Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Risk Management
- Overview
- Possibility of incurring a loss
- Long-term effect vs short-term inconvenient
- Individual vs Business
- Insurable vs Uninsurable
- Careful planning may reduce the change of occurrence or reduce its impact
- Types
- Economic
- Result in financial loss
- Categories
- Personal
- Health, personal well-being
- Property
- Loss of personal or business property
- Liability
- Harm or injury to other people or their property because of your actions
- Non-economic
- Result in inconvenience
- Examples
- Late for school
- Embarrassed but no economic impact
- Late for work
- May result in penalty or loss of job, economic risk
- Pure
- loss only, no opportunity for gain
- Severe weather such as typhoon may result in business close down and will reduce sales
- Speculative
- Either gain or loss
- Examples
- Investment in business
- Invest in Option or Future
- Controllable
- Can be reduced or eliminated by actions
- Prevent loss from theft by installing a security system
- Install a tracking device on gas-tank truck to reduce the chance of loss because gasoline gets stolen
- Uncontrollable
- Cannot be reduced by actions
- Century storm is unpredictable and little can be done to reduce the lost
- Insurable
- Exchanges the uncertainty of a possible large financial loss for a certain smaller payment
- Losses are predictable and a large number of people face similar risk
- Insurance
- Provide financial protection
- Losses usually are more than financial
- Recovery rather than financial interest
- Need quantification to claim
- Basics
- Insured person or business
- Insurer (policy owner) who take on certain economic risks and to pay for losses if they occur
- Insurable interest, i.e. the right for the policy owner to buy insurance for the insured
- Insurability, i.e. the quality of the insured
- Policy holder, i.e. the person or company buying the policy
- Insurance policy, i.e. the document which states the condition
- Premium, i.e. amount to pay for the coverage
- Claim, i.e. request for payment for a loss
- Beneficiary, i.e. who gets the business from the policy
- Insurable items for business
- Personnel
- Keyman
- Life insurance
- Employee
- Health insurance
- Disability insurance for worker's compensation
- Property (assets)
- Commercial property insurance
- Vehicle insurance
- Operation
- Business interruption insurance
- Third party liability insurance
- Insurance for Construction Project
- Performance bond, demand bond, tender bond
- Contractor All Risk Insurance, Employee Compensation Insurance
- Levies
- Uninsurable
- Not common or impossible to predict the amount of loss
- Circumstances
- Economic conditions
- Downturn in the economy
- Monitor economic changes
- Consumer demand
- Understand consumer behavior
- Competitors' actions
- Marketing
- Pricing
- Promotion
- Technology changes
- Local factors
- Geographical facilities
- Political community
- Laws
- Regulations
- Taxes
- Infrastructure of a local community
- Business operations
- High cost
- Low morale
- Poor customer image
- Maintain corporate image
- Lack of training
- Staff development and promotion
- Poor management
- Poor equipment maintenance
- Regular maintenance and inspection
- Accidents and injuries
- Ways to dealing with risks
- Avoid
- Experience
- Planning
- Decision based on likelihood of risk or the amount of loss
- Transfer
- When risk is too great to assume but cannot be avoided
- Examples
- Credit transfer to bank or credit card company
- Distribute products through resellers
- Partner with experienced research institution through joint venture for research or project development
- Insure
- Same type of risk also faced by others
- Reasonable or limited losses
- Statistically predictable occurrence
- Pay a small amount for insurance that will cover the losses of the business
- Fire
- Shipping
- Public Liability
- Assume
- Risks that are taken by the company
- Usually measurable and the extend is not serious