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Take the Leap, Stick the Landing: Four Keys to Modern Risk Management

"There is no reward without risk.” The adage still applies, but the upsides and downsides have never been more massive. Here’s how to transform risk management from a necessary cost into an opportunity engine.
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“Take risks: if you win, you will be happy; if you lose, you will be wise.” – Anonymous

Turns out, there are a lot of quotes about risk-taking. And with good reason – many of the most quotable minds of our time built their fame and/or fortune by taking chances that succeeded in a big way.

That doesn’t mean they were foolhardy. An old Zen saying reads “Leap and the net will appear.” While inspirational, as a consultant, it’s not something I can 100% endorse – especially not in this era of interconnectedness and rapid industry change.

But there’s no denying that risk in business is unavoidable, and there’s no succeeding without first accepting a level of uncertainty. So how do you achieve a level of comfort that isn’t…too comfortable? One that encourages you to take chances, is reassuring but not stifling? 

Enter Integrated Risk Management

From economic volatility and regulatory pressures to operational disruptions, the modern organization must be ready to address risk not as an obstacle but as an opportunity. The traditional “three lines of defense” approach has served its purpose but typically results in a siloed implementation of risk management practices.

By updating your approach to incorporate four key principles, you can deploy an integrated framework that anticipates challenges and prepares your organization to adapt and thrive.

1.    Managing risk is everyone’s responsibility.
Risk management can no longer sit solely within Compliance or Risk departments; it must be a shared responsibility across the entire organization.

Internally at Further Advisory, we promote a culture where every employee—regardless of their role—is empowered to identify and respond to risks. Think of a football team. If the quarterback is the only player scanning for threats, the offense will fall apart. Each player must anticipate, communicate, and execute their role seamlessly.

The same holds true in business. By embedding risk awareness into your organization’s culture, through active monitoring, reporting, and testing, you can empower every employee to proactively detect potential issues early, respond more effectively, and create a collective accountability that strengthens resilience.

2. Velocity is critical.

When addressing risk, traditional assessments often focus on its likelihood and impact while ignoring its velocity. In today’s environment, risks can escalate overnight—cyber breaches, regulatory changes, supply chain breakdowns. Therefore, the speed of response is critical to minimizing disruption and damage.

3. Risk management drives value, not just cost.

Risk management is often unfairly seen as a compliance function—a box-checking exercise to avoid fines, audits, or negative headlines. At its best, risk management is a competitive advantage that informs decision-making, drives innovation, and creates long-term value.

When integrated into core strategy, risk management uncovers opportunities to optimize resources, reduce costs, and inform better decisions. Instead of merely preventing losses, organizations can use risk insights to pursue smarter paths forward.

Consider Netflix’s strategic pivot from physical DVDs to streaming technology. While Blockbuster underestimated the risk of technological disruption, Netflix recognized it, adapted, and turned the challenge into a market-dominating opportunity. Effective risk management empowered Netflix to see the disruption not as a threat, rather as a launchpad for growth.

Reframing risk as a driver of strategic value can position you (and help secure the budget you need) to build trust, innovate, and expand confidently.

4. Offense is just as important as defense.

Many organizations equate risk management with risk mitigation. The latter is a defensive mechanism—a way to avoid problems. While mitigating risks is essential, focusing solely on defense limits potential. To achieve sustainable growth, businesses must also go on the offensive and leverage risk management as a competitive differentiator.

Recently, Tim Vanderham, Chief Operating Officer or Featurespace, a AI-based technology company whose solutions are used to fight enterprise fraud and financial crimes, told PYMNTS that “half of households have been victim to scams through the past several years.” He added that 30% of those victims have switched financial institutions in the wake of the scams, and half have considered switching, mainly because they expect fraud detection and monitoring technologies to be in place.

Proactive risk management demonstrates maturity, builds trust with stakeholders, and creates opportunities to expand into new markets. Companies that take an offensive approach can identify emerging opportunities before competitors do and capitalize on them.

The Bottom Line

Organizations that cling to a purely defensive approach to risk will struggle to keep pace in today’s dynamic business environment. Integrated Risk Management empowers businesses to see the opportunities in risk – innovation, efficiency, and strategic growth. By fostering shared accountability, building agility, uncovering value, and playing offense, you’ll be empowered to take the leap and stick that landing.

“In things seem under control, you are just not going fast enough.” – Mario Andretti

Erin Catalina contributed to this article.

About the author

Author

  • Michael Morley

    Michael has over two decades of strategic business and management consulting experience spanning multiple industries. His advisory focuses on large-scale transformations, go-to-market program execution, and IT strategies for clients in the financial services sector. As an organizational change management expert, Michael champions the practice of Objectives & Key Results (OKR’s), helping companies become more disciplined in defining clear, strategic objectives and measuring tangible outcomes.

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