Risk Culture, Governance and Operational Resilience in Crisis Management
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Risk culture plays a central role in operational resilience, particularly in environments shaped by uncertainty and rapid change.
In this segment, Bruce McIndoe explains why governance structures in risk management and crisis management often appear robust but struggle under real conditions.
He highlights how organisations rely on defined roles, escalation paths, and reporting structures, yet face challenges in speed, integration, and decision-making when ambiguity increases.
The discussion explores how culture influences whether early warning signals are surfaced, how oversight shapes behaviour, and how operational resilience depends on the ability to act before information is fully validated.
Listeners will gain insight into:
- How risk culture influences operational resilience and crisis response
- Why governance structures provide confidence but not always effectiveness
- How speed and integration become critical under pressure
- Why oversight can delay escalation when certainty is prioritised
- What this means for enterprise risk management and decision-making
Enterprise risk management, crisis management, and governance frameworks often emphasise structure, reporting, and control.
Operational resilience depends on how organisations behave when conditions are uncertain.
This includes:
- how early signals are surfaced
- how ambiguity is treated in decision-making
- how quickly teams can act across functions
Strengthening these capabilities improves business resilience and response effectiveness.
This extract is taken from the full RiskMasters interview with Bruce McIndoe on operational resilience, risk management, and crisis decision-making.