“It’s a dangerous world out there and whether the threats are real or
perceived, people are worrying, so we will go in and help them out,” he says.
“It is a growing market space you only have to read the newspapers and watch
the news to understand the kind of challenges that are out there today.”
Control Risks looks to do exactly what it says on the tin in more or less
every part of commercial life and protects its clients’ business interests with
firewalls, penetration tests, staff background checks and heavily armed security
guards in Baghdad’s Green Zone.
For a company with a wide range of blue-chip multinational clients, the
all-encompassing approach is one of necessity. However, a holistic strategy for
managing contemporary commercial risk management is increasingly crucial, says
Jay Heiser, research vice president at
analyst Gartner.
“One significant recent trend is the recognition that there are a lot of
issues that actually fall within risk management and that generic risk
management techniques can be and should be appropriately applied to a large
number of things that have previously been managed in silos,” he says.
“The traditional approach has been to get as big a budget as possible and not
worry about anything else confronting the enterprise. The holistic approach to
risk management takes the specialist risk people out of the competitive realm
and makes them part of the team.”
Heiser is also a keen advocate of joined-up working for better risk manageme
nt, but believes risk is all about the age-old theme of how well technology and
business leaders understand the demands of the other side.
“The word alignment has been overused, but in risk management I really don’t
think the practitioners have understood what it’s like to be aligned with the
business,” he says.
A common question from CIOs for Gartner, says Heiser, is how much other
organisations are spending on security - and his reaction is always the same.
“You need to go back to the business and find out how much confidentiality,
integrity and availability it needs,” he says.
Heiser invariably gets the same response; IT leaders cannot draw specific
information because the business is unclear about risk requirements.
Responsibility for the confusion ultimately rests with business leadership.
“The business is taking it for granted that IT is going to solve any
risk-related issue without knowing the business context,” he says. “Technology
teams don’t know what is valuable to the business, what is most important and
the level of effort to compromise such processes. IT workers have to help the
business, but
it is up to the business to say how much security it wants.”
A recent survey of IT companies suggests confusion is rife, even among
technically-minded organisations that might be expected to know better. The
Chartered Management Institute and
Cabinet Office research found that just 39 per cent of IT companies have
business continuity plans (BCPs) in place. Such firms trail behind public sector
organisations, where 62 per cent are ready with BCPs, and the 55 per cent of
listed companies claiming to be well prepared.
The findings led Bruce Mann, director of civil contingencies at the Cabinet
Office, to suggest that too many organisations do not have effective business
continuity arrangements in place. And research suggests the key driver in
pressuring organisations to take BCPs seriously is corporate governance, a
factor that has certainly tightened disaster recovery plans at
delivery specialist NYK Logistics
UK.
Myron Hrycyk, the company’s CIO, points to
service management standard the IT
Infrastructure Library (ITIL), and the 2002 US legislation the
Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) Act, as examples of discipline-imposing, process management
strategies. Named after the Congressmen who pushed the law through in the wake
of major US accounting scandals, SOX is a rigorous some might say daunting
means of regulating financial practice and corporate governance.
Hrycyk has seen enough of the processes to know how much work is involved,
having been audited by US-based client companies directly covered by the
legislation and having used a SOX-based system employed by NYK’s Japanese parent
company.
“It is a very time consuming task, involving going through key processes,
such as introducing change or analysing the financial investments in IT systems.
But to be honest, I actually welcome the changes because what you end up with is
a far more secure set of processes than you would have had at the beginning,” he
says.
“What you get out of the approach is an enormous amount of material that
allows you to tighten up on your processes of risk management, business change
or procurement. It’s good ammunition for the IT department to say ‘we need to
invest in this process’, so it is a good thing.”
NYK’s UK operation is also a determined user of ITIL for managing its IT
infrastructure, an ongoing process that Hrycyk claims has brought welcome
benefits to the way the company deploys change slashing the risks associated
with introducing new systems and processes into the organisation.
“If you are running a £400m business where you are supporting
business-to-business (B2B) customers, you have to be very good at managing risk
when introducing new upgrades and processes,” he says.
“You have to mitigate against the risk of change, the risk of failure in the
architecture that’s been quite a focus for me. We’ve taken a common sense
approach by saying that ITIL’s processes and procedures are a great framework
for us to deploy, offering a protocol for running IT.
“From this we have produced a change advisory board, which supports risk
management by ensuring which questions are asked before you allow a new piece of
software to go live. So, we can understand that if a change goes through, are we
putting it in at the right stage of the business cycle? Do we have a back-up
plan if we fail; do we have people on call if we have problems and has it been
fully tested?”
Such deep-seated thinking to risk management is not just evident in the
commercial world. The public sector’s relatively advanced grasp of risk
management is in evidence at Essex County
Council, where the authority has a keen sense of the mission critical data
that the organisation could not do without in the event of a catastrophe.
Joachim Adenusi, head of risk at the council and a member of the
Institute for Risk Management’s board of
directors, says his organisation has carried out exercises looking at what would
happen if a key building became unavailable. “Basically, what do we need to do
to keep our business going and how valuable certain information would be to us,”
he says. Such an approach helps determine the organisation’s most crucial
resources.
“For example, we have lots of software and we wanted to be able to prioritise
which is the most critical, which we cannot do without and which is not as
valuable in terms of exposure and the quality of information,” says Adenusi. “We
have been able to score and assess the value of our information, so we can plan
and manage the exposure of the information to damage.”
Essex’s IT systems are afforded the backup of separate data centres, and for
Adenusi, the council’s statutory status imposes a legal discipline which makes
contingency planning vital.
“As part of our council responsibilities we contribute to the Civil
Contingencies Act, so we have an emergency plan in place for disasters. For
example, this includes a business contingency plan in case there is a flood in
Essex, ” he says. “We have an emergency planning team that will respond to the
plan, as well as having emergency backup facilities and evacuation procedures in
place.”
The UK may not offer the eye watering security threats familiar to businesses
operating in Kabul or Baghdad. But the terror attacks on London in 2005, and the
floods that swept England last year, serve as powerful reminders of the threats
all businesses might have to confront if disaster came their way.
Placing such experiences to the fore might be the best way for the majority
of organisations to help think that the unthinkable can occur.
For more on risk management, visit:
http://managingrisk.computing.co.uk
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