Organizations operate in a risk environment of unparalleled volatility and complexity, intensified by AI and other emerging technologies. Traditional, siloed enterprise risk management (ERM) programs can’t keep pace with today’s deeply interconnected risks, which can cascade rapidly across department lines. This step-by-step blueprint will help you build an integrated ERM program that aligns risk appetite to strategic objectives, enables risk-informed decision-making, and embeds risk management across the organization.
Modern ERM programs require modern tools, such as integrated GRC platforms, AI-enabled analytics, and automated controls, supported by standardized risk taxonomies and a shared process across departments. But beyond technology, success depends on embedding ERM principles throughout organizational culture and practices. With strong cross-functional collaboration and a commitment to continuous improvement, organizations can move beyond reactive, siloed risk management to a holistic approach to navigate today’s complex web of risks.
1. Risk doesn’t care about your silos.
Enterprise risks are complex and interconnected, often cascading across functions in ways traditional, siloed risk management approaches fail to capture. Organizations must move toward a more integrated ERM approach that embeds risk management into strategy, governance, and daily operations across all functions.
2. Adopt a unified, goal-aligned view of ERM.
For your ERM program to be effective, it must be anchored in your organization’s strategic direction and risk appetite. This requires clear goals and success metrics, defined governance structures, a standardized risk taxonomy, and well-defined roles and responsibilities.
3. Tailor your risk response.
Effective risk management goes beyond risk identification to include specific response strategies around mitigation, transfer, acceptance, or leverage supported by fit-for-purpose controls. These strategies must be continuously monitored, transparently reported, and supported by appropriate GRC tooling.Use this step-by-step blueprint to build an integrated, proactive ERM program
Our research provides a structured, four-phase framework supported by detailed tools, templates, and case examples to embed risk governance, monitoring, and response into your organization’s strategy, operations, and culture. Use this practical, actionable blueprint to build an ERM program that helps you shift from reactive risk tracking to integrated, enterprise-wide risk management.
- Establish ERM goals and governance by defining success factors, identifying constraints, assessing current states, confirming risk capacity and tolerance, and clearly defining roles and responsibilities.
- Develop means to identify and assess risks by establishing or refining a risk taxonomy, risk identification approach and risk assessment methods and scales and ensuring those approaches encompass priority areas.
- Develop risk response options by establishing risk response methods, developing and documenting a controls management approach, and establishing a plan for documenting risk responses for priority areas.
- Build a tooling, monitoring, and reporting plan by formally establishing approaches to monitoring and reporting, developing buying criteria for a GRC tool if needed, and finalizing your organization’s ERM Program Manual and ERM Roadmap.
Optimize IT Governance for Dynamic Decision-Making
Maximize Business Value From IT Through Benefits Realization
Build an IT Risk Management Program
Review and Improve Your IT Policy Library
Establish a Sustainable ESG Reporting Program
Take Control of Compliance Improvement to Conquer Every Audit
Build an Effective IT Controls Register
Integrate IT Risk Into Enterprise Risk
The ESG Imperative and Its Impact on Organizations
Make Your IT Governance Adaptable
Build an IT Risk Taxonomy
Prepare for AI Regulation
Building the Road to Governing Digital Intelligence
Identify and Respond to Credible Threats Arising From Global Uncertainty
GRC Software Selection Guide
Establish Your Adaptive AI Governance Program: From Principles to Practice
Build an Integrated Enterprise Risk Management Program