Risk & Crisis Management

Description

risk and crisis management related to event operations
denni.egan
Slide Set by denni.egan, updated more than 1 year ago
denni.egan
Created by denni.egan about 9 years ago
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Resource summary

Slide 1

    Areas of Risk in Events
    Alcohol Risk Management- segregate drinking areas - assign security to prevent underage drinking, handle rowdy customers, and regulate the flow of people - check parking lots and other areas to prevent illegal consumption - serve alcohol only with food - employ marketing methods to position the event as a peaceful, leisure opportunity and discourage unwanted segments. - event managers have a right to screen customers, confiscate illegal substances of any kind and deal with the intoxicated. - require patrons to show proof of age - reduce the amount served - reduce the hours - responsible Serving of Alcohol courses must be a prerequisite for servers - free soft drinks may be offered to ‘designated drivers’ - price control is effective tool for demarketing - paper cups are less dangerous - advise patrons of all regulations and policies through clear signs
    Administration- ensure contracts are in place: venue, vendors, suppliers, performers, staff etc...- ensure licences and permits are secured: local council and/or governmentCrowd Management- crowd flow: entry/exit queues & gates, mosh pit management (concerts, music festivals), toilet queues- alcohol & drugs: overindulgence, illegal activity, underage drinking, improper application of RSA, use of glass ware - noise control: local community & attendees complaints- security: inadequate systems, improper responses, poor onsite communication

Slide 2

    Target Markets- different cultures: together has the possibility to cause problems- numerous market segments: many different habits and expectations, various levels of acceptable behaviour, clashes between segments- every event will offend some segment of the overall market (1992 celebration of 500th anniversary of the discovery of America offended native Americans, Bicentennial celebrations in Australia offended aborigines, etc)   Venue- emergency response: accessibility and capability for numerous types of emergencies- temporary onsite related risksWeather- need for adequate provisions in case of bad weather (indoor areas, marquees, tents, poncho sales)- appropriate systems in place if event needs to be called off due to weather conditions (fire danger: WA Racing The Planet - Turia Pitt)
    Areas of Risk in Events

Slide 3

    Areas of Risk in Events
    Quality Control- often difficult because of the occasional or one-time nature of many events- Poor quality poses financial risks and could exacerbate other problems, especially with regard to dissatisfied customersFinancial Controls- essential to preventing losses- many events cannot be produced without acceptance of some degree of financial risk- mega events in particular entail major financial risks and failures can be spectacular.Volunteers- training is often inadequate- risks involved as they are face of the event when working and if not properly familiar with proceedings/expectations etc... could shine in bad lightVisibility- bigger the event, the more the media coverage - greater chance of risk for marketing/pr departments- media attracted to unsavoury elements of event- high-visibility can draw attention of terrorism, crime etc...
    Financial Risk Management- determine who is allowed to access cash and bank accounts, and who is to be issued a credit facility- take steps to reduce cash, require prepayment or credit cards- keep video or photographic records of the inventory lists, especially for the expensive equipment- formulate clear policies on what staff and volunteers can claim as expenses, and procedures for reimbursement- personally control credit arrangements- ticket stubs with consecutive numbers must be retained. - unsold tickets must be saved for tax audits- control complimentary tickets- procedures for reselling and refunds- if a tax receipt is issued for donations, ensure receipts have the authorised signatures

Slide 4

Slide 5

    Reasons for Risk Management
    1. minimise liability and financial loss 2. reduce insurance premiums which risk is transferred to another party 3. maintain a safe environment for employees & spectators

Slide 6

    Emergency/Crisis Management
    May lead to loss of life or serious injury Incident will lead to outside attention through media Will cause serious disruption to event/facility Examples- fire - explosion - major accident - vehicle, theme park ride, attack by person or animal - food poisoning - flood - robbery or theft - bomb explosion / hoax
    Action Required1. Tackle Emergency/Crisis- evacuation- closure2. Handle Media- designated spokesperson- professional public relationsResponsibilities- operator is required to ensure that if an incident occurs, they have taken all possible care to reduce the seriousness of the incident- legal obligation: Duty of Care, Workplace Health & Safety requirements, other similar legislation - documented procedures must be in place, which adequately demonstrate that the impact of the incident is minimised    

Slide 7

    Contingency Plans
    contains the response to the impact of a risk and involves a decision procedure, chain of command and a set of related actions. you're presented with a risk and how you would help reduce/solve the likelihood of it happeningEXAMPLEattendace is higher than expected causing congestion at the front gate. Those who will be affected are the volunteers and staff at the front gate as well as the public. So as a contingency plan you will have the staff and volunteers trained to either go out to the lines and get their tickets, speeding up the lines or simply open up another gate
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