Board. In the future, ERM implementation will get better. New risk assessment matrices will make risk identification more comfortable, and the role of CRO's will become easier when all members of the organization, including CEOs and the Board of Directors, assume active roles in ERM implementation.
Reference
Fraser, J., Simkins, B., & Narvaez, K. (2014). Implementing enterprise risk management: Case studies and best practices. John Wiley & Sons.
Bottom of Form
Thumma
Discussion
COLLAPSE
Top of Form
The initial phase in making a successful hazard the executives framework is to comprehend the subjective differentiations among the kinds of dangers that associations face. Our field explore shows that dangers can be categorized as one of three classificatio ...
Problem 7. Dollars for WaitingJeffrey Swift has been a messenger.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 7. Dollars for Waiting?
Jeffrey Swift has been a messenger used by a couple of the local businesses where the Discrimina, Inc. machine shop is located. Sometimes he has done some extra errands inside the Discrimina building for a couple of hours. For the last several weeks, he has helped package items for shipment on Thursdays. Things have gone well, but Jeffrey is concerned because sometimes he has waited over two hours in the waiting room while waiting for the packaging to begin. He wouldn't mind but Discrimina pays only for packaging time, not for waiting time. He can never be certain when the parts will be ready for packaging because final quality checking time varies wildly.
Jeffrey has his own delivery business, but Discrimina has only paid him cash. Each time, Jeffrey has given the company a receipt for the cash. While he waits, he sometimes goes out for donuts for the crew. At other times, he plays games on his PDA or makes cell calls to friends.
Question
If Jeffrey Swift sues for the waiting time hours, what is the likely result and why? Write your answer in a Word document in 1-2 pages.
.
Problem 8-2B(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanation.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 8-2B
(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanations.
(Note, enter all accounts in one box.
The dates have been included to help with formatting).
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
1
2
3
4
5
(b) Enter the January 1, 2014 balances in Accounts Receivable and Allowance for Doubtful Accounts. Post the transactions to the ledger T Accounts
Be sure to post the amounts to the correct side of the T-Account!
Accounts Receivable
Bal.
(2)
(1)
(3)
(5)
(4)
(5)
Bal.
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts
(4)
Bal.
(5)
Bal.
(c)
Prepare the journal entry to record bad debt expense for 2014, assuming that aging the accounts receivable indicates that expected bad debts are $140,000.
Balance needed
...............................................................................
$
Balance before adjustment [see (b)]
................................................
Adjustment required
.......................................................................
$
The journal entry would therefore be as follows:
(d) Accounts Receivable Turnover Ratios:
Enter your answer here
Average Collection Period:
Enter your answer here
Problem 8-6B
(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanations.
(Note, enter all accounts in one box.
The dates have been included to help with formatting).
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
5
20
Feb
18
Apr
20
30
May
25
Aug
18
Sept.
1
Problem 9-2B
(a) Journalize the transactions, including explanations.
(Note, enter all accounts in one box.
The dates have been included to help with formatting).
If there are two entries for the same day, then you do not need to enter the date again.
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
April
1
May
1
May
1
June
1
Sept
1
PART B
Dec
31
31
(c)
Partial Balance Sheet
TONG CORPORATION
Partial Balance Sheet
December 31, 2014
Assets
Plant assets
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title (or contra account)
Amount
Total plant assets
Amount
Problem 9-7B
(a)
BUS 1
Year
Computation
Accumulated Depreciation
Amount
Amount
Amount
BUS 2
Year
Computation
Accumulated Depreciation
Amount
Amount
Amount
BUS 3
Year
Computation
Accumulated Depreciation
Amount
Amount
Amount
(b)
BUS 2
Year
Depreciation Expense
Amount
Amount
.
Problem 14-4AFinancial information for Ernie Bishop Company is pre.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 14-4A
Financial information for Ernie Bishop Company is presented below.
ERNIE BISHOP COMPANY
Balance Sheets
December 31
Assets
2013
2012
Cash
$ 70,000
$ 65,000
Short-term investments
52,000
40,000
Receivables (net)
98,000
80,000
Inventory
125,000
135,000
Prepaid expenses
29,000
23,000
Land
130,000
130,000
Building and equipment (net)
168,000
175,000
$672,000
$648,000
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Notes payable
$100,000
100,000
Accounts payable
48,000
42,000
Accrued liabilities
44,000
40,000
Bonds payable, due 2016
150,000
150,000
Common stock, $10 par
200,000
200,000
Retained earnings
130,000
116,000
$672,000
$648,000
ERNIE BISHOP COMPANY
Income Statement
For the Years Ended December 31
2013
2012
Net sales
$858,000
$798,000
Cost of goods sold
611,000
575,000
Gross profit
247,000
223,000
Operating expenses
204,500
181,000
Net income
$ 42,500
$ 42,000
Additional information:
1.
Inventory at the beginning of 2012 was $118,000.
2.
Total assets at the beginning of 2012 were $632,000.
3.
No common stock transactions occurred during 2012 or 2013.
4.
All sales were on account.
5.
Receivables (net) at the beginning of 2012 were $88,000.
(a)
Indicate, by using ratios, the change in liquidity and profitability of Ernie Bishop Company from 2012 to 2013.
(Round Earnings per share to 2 decimal places, e.g. 1.65, and all others to 1 decimal place, e.g. 6.8 or 6.8% .)
2012
2013
Change
LIQUIDITY
Current
Acid-test
Receivables turnover
Inventory turnover
PROFITABILITY
Profit margin
Asset turnover
Return on assets
Earnings per share
$
(b)
Given below are three independent situations and a ratio that may be affected. For each situation, compute the affected ratio (1) as of December 31, 2013, and (2) as of December 31, 2014, after giving effect to the situation. Net income for 2014 was $50,000. Total assets on December 31, 2014, were $700,000.
Situation
Ratio
(1)
18,000 shares of common stock were sold at par on July 1, 2014.
Return on common stockholders’ equity
(2)
All of the notes payable were paid in 2014. The only change in liabilities was that the notes payable were paid.
Debt to total assets
(3)
Market price of common stock was $9 on December 31, 2013, and $12.50 on December 31, 2014.
Price-earnings ratio
2013
2014
Change
Return on common stockholders’ equity
Debt to total assets
Price-earnings ratio
Click if you would like to Show Work for this question:
Open Show Work
.
Problem and solution essay about the difficulties of speaking Engli.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem and solution essay about the difficulties of speaking English language for international students in the foriegn country.
- introduction with good thesis statement( start with transition word and include the problem and solution)
- first body paragraph ( define and explain the problem)
- second body paragraph. give the solution
- conclusion
two paraphrase
.
problem 8-6 (LO 4) Worksheet, direct and indirect holding, interco.docxjeffsrosalyn
problem 8-6 (LO 4) Worksheet, direct and indirect holding, intercompany mer-
chandise,
machine. The
following
diagram
depicts
the
relationships
among
Mary
Company, John Company, and Joan Company on December 31, 2014:
Mary
John
Owns 60%
Owns 40%
Joan
Owns 50%
Mary Company purchases its interest in John Company on January 1, 2012, for $204,000.
John Company purchases its interest in Joan Company on January 1, 2013, for $75,000. Mary
Company purchases its interest in Joan Company on January 1, 2014, for $72,000. All invest-
ments are accounted for under the equity method. Control over Joan Company does not occur
until the January 1, 2014, acquisition. Thus, a D&D schedule will be prepared for the invest-
ment in Joan as of January 1, 2014.
The following stockholders’ equities are available:
John
Joan
Company
December31
,
December 31
2011
2012
2013
Commonstock ($10par). ........... ............
$150,000
Commonstock ($10par). ........... ............
$100,000
$100,000
Paid-incapitalinexcess of par ............. ..... 75,000
Retained earnings .............................
75,000
50,000
80,000
Totalequity ......... ........... ............
$300,000
$150,000
$180,000
On January 2, 2014, Joan Company sells a machine to Mary Company for $20,000. The
machine has a book value of $10,000, with an estimated life of five years and is being depre-
ciated on a straight-line basis.
