
- Image by ShashiBellamkonda via Flickr
It’s been difficult to come up with topics this week. The situation in Haiti seems to consume the majority of my thoughts when I’m outside the office. Make a difference. Please donate cash to the relief agency of your choice.
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I thought I’d take a look at my Google Analytics page and see what people are searching for when they find my website. There is a definite trend. Many of the searches involve the word “example” or are geared toward identifying potential risks for businesses. Let’s talk about that…
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Businesses face many types of risks. Some of those risks can be managed with insurance. I’m not going to address those here, but I’ll point you to a great site with tons of free information. Check out www.ClearRisk.com for a comprehensive list of business risks that can be managed by insurance. I would also strongly recommend that you download and read their free e-book. It’s an easy read and provides a great education on insurance for small and medium businesses. (Disclaimer: My recommendation is not sponsored and I’m not being paid in any way. In fact, Craig Rowe and the ClearRisk team don’t even know I’m doing it.)
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So let’s talk about the risks you can’t buy insurance for. Obviously every business is going to have risks that are unique to that business, but they will always fall into three broad categories – budget risk, quality risk and schedule risk. (Check out my post here for details.) Starting with those categories, you can drill down by using the “5 Coulds Technique” (detailed here).
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As you do the brainstorming, you’ll find that you come up with a wide range of risks. Here are just a few that come to mind as I’m writing. I’m in a manufacturing and retail mindset this morning so the risks are geared to those kinds of businesses, but many of them apply to service businesses, too. Some risks are repeated in multiple categories purposely.
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Make sure you read the IMPORTANT NOTE at the bottom of the post!
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Employee Related Risks
- Theft
- Departure of a key employee
- Lack of training
- High turnover
- Sabotage/intentional misbehavior
- Employee disputes
- Poor customer service
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Revenue Related Risks
- Competitor enters market
- Market size shrinks (local population shrinks, demographics change)
- Economic pressure (reduces money available to be spent on your product)
- Substitute product becomes available
- Customer access disrupted (e.g. road construction in front of your business)
- Pricing doesn’t match value perceived by customers
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Expense Related Risks
- Material costs increase
- High rework expense
- High warranty expense
- Loss of key supplier
- Increased wage expense (tight labor market)
- Increased benefit costs
- Loss of lease/increased rent
- Increased utility rates
- Increased bank charges (interest rates, credit card fees)
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Quality Related Risks
- Poor production process
- High rework expense
- High warranty expense
- Poor customer service
- Low quality materials
- Poor employee morale
- Inadequate equipment/tools
- Poor/unattractive packaging
- Equipment/tool breakdown
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Schedule Related Risks
- Customers are slow paying
- Unfavorable terms from suppliers (e.g. cash in advance)
- Late delivery of materials
- Lost/misdirected shipments of your product
- Slow response of bank, government agency (e.g. loan proceeds, permits, etc.)
- Delayed construction/remodel
- Slow response to marketing campaign
- Equipment/tool breakdown (e.g. internet down, computer virus)
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Are you getting the idea? This list just scratches the surface. Your business will have many more risks that are unique to your situation.
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IMPORTANT NOTE: I’ve focused the examples above on risks, but don’t forget about your opportunities. Many of the risks listed above will have corresponding opportunities you can exploit. For example: The risk “Customers are slow paying” has an opportunity “Customers pay quicker than expected”. Don’t get caught in the trap of focusing only on the negative. Identifying and exploiting opportunities can pay for your risk management program. Check out this post for more info.
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Please share some examples of risks facing your business. Leave a comment.

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