The International Standards Organisation (ISO) published ISO 31000:2009, Risk Management – Principles and guidelines on 15th November 2009.
The standard provides a set of principles, a framework and a process for effectively managing risks. It provides critical information for establishing, implementing and maintaining a risk management program, espousing the adoption of an integrated and holistic approach at both strategic and operational levels. This is deemed to be ‘an integral part of good management practice and an essential element of good corporate governance’.
It has been formally adopted as the national Standard of risk management for Australia and New Zealand. Standards Australia and Standards New Zealand produced a local edition—AS/NZS ISO 31000:2009, Risk Management – Principles and guidelines and withdrew its predecessor—the AS/NZS 4360, Risk Management Standard series. The new Australia/New Zealand Standard is identical to the international one, except that it contains a preface and an introduction which address the transition to the current edition.
Note: For simplicity’s sake, further references to the Standard (both local and international versions) will use the short title ISO 31000:2009.
Eleven risk management principles
ISO 31000:2009 stipulates eleven risk management principles that an organisation should address to effectively manage its risks and achieve its objectives. According to these principles, the management of risk must:
1 create and protect value by contributing to the achievement of objectives and improved performance
2 be an integral part of organisational processes, from the setting of organisational objectives to strategic planning, project management and operational activities
3 be an integral part of the decision making process, so that decisions are the right ones and can be managed to a successful outcome
4 explicitly address uncertainty
5 be systematic, structured and timely
6 be based on the best available information, and acknowledge any data limitations
7 be based on the organisations risk profile, and risk appetite for given situations
8 recognise the impact of the human, cultural and environmental paradigms of the organisation on the achievement of objectives
9 address the perceptions of stakeholders, not just company management
10 be dynamic and responsive to change and take account of new or emerging risks
11 be continually improving as the organisation matures.
These principles need to be addressed by an organisation’s Board and senior management when they establish a mandate and commitment to mange risk within the organisation.
Risk management framework
ISO 31000:2009 advocates a risk management framework designed to provide the foundations and arrangements that will embed the management of risk throughout the organisation at all levels.
To be effective, a framework must be founded upon a mandate and commitment by an organisation’s senior management. This undertaking must include a dedication to the implementation, review and continual improvement of how risk is managed, ensuring that each step is fully focused on the achievement of organisational objectives. The framework calls for a clear understanding of the context in which the organisation operates so as to ensure the risk management policy clearly states the Board’s commitment to the management of risk.
The framework also sets out how the management of risk is to be woven into the organisational fabric so as to become an integral part of how things are managed within the organisation rather than having risk management as an add on or separate activity divorced from the mainstream line management of the business.
An organisation’s Board must ensure there is accountability and authority for the management of risk. ISO 31000:2009 seeks to differentiate between risk owners who are accountable for managing risk (i.e. those persons with a corporate and/or legal liability for their decisions or lack of decision) and those who are responsible for specific tasks (i.e. those persons with an obligation to carry out an instruction from a higher authority).
Prescribed risk management process
The risk management process, as prescribed by ISO 31000:2009, consists of five activities:
1 communication and consultation
2 establishing the context
3 risk assessment, including identification, analysis and evaluation
4 treating risks
5 monitoring and review.
These activities are used as the basis for assessing and managing complex risk management portfolios. As a risk management practitioner, you need to understand all of the activities and the steps encompassed by each one. It is this process, graphically represented below, that will be the primary focus of the coming sections of this learning module.
Overview of the risk management process (Source: Figure 3 from ISO 31000:2009)