John Company sells $20,000 of merchandise to Joan Company during 2014 to realize a gross
profit of 30%. Of this merchandise, $5,000 remains in Joan Company’s December 31, 2014,
inventory. Joan owes John $3,000 on December 31, 2014, for merchandise delivered during
2014.
Trial balances of the three companies prepared from general ledger account balances on
December 31, 2014, are as follows:
Mary
John
Joan
Cash ...................... ........... ......
62,500
60,000
30,000
Accounts Receivable ........................... 200,000
55,000
30,000
Inventory ................... ........... ......
360,000
80,000
50,000
Investmentin JohnCompany........... ........ 270,000
Investmentin JoanCompany........... .......... 86,000
107,500
Property, Plant,andEquipment.... ........... ...2,250,000
850,000
350,000
Accumulated Depreciation ....... ........... .... (938,000)
(377,500)
(121,800
Mary
John
Joan
Intangibles.... ........... ........... .........
15,000
Accounts Payable ............... ........... ...
(215,500)
(61,000)
(22,000)
AccruedExpenses............... ........... ...
(12,000)
(4,000)
(1,200)
BondsPayable. ........... ........... .........
(500,000)
(300,000)
(100,000)
Common Stock($5par) ........................
(500,000)
Common Stock($10par) ....................... (150,000)
Common Stock($10par) ....................... (100,000)
Paid-In Capital inExcessof Par ...... ........... (700,000)
(75,000).
Problem 4-5ADevine Brown opened Devine’s Carpet Cleaners on March .docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 4-5A
Devine Brown opened Devine’s Carpet Cleaners on March 1. During March, the following transactions were completed.
Mar. 1
Invested $10,940 cash in the business.
1
Purchased used truck for $6,050, paying $3,025 cash and the balance on account.
3
Purchased cleaning supplies for $1,128 on account.
5
Paid $1,788 cash on one-year insurance policy effective March 1.
14
Billed customers $4,723 for cleaning services.
18
Paid $1,538 cash on amount owed on truck and $402 on amount owed on cleaning supplies.
20
Paid $1,648 cash for employee salaries.
21
Collected $1,926 cash from customers billed on March 14.
28
Billed customers $2,561 for cleaning services.
31
Paid gasoline for month on truck $393.
31
Withdrew $769 cash for personal use.
(a)
Your answer is correct.
Journalize the March transactions.
(Record entries in the order displayed in the problem statement. Credit account titles are automatically indented when amount is entered. Do not indent manually.)
Date
Account Titles and Explanation
Debit
Credit
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
J1
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
Click if you would like to Show Work for this question:
Open Show Work
SHOW LIST OF ACCOUNTS
SHOW ANSWER
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
LINK TO TEXT
Attempts: 2 of 5 used
(b) and (c)
Your answer is partially correct. Try again.
Prepare a trial balance at March 31 on a worksheet. Enter the following adjustments on the worksheet and complete the worksheet.
(1)
Earned but unbilled revenue at March 31 was $843.
(2)
Depreciation on equipment for the month was $463.
(3)
One-twelfth of the insurance expired.
(4)
An inventory count shows $273 of cleaning supplies on hand at March 31.
(5)
Accrued but unpaid employee salaries were $598.
DEVINE’S CARPET CLEANERS
Worksheet
For the Month Ended March 31, 2012
Trial Balance
Adjustments
Adjusted Trial Balance
Income Statement
Balance Sheet
Account Titles
Dr.
Cr.
Dr.
Cr.
Dr.
Cr.
Dr.
Cr.
Dr.
Cr.
Cash
[removed]
[removed]
[removed]
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[removed]
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Accounts Receivable
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Problem 1-4A (Part Level Submission)Matt Stiner started a delivery.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 1-4A (Part Level Submission)
Matt Stiner started a delivery service, Stiner Deliveries, on June 1, 2014. The following transactions occurred during the month of June.
June 1
Stockholders invested $14,493 cash in the business in exchange for common stock.
2
Purchased a used van for deliveries for $14,932. Matt paid $3,189 cash and signed a note payable for the remaining balance.
3
Paid $669 for office rent for the month.
5
Performed $4,502 of services on account.
9
Declared and paid $203 in cash dividends.
12
Purchased supplies for $109 on account.
15
Received a cash payment of $1,468 for services provided on June 5.
17
Purchased gasoline for $124 on account.
20
Received a cash payment of $1,385 for services provided.
23
Made a cash payment of $531 on the note payable.
26
Paid $122 for utilities.
29
Paid for the gasoline purchased on account on June 17.
30
Paid $1,255 for employee salaries.
(a)
Show the effects of the previous transactions on the accounting equation.
(If a transaction causes a decrease in Assets, Liabilities or Stockholders' Equity, place a negative sign (or parentheses) in front of the amount entered for the particular Asset, Liability or Equity item that was reduced. See Illustration 1-8 for example.)
STINER DELIVERIES
Assets
=
Liabilities
+
Stockholders' Equity
Retained Earnings
Date
Cash
+
Accounts
Receivable
+
Supplies
+
Equipment
=
Notes
Payable
+
Accounts
Payable
+
Common
Stock
+
Revenues
–
Expenses
–
Dividends
June 1
$
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$
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$
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$
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PROBLEM 5-5BPrepare a correct detailed multiple-step income stat.docxjeffsrosalyn
PROBLEM 5-5B
Prepare a correct detailed multiple-step income statement.
Assume a tax rate of 25%.
WRIGHT COMPANY
Income Statement
For the Month Ended December 31, 2014
Sales Revenues
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Net Sales
Cost of goods sold
Gross profit
Amount
Operating Expenses
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Account title
Amount
Total operating expenses
Amount
Income from operations
Amount
Other revenues and gains
Account title
Amount
Other expenses and losses
Account title
Amount
Amount (Total)
Income before income taxes
Income tax expense
Net Income
P5-5B
An inexperienced accountant prepared this condensed income statement for
Wright Company, a retail firm that has been in business for a number of years.
WRIGHT COMPANY
Income Statement
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
Revenues
Net sales $952,000
Other revenues 16,000
968,000
Cost of goods sold 548,000
Gross profit 420,000
Operating expenses
Selling expenses 160,000
Administrative expenses
104,000
264,000
Net earnings $156,000
As an experienced, knowledgeable accountant, you review the statement and determine
the following facts.
1. Net sales consist of sales $972,000, less freight-out on merchandise sold $20,000.
2. Other revenues consist of sales discounts $12,000 and interest revenue $4,000.
3. Selling expenses consist of salespersons’ salaries $88,000; depreciation on equip-
ment $4,000; sales returns and allowances $46,000; advertising $12,000; and sales
commissions $10,000. All compensation should be recorded as Salaries and Wages
Expense.
4. Administrative expenses consist of office salaries $54,000; dividends $14,000; utili-
ties $13,000; interest expense $3,000; and rent expense $20,000, which includes
prepayments totaling $2,000 for the first month of 2015. The utilities represent
utilities paid. At December 31, utility expense of $3,000 has been incurred but not
paid.
Problem 6-2B
(a) Determine the Cost of Goods Available for Sale
Date
Explanation
Units
Unit Cost
Total Cost
Total
(b) Determine the ending inventory and cost of goods sold under each of the assumed cost flow methods.
Prove the accuracy of the cost of goods sold under FIFO and LIFO.
FIFO
(1) Ending Inventory
(2) Cost of Goods Sold
Date
Units
Unit Cost
Total Cost
Cost of goods available for sale
Amount
Amount
Amount
Less: ending inventory
Amount
Amount
Amount
Total
Amount
Total
Amount
Cost of Goods Sold
Amount
Proof of Cost of Goods Sold (FIFO)
Date
Units
Unit Cost
Total Cost
Amount
Amount
Amount
Amount
Amount
Amount
Amount
Amount
Total
Amount
Total
Amount
LIFO
(1) Ending Inventory
(2) Cost of Goods Sold
Date
Units
Unit Cost
Total Cost
Cost of goods available for sale
Amount
Amount
Amount
Less: ending inventory
Amount
Amount
Amount
Total
Amount
Total
Amount
Cost of Goods Sold
Amount
Proof of .
