{"id":32959,"date":"2016-08-03T10:02:59","date_gmt":"2016-08-03T00:02:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/leadershipmanagement.co.nz\/?p=32959"},"modified":"2016-08-03T10:02:59","modified_gmt":"2016-08-03T00:02:59","slug":"rio-olympics-lesson-risk-management","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/leadershipmanagement.co.nz\/rio-olympics-lesson-risk-management\/","title":{"rendered":"Rio Olympics: A Lesson in Risk Management"},"content":{"rendered":"

With the Rio Olympics underway, there has been a definite tension running under the surface that has little or nothing to do with athletic rivalry. The source of the tension? The rough road to Rio in the form of stadium constructions debacles, the Zika virus, filthy water and facilities, explosions, the almost expected doping scandal and the odd mugging or two of athletes and tourists.<\/p>\n

In some, if not most people\u2019s minds, things have indeed gone too far for the 2016 Olympics to be considered a shining beacon of success. Although adjustments have been promised and resolutions have been put in place, the fingers of blame are still being pointed every which way. No matter where the blame lands, each issue that has plagued Rio can be viewed as part of a narrative regarding the necessity for effective and long-sighted risk management.<\/p>\n

Risk management has long been at the heart of the governance model for the Olympic Games and the Olympic movement. This is not only due to the growing scale and complexity of the event, but also due to the amount of global scale planning required, and equally relevant regional vulnerability that can be exposed when hosting such an event. For Rio, these risks have emulated from the realms of security, public health, natural ecology, technology and economics, both at the global and local scale. In many negative ways, Rio has already shattered the records for the number and volume of problems facing a single Games.<\/p>\n

Although thinking on a risk management level to rival the Olympics will likely never fall upon one person or small team, there are some individual lessons that Rio\u2019s shortcomings and successes can teach about how to manage risk well, and how to remain strong through potential disaster.<\/p>\n

Clear and honest identification of risks<\/strong><\/h2>\n

The first step in any risk management strategy is to properly and thoroughly identify the potential threats and risks to a project. Only by developing an awareness of what could happen can you stand any change of doing something about it. Unfortunately for Rio, although many of the risks may have been partially known internally, the opportunity to conduct an external and more thorough risk analysis appears to be one of the causes of many of the now ingrained issues.<\/p>\n

By tackling the risks head on, the possibility of intersecting problems before they occur inevitably increases. There are many tools that can be implemented when conducting a risk assessment, many of which are relatively easy and cost effective:<\/p>\n