How you react to them, and whether you manage them or they control you is a matter of planning, but no one likes to plan for a risk becoming an issue.
Risk Registers are built and Controls are put in place to control the risks. A control, however, only reduces a risk rather than eliminates it completely. There is still a possibility of the events in the risk actually occurring. It is a common failing to believe that identifying a risk, and associating a Control with it makes the risk disappear.
Planning for a Controlled Risk actually happening often feels like a worthless activity, and so there is little effort or enthusiasm in performing it. There is also a view that says “We don’t know what will happen (if we did we’d have stopped if happening), therefore we can’t plan for it.” This is largely true, but a general structure and roles in addressing an event can be established.
The aim of an incident response plan is to reduce the opportunity for chaos, enabling a business to recover as quickly as possible and to reduce the losses.
What is in the plan?
- Pre-agreed Roles and Responsibilities.
- How an the Incident Team is triggered
- Who owns the Incident.
- The support they can call on: Technical and Security experts, Media Relations, Property and Transport.
- How the Team will Communicate, both between the members of the team and with other stakeholders.
- What records they will keep.
- What authority they have
- What limitations will they have on funding and resources.
Doesn’t this sound similar to a Business Continuity and Recovery Plan?