Problem 12-9ACondensed financial data of Odgers Inc. follow.ODGE.docxjeffsrosalyn
Problem 12-9A
Condensed financial data of Odgers Inc. follow.
ODGERS INC.
Comparative Balance Sheets
December 31
Assets
2014
2013
Cash
$ 147,864
$ 88,572
Accounts receivable
160,674
69,540
Inventory
205,875
188,216
Prepaid expenses
51,972
47,580
Long-term investments
252,540
199,470
Plant assets
521,550
443,775
Accumulated depreciation
(91,500
)
(95,160
)
Total
$1,248,975
$941,993
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Accounts payable
$ 186,660
$ 123,159
Accrued expenses payable
30,195
38,430
Bonds payable
201,300
267,180
Common stock
402,600
320,250
Retained earnings
428,220
192,974
Total
$1,248,975
$941,993
ODGERS INC.
Income Statement Data
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
Sales revenue
$710,882
Less:
Cost of goods sold
$247,892
Operating expenses, excluding depreciation
22,710
Depreciation expense
85,095
Income tax expense
49,922
Interest expense
8,656
Loss on disposal of plant assets
13,725
428,000
Net income
$ 282,882
Additional information:
1.
New plant assets costing $183,000 were purchased for cash during the year.
2.
Old plant assets having an original cost of $105,225 and accumulated depreciation of $88,755 were sold for $2,745 cash.
3.
Bonds payable matured and were paid off at face value for cash.
4.
A cash dividend of $47,636 was declared and paid during the year.
Prepare a statement of cash flows using the indirect method.
(Show amounts that decrease cash flow with either a - sign e.g. -15,000 or in parenthesis e.g. (15,000).)
ODGERS INC.
Statement of Cash Flows
For the Year Ended December 31, 2014
$
$
$
[removed]
.
Problem 13-6AIrwin Corporation has been authorized to issue 20,80.docxjeffsrosalyn
*Problem 13-6A
Irwin Corporation has been authorized to issue 20,800 shares of $100 par value, 10%, noncumulative preferred stock
and 981,000 shares of no-par common stock. The corporation assigned a $2.50 stated value to the common stock. At
December 31, 2014, the ledger contained the following balances pertaining to stockholders’ equity.
The preferred stock was issued for land having a fair value of $142,900. All common stock issued was for cash. In
November, 1,500 shares of common stock were purchased for the treasury at a per share cost of $14. In
December, 500 shares of treasury stock were sold for $15 per share. No dividends were declared in 2014.
Preferred Stock $119,000
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Par—Preferred Stock 23,900
Common Stock 981,000
Paid-in Capital in Excess of Stated Value—Common Stock 1,781,300
Treasury Stock (1,000 common shares) 14,000
Paid-in Capital from Treasury Stock 500
Retained Earnings 81,600
.
Prior to posting in this discussion, completeThe Parking Garage.docxjeffsrosalyn
Prior to posting in this discussion, complete
The Parking Garage
scenario interactivity module and view the video,
This is Water by David Foster Wallace
. Reflect on what you have seen and recall a time when you experienced simplistic and unfounded stereotypical thinking. What could you have done differently? What is something that you need to work on in the future to become a better critical thinker? 200 words
.
Prior to engaging in this discussion, read Chapters 10 and 11 in y.docxjeffsrosalyn
Prior to engaging in this discussion, read Chapters 10 and 11 in your text as well as the “Steps for Effective Discharge Planning” article, and review any relevant Instructor Guidance.
For this discussion, refer to the information in the
“Introduction to the Miller Family”
document.
Select one of the family members below whose medical condition has the potential to have worsened to the point that they would need to be hospitalized. Once you have chosen your subject, create a discharge scenario. Each of these family members has been introduced in an earlier assignment. Be sure to review your materials for that assignment including any relevant instructor feedback.
Option 1:
Elías - leukemia
Option 2:
Lila - diabetes (IDDM)
Option 3:
Sam - liver disease caused by heavy drinking
Option 4:
Lucy - bipolar disorder and serious substance abuse (dual diagnosis)
In your initial post, create and present a possible scenario in order to respond to the subject’s discharge from the hospital. See earlier assignments for samples of how to begin crafting the scenario for your subject. Remember to be creative, refer to the “Introduction to the Miller Family” document, and include as much detailed information as appropriate. Be sure to address the following points in your initial post.
Describe the specific issues that need to be addressed when discharging this patient.
Briefly identify who (individuals, professionals, agencies, or organizations) might be identified in the plan, what needs to be done, and when it should happen.
Identify community resources (e.g., doctors, counselors, and agencies) that will be needed, what their roles are in the plan, and assess how they might meet the needs of your patient. Integrate the biological theory of intellect and cognition with your subject’s sociocultural experiences in order to better ascertain his or her needs.
Identify and discuss at least one barrier for success based on the individual’s intellect and his or her sociocultural experiences and perspectives. Critique the contributions of community-based programs and how they might alleviate issues related to this barrier.
dq2
Watch one of the eight videos from
The Future of Medicine
playlist. Then, go to the Ashford University Library and find two research articles related to the social impact or relevance of the topic addressed in your selected video. For assistance with finding peer-reviewed articles, please see the
tutorial
on the Ashford University Library website. Consider the work you have completed in the previous discussions throughout the course. Summarize how we, as individuals, are affected by disease, disability, or disorder. What emotions do we experience toward others with these conditions (empathy, judgment, fear, guilt)? Critique the contributions of community-based programs and how they influence our societal reactions to diseases, disabilities, and disorders. Examine and comment on the ways in which individuals, families, communi.
Privacy in a Technological AgePrivacy protection is a hot top.docxjeffsrosalyn
Privacy in a Technological Age:
Privacy protection is a hot topic in today’s data-hungry technological world
. In a well-written paper,
1.
Begin with an examination of an individual’s right to privacy
.
Then consider
2.
How advanced surveillance and monitoring technologies might intrude upon this right to privacy.
3.
How might the roles and obligations of an organization conflict with its workers right to privacy?
Provide specific examples to support your analysis.
Your well-written paper should be 2-3 pages in length and formatted according to the
CSU-Global Guide to Writing and
APA Requirements
. You should reference 2-3 scholarly sources (your textbook can count as one of these). The CSU-Global Library is a good place to find these scholarly sources
Textbook is attached
Reynolds, G. W. (2014).
Ethics in information technology
(5th ed.). Stamford, CT: Cengage Learning
Note:
I don’t need cover page.
.
Privacy Introduction Does the technology today Pene.docxjeffsrosalyn
Privacy :
Introduction
Does the technology today
Penetrates
our
privacy
?
Harms and the benefits.
What is the natural right for privacy ?
How we can trust the people or the organizations in our privacy ?
Does the governments have the right to go through our privacy? why ?
What the limit for privacy ?
How we can protect our privacy ?
Conclusion
.
Prisoner rights in America are based largely on the provisions of th.docxjeffsrosalyn
Prisoner rights in America are based largely on the provisions of the Bill of Rights. In this assignment, you will research the U.S. Bill of Rights and explain its major provisions. You should address the impact that the Bill of Rights has had on the field of criminal justice, corrections, and prisoners' rights. Also, explain how the Bill of Rights is applied at the state level.
Identify and explain the major provisions of the Bill of Rights.
How has the Bill of Rights significantly impacted the prisoners' rights and the fields of criminal justice and corrections?
Explain how the Bill of Rights is applied at the state level.
What are 2 major avenues of relief pursued by prisoners?
You must reference at least 2 credible sources in APA style.
4 pages
No plagerism
Abstract and Reference Page
.
Principles of Supply and Demanda brief example of supply and deman.docxjeffsrosalyn
Principles of Supply and Demand
a brief example of supply and demand for public health goods and services. Select two factors that might influence price elasticity of demand for public health goods or services in your example. Explain how and why price elasticity might influence the quantity of goods and services demanded in that example.
.
