In the first of a series of articles, we discuss risk silos and why they are a problem.
For the purposes of this series, a silo is an isolated activity, function or grouping that operates apart from, and independently of, others in a way that hinders communication, co-operation and organisational effectiveness.
When you consider risk management in your organisation, do any of the following apply?
If you have answered yes to any of the above, then it is possible that your organisation, like many others, has risk silos.
What exactly is a risk silo?
A useful definition comes from the Open Risk Manual. A risk silo is:
“an informal (usually meant as derogatory) characterisation ascribed to organizational structures of Risk Management. It is meant to indicate that the treatment of the range of various possible risks is done in isolation (autonomously) rather than in an integrated way. Risk silos can happen within any type and at any level of an organization.”
Risk silos can occur because there is no centralised approach to risk management and so organisations must rely on the competence of individual managers in managing risk activities and hope that they give risk management a high enough priority as part of their work responsibilities.
Other factors that can influence the formation of risk silos include:
A useful way of breaking down risk silos is to approach risk management in an integrated way. Some steps to get you started are:
Risk silos can easily occur, especially as organisations experience growth in teams and locations. If you start to recognise risk silos developing in your organisation, consider establishing an enterprise wide approach to risk management to align risk management activities, create a common language, and bring the organisation back to an integrated approach.
In our next article, An Integrated Approach to Risk Management, we will explain the steps suggested above in more detail to help your organisation break down risk silos.