Developing a mitigation strategy built on processes
Integrated risk management plays an outsized role in a time of global economic upheaval as finance functions have to contend with inflation and interest rate hikes. Since risk management depends on seamless data integration and the timely recognition of potential threats, optimized processes allow risk managers to quickly access and act on relevant information across the enterprise. In fact, 83% of finance leaders see processes as vital to safeguarding against operational risk.
So what are the consequences for lacking a proactive risk management strategy? Let’s look at five typical risks faced by finance departments and how finance leaders can outmaneuver threats by boosting operational risk management and bridging funding gaps.
- Liquidity and Cash Flow Risk — Liquidity and cash flow risks are intertwined. A company’s liquidity is their bottom-line ability to manage money and pay current obligations. Timing drives liquidity risk (what happens when suppliers are net 30 but customers get extended 90 days credit?) Cash flow can be impacted as reserves dwindle, lending costs increase, profit margins fall, and outstanding receivables mount. To achieve a steady, positive cash flow, finance departments can improve forecast data quality, harmonize the payment of short- and long-term obligations, and boost the efficiency of day-to-day procurement, payment, and collection activities.
- Credit Risk — Robust credit risk management can reduce bad debt and help ensure company financial health. When companies extend customer credit to grow revenue, uncollected sales create losses. At the same time, poor invoicing practices can create piles of old, unbilled orders leading to revenue leakage.
- Operational Risk — Operational risk disrupts the flow of normal business operations and can lead to organizational failure. Operational risks can emerge from internal processes, systems, and people. These risk events include data breaches, cyber attacks, employee error, fraud, and the failure of internal controls. To gain an upper hand over operational risk, finance functions must develop their capacity to track and measure deviations from expected operational metrics.
- Regulatory Compliance Risk — Companies must adjust their risk management processes to adapt to regulatory changes and identify compliance gaps. Developing a regulatory risk mitigation strategy can include the use of generative AI to carry out compliance monitoring, risk identification, and streamline regulatory reporting.