Primary Task Response Within the Discussion Board area, write 300.docxjeffsrosalyn
Primary Task Response:
Within the Discussion Board area, write 300–500 words that respond to the following questions with your thoughts, ideas, and comments. This will be the foundation for future discussions by your classmates. Be substantive and clear, and use examples to reinforce your ideas.
Interest groups play a significant role in contemporary American politics, on a wide range of public policy issues, from healthcare (Affordable Care Act, for example) to gun control (the NRA is a well-known example), and from financial services regulation to regulating food production.
For this discussion board, choose an interest group that appeals to you and then identify a public policy issue that your selected interest group is working on impacting. In addition, include the following information:
What types of activities are conducted by your interest group? Provide examples of activities undertaken by the group within the last 12 months. Activities can include lobbying, television or radio spots, media spots, rallies or other activities. Also, if available, provide links to any news articles about the organization’s activities or press releases from the organization or other articles from the organization’s website for your classmates’ reference.
How is your chosen interest group connected to the average citizen, if at all? Provide examples of average citizens’ involvement in your chosen interest group, if any. If your chosen interest group rarely or does not interact with the average citizen, please discuss how the work of your chosen interest group indirectly impacts the average citizen, if at all.
Do you believe that interest groups do, or have the ability to, promote corruption in government? Explain your position. If they do or have the potential to do so, why do you believe so? If not, what do you think prevents them from corrupting government? Support your position with specific examples.
.
Pretend you are a British government official during the time leadin.docxjeffsrosalyn
Pretend you are a British government official during the time leading up the Revolutionary War.
Write a 2-3 paragraph letter to the editor of your local newspaper explaining your feelins about the actions of the colonists. Be sure to give examples. (Things to possibly include: Do you think they are overreacting? Why or why not? How do you feel the issues should be resolved?) Really put some thought into this assignment, it wouldn't hurt to do some outside research to support your Letter to the Editor
.
Embracing GenAI - A Strategic ImperativePeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Scanned with CamScannerITS 835 enterprise risk managem.docx
1. Scanned with CamScanner
ITS 835 enterprise risk management
Chapter 22
ERM - JAA Inc. –A Case Study in Creating Value from
Uncertainty
University of Cumberlands
1
introduction
Business background
Initial steps
Evolution of Risk Management
Introduction of ISO 31000 and HB 436 to JAA
Bringing everything together
University of Cumberlands
2
Business background
JAA is a clothing wholesaler and retailer
Founded in 1972
Went public in 1998
Three operating segments
U.S. wholesale
U.S. retail
International (wholesale and retail)
57 retail stores in 10 countries
University of Cumberlands
2. 3
Initial steps
Strategic objectives
Maintain market leadership
Sustain technology leadership
Strengthen global presence
Deliver quality service
A leader in compliance with all laws and regulation
Establish a governance system
Multiple committees, each with specific responsibilities
University of Cumberlands
4
Governance framework
University of Cumberlands
5
Evolution of risk management
Lack of strategic risk management led to many problems
Communication
Missed/lost opportunities
Lack of commitment to objectives
Declining quality
Identified gaps in risk management
Engaged in aggressive internal training
Soft skills
Team building
Management planning
University of Cumberlands
6
3. Introductions of iso 31000 and hb 436
JAA adopted ISO 31000
HB 436 provided extensive implementation guidance
ISO 31000 was basically an upgrade of the framework JAA was
already using
ISO 31000 framework formalized JAA’s ERM
Defined organization and process
University of Cumberlands
7
Using context for risk criteria
University of Cumberlands
8
Bringing everyone together
University of Cumberlands
9
Risk map
University of Cumberlands
10
4. Risk attitude
University of Cumberlands
11
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Additional Praise for
Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
“Educators the world over seeking to make the management of
risk an integral part
of management degrees have had great difficulties in providing
their students with
a definitive ERM text for their course. The Standards and
associated Handbooks
helped, but until the arrival of Implementing Enterprise Risk
Management: Case Stud-
ies and Best Practices, there has been no text to enlighten
students on the application
of an effective program to manage risk across an enterprise so
that objectives are
maximized and threats minimized. Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez
have combined
with a group of contributors that represent the cream of risk
practitioners, to pro-
5. vide the reader with a clear and concise journey through the
management of risk
within a wide range of organizations and industries. The
knowledge, skills, and
experience in the management of risk contained within the
covers of this book are
second to none. It will provide a much needed resource to
students and practition-
ers for many years to come and should become a well-used
reference on the desk
of every manager of risk.”
—Kevin W. Knight AM, chairman, ISO/TC 262—Risk
Management
“The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an
invaluable service to
advance the science of enterprise risk management by collecting
an extensive num-
ber of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk
management practices
in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book
should be an extremely
valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested in the
emerging and evolving
field of risk management.”
—Robert S. Kaplan, senior fellow, Marvin Bower Professor of
Leadership
Development, emeritus, Harvard University
“Lessons learned from case studies and best practices represent
an efficient way
to gain practical insights on the implementation of ERM.
Implementing Enterprise
Risk Management provides such insights from a robust
6. collection of ERM pro-
grams across public companies and private organizations. I
commend the editors
and contributors for making a significant contribution to ERM
by sharing their
experiences.”
—James Lam, president, James Lam & Associates; director and
Risk Oversight
Committee chairman, E∗ TRADE Financial Corporation;
author, Enterprise Risk Management—From Incentives to
Controls
“For those who still think that enterprise risk management is
just a fad, the varied
examples of practical value-generating uses contained in this
book should dispel
any doubt that the discipline is here to stay! The broad
collection of practices is
insightful for students, academics, and executives, as well as
seasoned risk man-
agement professionals.”
—Carol Fox, ARM, director of Strategic and Enterprise Risk
Practice, RIMS
“Managing risk across the enterprise is the new frontier of
business management.
Doing so effectively, in my view, will be the single most
important differentiating
factor for many enterprises in the twenty-first century.
Implementing Enterprise Risk
Management: Case Studies and Best Practices is an innovative
and important addition
to the literature and contains a wealth of insight in this critical
7. area. This book’s
integration of theory with hands-on, real-world lessons in
managing enterprise
risk provides an opportunity for its readers to gain insight and
understanding that
could otherwise be acquired only through many years of hard-
earned experience.
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I highly recommend this book for use by executives, line
managers, risk managers,
and business students alike.”
—Douglas F. Prawitt, professor of Accounting at Brigham
Young University,
and Committee of Sponsoring Organizations (COSO)
Executive Board member
“The real beauty of and value in this book is its case study
focus and the wide
variety of firms profiled and writers’ perspectives shared. This
will provide readers
with a wealth of details and views that will help them chart an
ERM journey of their
own that is more likely to fit the specific and typically
customized ERM needs of
the firms for whom they toil.”
—Chris Mandel, senior vice president, Strategic
8. Solution
s for Sedgwick;
former president of the Risk Management Society
and the 2004 Risk Manager of the Year
“Implementing Enterprise Risk Management looks at many
industries through excel-
lent case studies, providing a real-world base for its
recommendations and an
important reminder that ERM is valuable in many industries. I
highly recommend
this text.”
—Russell Walker, Clinical associate professor, Kellogg School
of Management;
author of Winning with Risk Management
“The body of knowledge in Implementing Enterprise Risk
Management continues to
develop as business educators and leaders confront a complex
and rapidly chang-
9. ing environment. This book provides a valuable resource for
academics and prac-
titioners in this dynamic area.”
—Mark L. Frigo, director, Strategic Risk Management Lab,
Kellstadt Graduate School of Business, DePaul University
“The management of enterprise risk is one of the most vexatious
problems con-
fronting boards and executives worldwide. This is why this
latest book by Fraser,
Simkins, and Narvaez is a much needed and highly refreshing
approach to the sub-
ject. The editors have managed to assemble an impressive list of
contributors who,
through a series of fascinating real-life case studies, adroitly
help educate readers
to better understand and deal with the myriad of risks that can
assault, seriously
maim, and/or kill an organization. This is a ‘how to’ book
written with the ‘risk
management problem solver’ in mind. It provides the link that
has been missing
for effectively teaching ERM at the university and executive
education levels and
10. it is an exceptional achievement by true risk management
advocates.”
