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Risk Management through Common Sense

November 20, 2009 Nik

nodiving

Disclosure: I’ll start out with the intent of touching on being proactive rather than reactionary in regards to risk management….but we’ll see where we end up!

This blog idea came to me while I was driving through middle-of-nowhere West Texas. I have always noticed the growing prevalence of people feeling they are owed things and the increasing lack of common sense in this world, but never really said anything to more than just my friends. In late October, I was passing through a small po-dunk country town and noticed that the community pool had already been drained for the winter. Of course, in good small-town country fashion, all that was left was a deep empty cement hole. My first thought was thinking how refreshing it was to see that! You mean kids and adults are actually smart enough out here to realize that there is no water in there…so if you jump in you can actually hurt yourself?

Now, granted, I do know accidents happen and the community did have a relatively high metal fence surrounding the pool area so don’t worry too much. I also know that covering your pool is being “proactive” and I realize why many people cover their pools. It was just a good feeling to remember what common sense looked like and all the old memories of learning things the “hard way” that created that proactive method of reason! You know you touch the stove and it burned you, so you learned to hold your hand over it first…or how bout the time you left a pack of gum in your jeans and put them through the wash. Then got to spend the next hour trying to pick gum off of everything! Or how about you ate grilled chicken for the first time…realized it was so much better fried…so now you just fry everything first! The infamous McDonald’s coffee law-suit also comes to mind.

My point is when we walk through the doors we are committed to helping our clients take a common sense approach to risk and compliance. Educating our customers about doing things not just for the sake of compliance but for the sake of the growth of their businesses.

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  • NikP
    I myself am from a Central Texas small-po-dunk-country town and very very proud to have grown up in that type of community. I Graduated from a class of 67 not even 7 years ago. I am hoping to eventually raise my family in that setting as well and by no way had intentions of offending anyone. I am truly sorry if I did. I was intending on the point to be driven that it was refreshing to see more grass and trees than concrete and buildings. That I miss the times where it was safe for Mom to tell be to just be back by dark and don't play in the street. Where you remember you best friends home number...not his or hers cell. That folks didn't try to find how they had been wronged but made the best from situations and learned from the hard ones. I was hoping to instill more of pride of those who, like me, grew up in our small towns and remember the times where we stopped and thought of how of how our next move might lead to our next situation.
  • "Educating our customers about doing things not just for the sake of compliance but for the sake of the growth of their businesses."

    Could not have said it better myself. Good introduction to risk management!
  • There are benefits to risk management. When organizations realize and understand that risk management and compliance are not just for the auditors but actually impact their bottom line, "a common sense approach" will be the norm. "Proactive" will be a must and perhaps, just perhaps, "no more gum in jeans pocket." What an eye opener it will be...
  • West Texas Banker
    "This blog idea come to me while I was driving through a middle of nowhere West Texas (small- po-dunk country town) My first thought was thinking how refreshing to see that. You mean kids and adults are actually smart enough out here to realize that there is no water in here...so if you jump in you can actually hurt yourself?"

    Enticing advertisement that will lure companies to utilize the GG??
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