—Dr. Chris Bart, FCPA, founder and lead faculty,
The Directors College of Canada
“The Institute of Risk Management welcomes the publication of
this highly practi-
cal text which should be of great interest to our students and
members around the
world. Implementing Enterprise Risk Management brings
together a fine collection of
detailed case studies from organizations of varying sizes and
working in differ-
ent sectors, all seeking to enhance their business performance
by managing their
risks more effectively, from the boardroom to the shop floor.
This book makes a
valuable contribution to the body of knowledge of what works
that will benefit the
development of the risk profession.”
—Carolyn Williams, technical director, Institute of Risk
Management
12. Each volume is edited by a specialist in a particular area of
finance, who develops
the volume outline and commissions articles by the world’s
experts in that partic-
ular field of finance. Each volume includes an editor’s
introduction and approx-
imately thirty articles to fully describe the current state of
financial research and
practice in a particular area of finance.
The essays in each volume are intended for practicing finance
professionals, grad-
uate students, and advanced undergraduate students. The goal of
each volume is
to encapsulate the current state of knowledge in a particular
area of finance so that
the reader can quickly achieve a mastery of that special area of
finance.
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14. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a
retrieval system, or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, scanning,
or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of
the 1976 United States
Copyright Act, without either the prior written permission of
the Publisher, or
authorization through payment of the appropriate per-copy fee
to the Copyright
Clearance Center, Inc., 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA
01923, (978) 750-8400, fax (978)
646-8600, or on the Web at www.copyright.com. Requests to
the Publisher for permission
should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley
& Sons, Inc., 111 River
Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030, (201) 748-6011, fax (201) 748-
6008, or online at
http://www.wiley.com/go/permissions.
Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher
15. and author have used their
best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations
or warranties with
respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this
book and specifically
disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness
for a particular purpose. No
warranty may be created or extended by sales representatives or
written sales materials.
The advice and strategies contained herein may not be suitable
for your situation. You
should consult with a professional where appropriate. Neither
the publisher nor author
shall be liable for any loss of profit or any other commercial
damages, including but not
limited to special, incidental, consequential, or other damages.
For general information on our other products and services or
for technical support, please
contact our Customer Care Department within the United States
at (800) 762-2974, outside
the United States at (317) 572-3993 or fax (317) 572-4002.
Wiley publishes in a variety of print and electronic formats and
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16. Some material included with standard print versions of this
book may not be included in
e-books or in print-on-demand. If this book refers to media such
as a CD or DVD that is
not included in the version you purchased, you may download
this material at
http://booksupport.wiley.com. For more information about
Wiley products, visit
www.wiley.com.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
ISBN 978-1-118-69196-0 (Hardcover)
ISBN 978-1-118-74576-2 (ePDF)
ISBN 978-1-118-74618-9 (ePub)
Printed in the United States of America.
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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17. http://www.it-ebooks.info/
To Wendy, my wonderful wife and my inspiration, and to my
parents who instilled in me a lifelong thirst for learning.
—John Fraser
To my husband (Russell) and our family: sons and daughters-
in-law (Luke & Stephanie and Walt & Lauren), daughter and
son-in-law (Susan & Jason), and our youngest daughter (April).
Thank you for your love, support, and encouragement!
—Betty Simkins
I would like to thank my husband and four children for support-
ing me on my journey of writing two chapters and co-editing
this
book. I would also like to thank the Risk and Insurance Manage-
ment Society for supporting me during my educational years
and providing great workshops and conferences on enterprise
risk management.
—Kristina Narvaez
19. 3 ERM at Mars, Incorporated: ERM for Strategy
and Operations 39
Larry Warner
4 Value and Risk: Enterprise Risk Management at Statoil 59
Alf Alviniussen and Håkan Jankensgård
5 ERM in Practice at the University of California
Health System 75
Grace Crickette
6 Strategic Risk Management at the LEGO Group:
Integrating Strategy and Risk Management 93
Mark L. Frigo and Hans Læssøe
7 Turning the Organizational Pyramid Upside Down:
Ten Years of Evolution in Enterprise Risk Management
at United Grain Growers 107
John Bugalla
ix
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x Contents
8 Housing Association Case Study of ERM in a
Changing Marketplace 119
John Hargreaves
9 Lessons from the Academy: ERM Implementation in
the University Setting 143
Anne E. Lundquist
10 Developing Accountability in Risk Management: The
British Columbia Lottery Corporation Case Study 179
Jacquetta C. M. Goy
11 Starting from Scratch: The Evolution of ERM at the
Workers’ Compensation Fund 207
Dan M. Hair
12 Measuring Performance at Intuit: A Value-Added
Component in ERM Programs 227
Janet Nasburg
21. 13 TD Bank’s Approach to an Enterprise Risk
Management Program 241
Paul Cunha and Kristina Narvaez
PART III Linking ERM to Strategy and Strategic
Risk Management 251
14 A Strategic Approach to Enterprise Risk Management
at Zurich Insurance Group 253
Linda Conrad and Kristina Narvaez
15 Embedding ERM into Strategic Planning at the City
of Edmonton 281
Ken Baker
16 Leveraging ERM to Practice Strategic Risk Management 305
John Bugalla and James Kallman
PART IV Specialized Aspects of Risk Management 319
17 Developing a Strategic Risk Plan for the Hope City
Police Service 321
Andrew Graham
18 Blue Wood Chocolates 335
22. Stephen McPhie and Rick Nason
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CONTENTS xi
19 Kilgore Custom Milling 363
Rick Nason and Stephen McPhie
20 Implementing Risk Management within Middle
Eastern Oil and Gas Companies 377
Alexander Larsen
21 The Role of Root Cause Analysis in Public Safety
ERM Programs 397
Andrew Bent
22 JAA Inc.—A Case Study in Creating Value from
Uncertainty: Best Practices in Managing Risk 427
Julian du Plessis, Arnold Schanfield, and Alpaslan Menevse
23 Control Complacency: Rogue Trading
23. at Société Générale 461
Steve Lindo
24 The Role of VaR in Enterprise Risk Management:
Calculating Value at Risk for Portfolios Held by the
Vane Mallory Investment Bank 489
Allissa A. Lee and Betty J. Simkins
25 Uses of Efficient Frontier Analysis in Strategic Risk
Management: A Technical Examination 501
Ward Ching and Loren Nickel
PART V Mini-Cases on ERM and Risk 523
26 Bim Consultants Inc. 525
John R.S. Fraser
27 Nerds Galore 529
Rob Quail
28 The Reluctant General Counsel 535
Norman D. Marks
29 Transforming Risk Management at Akawini Copper 539
Grant Purdy
24. 30 Alleged Corruption at Chessfield: Corporate
Governance and the Risk Oversight Role of the Board
of Directors 547
Richard Leblanc
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xii Contents
31 Operational Risk Management Case Study:
Bon Boulangerie 555
Diana Del Bel Belluz
PART VI Other Case Studies 559
32 Constructive Dialogue and ERM: Lessons from the
Financial Crisis 561
Thomas H. Stanton
33 Challenges and Obstacles of ERM Implementation
in Poland 577
25. Zbigniew Krysiak and Sl̄ awomir Pijanowski
34 Turning Crisis into Opportunity: Building an ERM
Program at General Motors 607
Marc S. Robinson, Lisa M. Smith, and Brian D. Thelen
35 ERM at Malaysia’s Media Company Astro: Quickly
Implementing ERM and Using It to Assess the
Risk-Adjusted Performance of a Portfolio of Acquired
Foreign Companies 623
Patrick Adam K. Abdullah and Ghislain Giroux Dufort
About the Editors 649
Index 651
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Foreword
Enterprise Risk Management is an evolving discipline focused
on a com-plex and still imperfectly-understood subject. In such
26. a situation, science isadvanced best by collecting data from
multiple, independent sites. A rich
set of observations educates the field’s scholars and
practitioners and provides the
foundation for them to develop descriptive and normative
theories as well as cod-
ified best practices about the subject.
The authors—Fraser, Simkins, and Narvaez—have done an
invaluable service
to advance the science of enterprise risk management by
collecting an extensive
number of wonderful case studies that describe innovative risk
management prac-
tices in a diverse set of companies around the world. This book
should be an
extremely valuable source of knowledge for anyone interested
in the emerging
and evolving field of risk management. We should be grateful to
the editors and
to each chapter author for expanding the body of knowledge for
risk management
professionals and academics.
Robert S. Kaplan
27. Senior Fellow, Marvin Bower Professor
of Leadership Development, Emeritus
Harvard University
xiii
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CHAPTER 1
Enterprise Risk Management
Case Studies
An Introduction and Overview
JOHN R.S. FRASER
Senior Vice President, Internal Audit, and former Chief Risk
28. Officer, Hydro One
Networks Inc.
BETTY J. SIMKINS
Williams Companies Chair of Business and Professor of
Finance, Oklahoma State
University
KRISTINA NARVAEZ
President and Owner of ERM Strategies, LLC
Businesses, business schools, regulators, and the public are now
scrambling to
catch up with the emerging field of enterprise risk management.
—Robert Kaplan (quote from Foreword in Fraser and Simkins,
2010)
Most executives with MBA degrees were not taught ERM. In
fact, there are only
a few universities that teach ERM. So some business school
graduates are strong
in finance, marketing, and management theory, but they are
limited in terms of
critical thinking, business acumen, and risk analysis skills.
29. —Paul Walker1
THE EVOLUTION OF ENTERPRISE
RISK MANAGEMENT
Over the past two decades enterprise risk management (ERM)
has evolved
from concepts and visions of how risks should be addressed to a
method-
ology that is becoming entrenched in modern management and
is now
increasingly expected by those in oversight roles (e.g.,
governing bodies and
regulators). As Felix Kloman describes in his chapter “A Brief
History of Risk Man-
agement,” published in Fraser and Simkins (2010), many of the
concepts go back
a very long time and many of the so-called newly discovered
techniques can be
1
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30. 2 Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
referenced to the earlier writings and practices described by
Kloman. However,
it is only from around the mid-1990s that the concept of giving
a name to manag-
ing risks in a holistic way across the many operating silos of an
enterprise started
to take hold. In the 1990s, terms such as integrated risk
management and enterprise-
wide risk management were also used. Many thought leaders,
for example, those
who created ISO 31000,2 believe that the term risk management
is all that is needed
to describe good risk management; however, many others
believe that the latter
term is often used to describe risk management at the lower
levels of the organiza-
tion and does not necessarily capture the concepts of enterprise-
level approaches
to risk. As a result, the term ERM is used throughout this book.
As ERM continues to evolve there is still much discussion and
31. confusion over
exactly what it is and how it should be achieved. It is important
to realize that
it is still evolving and may take many more years before it is
fully codified and
practiced in a consistent way. In fact, there is a grave danger
now of believing
that there is only one way of doing ERM. This is probably a
mistake by regula-
tors who have too eagerly seized some of these concepts and are
trying to impose
them when the methods are not fully understood, and in some
cases the require-
ments are unlikely to produce the desired results. As Fraser and
Simkins (2010)
noted in their first book on ERM: “While regulatory interest can
force ERM into
companies, if not done well, it can become another box-ticking
exercise that adds
little value.”3
The leading and most commonly agreed4 guideline to holistic
risk manage-
ment is ISO 31000. However, it should be mentioned that in the
United States
32. the COSO 2004 Enterprise Risk Management–Integrated
Framework has been the
dominant framework used to date. Many organizations are
currently adopting
one or the other of these frameworks and then customizing them
to their own
context.
WHY THE NEED FOR A BOOK WITH ERM
CASE STUDIES?
Following the success of the earlier Enterprise Risk
Management: Today’s Leading
Research and Best Practices for Tomorrow’s Executives by
Fraser and Simkins (2010),
we found through our own teaching experiences, and by talking
to others, that
there was an urgent need for a university-level textbook of ERM
case studies to
help educate executives, risk practitioners, academics, and
students alike about
the evolving methodology. As a result, Fraser and Simkins,
together with Kristina
Narvaez, approached many of the leading ERM specialists to
write case studies for
this book.
33. Surveys have also shown that there is a dire need for more case
studies on ERM
(see Fraser, Schoening-Thiessen, and Simkins 2008).
Additionally, surveys of risk
executives report that business risk is increasing due to new
technologies, faster
rate of change, increases in regulatory risk, and more (PWC
2014). As Paul Walker
of St. John’s University points out in the opening quote of the
2014 American Pro-
ductivity & Quality Center (APQC) report on ERM, “Most
executives with MBA
degrees were not taught ERM. In fact, there are only a few
universities that teach
ERM. So some business school graduates are strong in finance,
marketing, and
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ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT CASE STUDIES 3
34. management theory, but they are limited in terms of critical
thinking, business acu-
men, and risk analysis skills.” Learning Centered Teaching
(LCT), as discussed in
Chapter 2, is an ideal way to achieve this. Using LCT and the
case study approach,
students actively participate in the learning process through
constructive reflective
reasoning, critical thinking and analysis, and discussion of key
issues. This is the
first book to provide such a broad coverage of case studies on
ERM.
The case studies that follow are from some of the leading
academics and prac-
titioners of enterprise risk management. While many of the
cases are about real-life
situations, there are also those that, while based on real-life
experiences, have had
names changed to maintain confidentiality or are composites of
several situations.
We are deeply indebted to the authors and to the organizations
that agreed so
kindly to share their stories to help benefit future generations of
ERM practition-
35. ers. In addition, we have added several chapters where we feel
the fundamentals
of these specialized techniques (e.g., VaR) deserve to be
understood by ERM stu-
dents and practitioners. Each case study provides opportunities
for executives, risk
practitioners, and students to explore what went well, what
could have been done
differently, and what lessons are to be learned.
Teachers of ERM will find a wealth of material to use in
demonstrating ERM
principles to students. These can be used for term papers or
class discussions, and
the approaches can be contrasted to emphasize different
contexts that may require
customized approaches. This book introduces the reader to a
wide range of con-
cepts and techniques for managing risks in a holistic way, by
correctly identifying
risks and prioritizing the appropriate responses. It offers a
broad overview of the
various types of ERM techniques, the role of the board of
directors, risk tolerances,
profiles, workshops, and allocation of resources, while focusing
36. on the principles
that determine business success.
Practitioners interested in implementing ERM, enhancing their
knowledge on
the subject, or wishing to mature their ERM program, will find
this book an abso-
lute must resource to have. Case studies are one of the best
ways to learn more on
this topic.
This book is a companion to Enterprise Risk Management:
Today’s Leading
Research and Best Practices for Tomorrow’s Executives (Fraser
and Simkins 2010).
Together, these two books can create a curriculum of study for
business students
and risk practitioners who desire to have a better understanding
of the world of
enterprise risk management and where it is heading in the
future. Boards and
senior leadership teams in progressive organizations are now
engaging in building
ERM into their scenario-planning and decision-making
processes. These forward-
37. looking organizations are also integrating ERM into the
business-planning pro-
cess with resource allocation and investment decisions. At the
business unit
level, ERM is being used to measure the performance of risk-
taking activities of
employees.
As these case studies demonstrate, ERM is a continuous
improvement process
and takes time to evolve. As can be gleaned from these case
studies, most firms that
have taken the ERM journey started with a basic ERM language,
risk identification,
and risk-assessment process and then moved down the road to
broaden their pro-
grams to include risk treatments, monitoring, and reporting
processes. The ulti-
mate goal of ERM is to have it embedded into the risk culture of
the organization
and drive the decision-making process to make more sound
business decisions.
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4 Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
SUMMARY OF THE BOOK CHAPTERS
As mentioned earlier, the purpose of this book is to provide
case studies on ERM
in order to educate executives, risk practitioners, academics,
and students alike
about this evolving methodology. To achieve this goal, the book
is organized into
the following sections:
Part I: Overview and Insights for Teaching ERM
Part II: ERM Implementation at Leading Organizations
Part III: Linking ERM to Strategy and Strategic Risk
Management
Part IV: Specialized Aspects of Risk Management
Part V: Mini-Cases on ERM and Risk
Part VI: Other Case Studies
Brief descriptions of the contributors and the chapters are
provided next.
39. PART I: OVERVIEW AND INSIGHTS FOR
TEACHING ERM
The first two chapters provide an overview of ERM and
guidance on ERM educa-
tion. As we have pointed out, education on ERM is crucial and
more universities
need to offer courses in this area. Our conversations with many
ERM educators
and consultants highlight how extremely challenging it is to
achieve excellence in
ERM education.
Chapter 2, “An Innovative Method to Teaching Enterprise Risk
Manage-
ment: A Learner-Centered Teaching Approach,” offers insights
and suggestions
on teaching ERM. This chapter covers the concept of flipping
the classroom with
learner-centered teaching (LCT), distinguishes it from
traditional lectures, and
describes how it can be used in teaching ERM. The LCT
approach emphasizes
active student participation and collaboration on in-class
activities such as case
studies versus the traditional lecture approach. This chapter
40. provides several
examples as to how LCT can be applied in teaching ERM,
utilizing Fraser and
Simkins’ (2010) book. David R. Lange and Betty J. Simkins,
both experienced ERM
educators, team together to write this chapter. David Lange,
DBA, is an Auburn
University Montgomery (AUM) Distinguished Research and
Teaching Professor of
Finance. He has received many prestigious awards for both
research and teaching
from the University and from several academic associations. He
has taught many
courses in the area of risk management and has consulted in a
significant num-
ber of individual and class insurance–related cases in both state
and federal court.
Betty Simkins, PhD, the Williams Companies Chair of Business
and Professor of
Finance at Oklahoma State University, is coeditor of this book.
PART II: ERM IMPLEMENTATION AT
LEADING ORGANIZATIONS
Part II is a collection of ERM case studies that give examples of
how ERM was
41. developed and applied in major organizations around the world.
Note that there
is no perfect ERM case study and the objective is for readers to
assess what they
believe was successful or not so successful about these ERM
programs.
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ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT CASE STUDIES 5
The first case study in this book describes ERM at Mars, Inc.
Larry Warner, who
is the former corporate risk manager at Mars, Inc. and now is
president of Warner
Risk Group, describes the ERM program at the company in
Chapter 3. Mars is
a global food company and one of the largest privately held
corporations in the
United States. It has more than 72,000 associates and annual net
sales in excess
of $33 billion across six business segments—Petcare,
42. Chocolate, Wrigley, Food,
Drinks, and Symbioscience. Its brands include Pedigree, Royal
Canin, M&M’s,
Snickers, Extra, Skittles, Uncle Ben’s, and Flavia. With such
complex business oper-
ations, Mars recognized the importance of providing its
managers with a tool to
knowledgably and comfortably take risk in order to achieve its
long-term goals.
Mars business units use its award-winning process to test their
annual operating
plan and thereby increase the probability of achieving these
objectives.
The case study in Chapter 4 entitled “Value and Risk: ERM in
Statoil” was writ-
ten by Alf Alviniussen, who is the former Group Treasurer and
Senior Vice Pres-
ident of Norsk Hydro ASA, Oslo, Norway, and Håkan
Jankensgård who holds
a PhD in risk management from Lund University, Sweden.
Håkan is also a for-
mer risk manager of Norsk Hydro. In this case study, the
authors discuss ERM at
Statoil, one of the top oil and gas companies in the world,
43. located in Norway. In
Statoil, understanding and managing risk is today considered a
core value of the
company, which is written into the corporate directives and
widely communicated
to employees. ERM is thoroughly embedded in the
organization’s work processes,
and its risk committee has managed the transition from a “silo”-
mentality to pro-
moting Statoil’s best interests in areas where risk needs to be
considered.
Chapter 5, called “ERM in Practice at University of California
Health Systems,”
is written by their former Chief Risk Officer (CRO), Grace
Crickette, who is now
the Senior Vice President and Chief Risk and Compliance
Officer of AAA Northern
California, Nevada, and Utah. The University of California’s
(UC) Health System
is comprised of numerous clinical operations, including five
medical centers that
support the clinical teaching programs for the university’s
medical and health sci-
ence school and handle more than three million patient visits
44. each year. ERM plays
an important role at the UC Health System and assists the
organization in assess-
ing and responding to all risks (operational, clinical, business,
accreditation, and
regulatory) that affect the achievement of the strategic and
financial objectives of
the UC Health System.
The descriptive case study in Chapter 6, written by Dr. Mark
Frigo from
DePaul University and Hans Læssøe, the Strategic Risk
Manager of the LEGO
Group, provides a great example of integrating risk management
in strategy devel-
opment and strategy execution at the LEGO Group, which is
based on an initiative
started in late 2006 and led by co-author Hans Læssøe. The
LEGO methodology is
also part of the continuing work of the Strategic Risk
Management Lab at DePaul
University, which is identifying and developing leading
practices in integrating
risk management with strategy development and execution.
45. United Grain Growers (UGG), a conservative 100-year-old
Winnipeg, Canada-
based grain handler and distributor of farm supplies, was an
ERM pioneer. Chap-
ter 7 called “Turning the Organizational Pyramid Upside Down:
Ten Years of Evo-
lution in Enterprise Risk Management at United Grain Growers”
analyzes the ERM
program at United Grain Growers 15 years later. When UGG
announced that it
had implemented a new integrated risk-financing program in
1999, it received
a great deal of attention in the financial press. CFO magazine
hailed the UGG
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6 Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
program as “the deal of the decade.” The Economist
characterized it as a “revo-
lutionary advance in corporate finance,” and Harvard University
46. created a UGG
case study. While most outside attention focused on the direct
financial benefits
of implementing the program (protection of cash flow, the
reduced risk-capital
required, and a 20 percent increase in stock price), scant
attention was given to the
less tangible and therefore less measurable issues of
governance, leadership, and
corporate culture—the conditions that enabled such innovation.
It was a combi-
nation of a collaborative leadership open to new ideas, a culture
of controlled risk
taking, and active risk oversight by the board that produced a
strategic approach
to UGG’s risk management process. This chapter is written by
John Bugalla, who
is the principal of ermINSIGHTS.
John Hargreaves has written Chapter 8 titled “Housing
Association Case
Study of ERM in a Changing Marketplace.” He has a
mathematics degree from
Cambridge University and six years strategy consultancy
experience at KPMG.
47. This case study features four real-life charitable housing
associations in England
and Wales, each with a different strategy and risk environment.
Simple yet prac-
tical tools to assist in risk identification and prioritization are
also presented. This
case study has two main aims. The first is to help develop an
understanding of
the importance of ERM in a charitable context, showing that
modern charities are
often very active organizations that face significant risks.
Second, the case aims to
illustrate the need for a close relationship between risk
assessment and strategy
development, particularly in sectors where objectives are
defined in social as well
as economic terms. Each of the four cases has a different
perspective and challenges
the student or practitioner to identify and assess the risk and
develop possible risk
treatments for each.
Chapter 9, “Lessons from the Academy: ERM Implementation in
the Univer-
sity Setting,” was written by Anne E. Lundquist. She is
48. pursuing a PhD in the
Educational Leadership program at Western Michigan
University with a concen-
tration in Higher Education Administration. This chapter
explores the unique
aspects of the University of Washington’s (UW) risk
environment, including how
leadership, goal-setting, planning, and decision-making differ
from the for-profit
sector. The lack of risk management regulatory requirements,
combined with cul-
tural and environmental differences, helps explain why there are
a limited number
of fully evolved ERM programs at colleges and universities.
The second half of the
chapter explores the decision to adopt and implement ERM at
UW, including a
description of early decisions, a timeline of how the program
evolved, a discus-
sion of the ERM framework, and examples of some of the tools
used in the risk
management process. It traces the evolution of the UW program
as well as demon-
strates decisions that administrators made to tailor ERM to fit
the decentralized
49. culture of a university.
The case study in Chapter 10, “Developing Accountability in
Risk Manage-
ment: The British Columbia Lottery Corporation Case Study,”
demonstrates how
ERM was successfully implemented in a Canadian public sector
organization over
a 10-year period. Jacquetta Goy, author of this chapter, was the
Senior Manager,
Risk Advisory Services at British Columbia Lottery Corporation
and was respon-
sible for establishing and developing the ERM program.
Currently, Jacquetta is
the Director of Risk Management at Thompson Rivers
University, Canada. This
case study focuses on initiation, early development, and
sustainment of the ERM
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ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT CASE STUDIES 7
50. program, highlighting some of the barriers and enablers that
affected implemen-
tation. This case study includes a focus on developing risk
profiles; the role of
risk managers, champions, and committees; and the
development of effective risk
evaluation tools. The approach to ERM has evolved from
informal conversations
supported by an external assessment, through a period of high-
level corporate
focus supported by a dedicated group of champions using voting
technology to
an embedded approach, where risk assessment is incorporated
into both opera-
tional practice and planning.
Chapter 11, “Starting from Scratch: The Evolution of ERM at
the Workers Com-
pensation Fund,” describes the evolution of a formal ERM
program at a midsize
property casualty insurance carrier. This chapter is authored by
Dan Hair, the CRO
of the Workers Compensation Fund. In this chapter, the
motivations of executive
51. management and the board of directors in taking existing
strategic risk manage-
ment discussions to a higher level are reviewed. The step-by-
step actions taken by
the company to develop the ERM program are explained in
chronological order.
External resources used are also commented upon. The chapter
concludes with a
discussion of striking an ongoing balance between program
rigor, documentation,
and business needs.
Chapter 12, “Measuring Performance at Intuit: A Value-Added
Component
in ERM Programs,” shows how Intuit, maker of Quicken,
QuickBooks, and Turbo-
Tax, is committed to creating new and easier ways for
consumers and businesses to
tackle life’s financial chores, giving them more time to live
their lives and
run their businesses. This case study shows how Intuit, a global
company, is
exposed to a wide range of customer-related and operational
risks. Understand-
ing the risk landscape enables Intuit to formulate and execute
52. strategies to address
potential pitfalls and opportunities. The author, Janet Nasburg,
is Chief Risk Offi-
cer at Intuit. Janet is responsible for driving Intuit’s ERM
capability, ensuring that
the company appropriately balances opportunities and risks to
achieve optimal
business results. Before Intuit, Janet spent 16 years in various
finance roles at Visa,
and has more than 30 years of risk management and finance
experience.
Chapter 13 describes TD Bank’s ERM program and how it has
been developed
to reinforce the risk culture and ensure that all stakeholders
have a common under-
standing of how risks are addressed within the organization.
This is achieved by
identifying the risks to TD Bank’s business strategy and
operations, determining
the types of risk it is prepared to take, establishing policies and
practices to gov-
ern risks, and following an ERM framework to manage those
risks. This chapter is
co-authored by Paul Cunha and Kristina Narvaez. Paul Cunha is
53. Vice President,
Enterprise Risk Management at TD Bank. During his career at
TD Bank, he has
spent time in risk management, internal audit, retail banking,
commercial bank-
ing, and corporate and investment banking. Kristina Narvaez is
the president and
owner of ERM Strategies, LLC, and is co-editor of this book.
PART III: LINKING ERM TO STRATEGY AND
STRATEGIC RISK MANAGEMENT
Part III of this book demonstrates the link between ERM and
strategy in what is
now being called strategic risk management (SRM). SRM
represents an important
evolution in enterprise risk management, shifting from a
reactive approach to a
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8 Implementing Enterprise Risk Management
54. proactive approach in dealing with the large spectrum of risks
across the organi-
zation. These case studies view their risk-taking activities in a
strategic way, not
only to protect the organization’s value and assets, but also to
be able to capture
new value that is in alignment with the strategic goals of the
organization.
Zurich Insurance Group, the case study in Chapter 14,
demonstrates the link
between ERM and strategy. Zurich is a global insurance carrier
and is exposed to
a wide range of risks. Zurich recognizes that taking the right
risks is a necessary
part of growing and protecting shareholder value. It is careful
not to miss valu-
able market opportunities that could attract the best talent and
investor capital, but
must also balance the growth opportunities with the reality that
it is operating in
a complex world economy. This chapter is co-authored by Linda
Conrad, Director
of Strategic Business Risk Management at Zurich and Kristina
Narvaez, president
55. and owner of ERM Strategies, LLC and co-editor of this book.
Linda leads a global
team responsible for delivering tactical solutions to Zurich and
to its customers on
strategic issues such as business resilience, supply chain risk,
ERM, risk culture,
and total risk profiling.
Chapter 15, “Embedding ERM into Strategic Planning at the
City of Edmon-
ton,” is written by Ken Baker, who is their ERM Program
Manager. This study
examines the process used by the City of Edmonton in Alberta,
Canada, to estab-
lish its strategic ERM model. After examining several existing
frameworks, the
City decided on a framework based on the ISO 31000 risk
management standard,
but customized to suit the City’s needs. During the process,
administration had
to weigh factors common to any large organization, as well as
those specific to
governments in general and municipalities in particular. The
chronicling of this
process may assist those in similar organizations to more
56. successfully implement
their own ERM and SRM programs.
Chapter 16 describes a brief history of the evolution of
enterprise risk
management and describes a new and innovative approach
(value mapping) to
measuring the potential value by taking risks. This chapter also
provides a model
for incorporating the ERM process into strategic planning. John
Bugalla, Principal
of ermINSIGHTS and author of Chapter 7, and James Kallman,
a finance professor
at St. Edward’s University, co-author this chapter. John’s
experience includes
30 years in the risk management profession serving as
Managing Director of
Marsh & McLennan, Inc., Willis Group, Plc., and Aon Corp.,
before founding
ermINSIGHTS. James teaches courses in finance, statistics, and
risk management.
PART IV: SPECIALIZED ASPECTS OF
RISK MANAGEMENT
Part IV of the book captures unique aspects of ERM so that the
57. reader can learn
about the many broad applications, including insights into
managing specific
types of risk. This part starts with a case study in Chapter 17 of
the challenges
of risk management within a typical police department. This
case is followed by
eight additional chapters addressing other intriguing aspects of
risk management.
Andrew Graham reveals the complex and challenging aspects of
risk manage-
ment in Chapter 17, “Developing a Strategic Risk Plan for the
Hope City Police Ser-
vice.” This fictional case study was developed based on many
years of teaching risk
management to police forces. The setting is a medium-sized but
growing city that
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ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT CASE STUDIES 9
58. is facing many issues, including changes in demographics,
traffic issues, budgetary
challenges, and so on. The student is required to act as a
consultant who has been
hired by the chief of police to assist him in briefing the Police
Services Board and the
mayor in understanding the most critical risks to their objective
of having a best-
in-class police service for their citizens. Andrew Graham
researches, teaches, and
writes on public-sector management, financial management,
integrated risk man-
agement, and governance at Queen’s University School of
Policy Studies, Canada,
as well as a variety of international and Canadian venues.
Andrew had an exten-
sive career in Canada’s criminal justice system and has taught
and worked with
police services and police boards and commissioners in a
variety of ways for the
past 10 years.
Chapter 18, “Blue Wood Chocolates,” is designed to facilitate
discussion of the
59. implementation of an ERM framework, corporate governance
issues, and com-
modity risk management. The situation that this fictional
company faces is typi-
cal of many midsize companies that have performed
satisfactorily in the past but
are exposed, often unknowingly, to major potential risks and do
not have the
internal governance and risk management structures to identify,
quantify, and
manage such risks adequately. In particular, this case illustrates
commodity and
foreign currency exposures, and challenges the student to
investigate the specifics
of hedging such positions. Rick Nason, PhD, CFA, and Stephen
McPhie, CA, coau-
thored this chapter. Rick is an associate professor of finance at
Dalhousie Univer-
sity, Canada, and is also a founding partner of RSD