About Jared Wade

Jared Wade is a freelance writer and former editor of the Risk Management Monitor and senior editor of Risk Management magazine. You can find more of his writing at JaredWade.com.
Игроки всегда ценят удобный и стабильный доступ к играм. Для этого идеально подходит зеркало Вавады, которое позволяет обходить любые ограничения, обеспечивая доступ ко всем бонусам и слотам.

Brad Pitt and Enterprise Risk Management

My employer, the Risk and Insurance Management Society, today unveiled its webpage for the upcoming RIMS 2012 Annual Conference & Exhibition in Philadelphia. They brought the show to Philly a few years ago, and it was a great host city. I’m sure it will be again next April.

Moreover, they got a speaker I consider to be one of the most interesting in RIMS history: Billy Beane.

For those who don’t know, Beane is the general manager of the Oakland A’s baseball team. And because he was instrumental in revolutionizing the sport into a new era of statistical analysis, he was also the subject of this fall’s blockbuster movie Moneyball, in which he was played by Brad Pitt.

The gist of the flick is this: In the olden days, scouts, coaches and personnel execs watched players hit or pitch, scanned a few basic stats and decided whether or not they would sign them to million-dollar contracts. It was an simple and seemingly adequate, if inefficient, system. But Beane had a tiny payroll so felt he had to better allocate his resources to cut down on waste. His solution: employ better data and foster a new way of thinking throughout the ballclub.

And in last month’s issue of Risk Management, I wrote about how the success of this transformation is not so dissimilar to how enterprise risk management has begun to rise to prominence in the business world.

You can check out the full piece here, but here’s an excerpt.

Baseball had become big business. But Oakland was poor. So basing the team’s strategy solely on the gut-feel of scouts, as had been done traditionally, would be reckless. With the stakes so high, how could Beane not use this new mountain of data to inform decision making? Tens of millions of dollars were on the line — not to mention a World Series.

The stakes for businesses have been similarly raised. Companies must also embrace any concept that may improve strategy. ERM has been a quantum leap forward for risk quantification. There are now oceans of information to help companies avoid the pitfalls of risk.

Head over to RMmagazine.com to read the rest.

Managing Strategic Risk: How IBM Looked Ahead, Revamped Its Operations and Profited

New IBM chief executive Virginia Rometty

In 1981, IBM revolutionized the computer industry — and arguably the world. In introducing its IBM Personal Computer, the company’s goal was to offer a machine capable of competing for sales in a burgeoning market against the likes of Commodore, Apple, Atari and Tandy. But what it really did was create a product that was so successful that its makeup became the standard for all home computers.

Fast forward 10 years. The massive market share of the home computer segment that IBM devoured following the success of the IBM PC, while still substantial, was dwindling. The “IBM Compatible” army of imitators was growing by the year and the company no longer retained the popular cache among consumer to give it any real advantage over “PC Clone” rivals like Compaq and Hewlett-Packard.

It became increasingly clear that the company’s domination of the hardware market was over.

 For some companies, this could have been the beginning of the end. But it was merely a new beginning away from the machines that had once been so much at the heart of its business that they not only comprised most of its revenue but one third of its very name, International Business Machines.

Like the long version of its name, however, the past model is long gone. In 2005, IBM made it official, selling off its venerable ThinkPad brand of laptops to Lenovo and culminating a mission began by Samuel Palmisano, who took the top executive spot in 1993, to find a non-hardware-driven way to not just survive, but thrive.

Leaders knew that their company’s long-term success would come from services and software, not hardware. In 2002, the company made its marquee splash into a pool it now dominates, by spending $3.5 billion to purchase PricewaterhouseCoopers’ consulting arm, something the company lists as “the largest acquisition in professional services history.”

And it was largely due to the vision of IBM’s recently appointed new CEO Virginia Rommety.

In 2002, Ms. Rometty championed the purchase of the big business consulting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers Consulting, for .

5 billion.

The deal was made shortly after [former chief executive Samuel] Palmisano became chief executive and it was seen as a big risk. The PricewaterhouseCoopers consultants were used to operating fairly independently, in a very different culture from the more regimented I.B.M. style of the time. The danger, analysts say, was that the business consultants would flee in droves, leaving the business a shell.

Ms. Rometty was put in charge of coordinating the work of the acquired firm’s consultants with I.B.M.’s technologists, to tailor services and software offering for specific industries. Ms. Rometty, analysts say, worked tirelessly and effectively to win over the consultants. “She did the deal, and she made it work,” Mr. Palmisano said.

This shows two admirable leadership qualities of Rometty: the ability to think long-term and the ability to successfully navigate a tricky merger. Its rare for anyone to be capable of pulling off even one of those tasks. She has done both.

And its not just those inside IBM that see it this way. Outside analysts agree.

Ms. Rometty has led the growth and development of I.B.M.’s huge services business for more than a decade. The services strategy, analysts say, is partly a marketing tactic. But, they add, it also represents a different approach to the technology business, with less emphasis on selling hardware and software products. Instead, I.B.M. puts together bundles of technology to help business streamline operations, find customers and develop new products.

“I.B.M. is selling business solutions, not just products,” said Frank Gens, chief analyst for the technology market research firm IDC. “Rometty has been at the forefront of that effort.

And this.

“Ginni Rometty combines performance and charisma,” said George F. Colony, chairman of Forrester Research. “She orchestrated a massive charm campaign to bring the PricewaterhouseCoopers people into the fold. That was the trial by fire for her.”

As its hardware dominance started to wane, the company didn’t panic. Its leaders, notably Rometty, just found new ways to maintain the company’s status as a leader in the tech market. Now, the company is the 18th largest in the country, the 2nd largest tech firm on the planet (trailing only Apply) and the world’s 2nd best brand (according to Interbrand).

Warren Buffet even wants in on the action, yesterday announcing that his company just paid $10 billion for a 5% stake in IBM in a deal that is the “most Berkshire has ever paid for a minority stake in a publicly traded company” and “a massive bet on a technology services company after years of eschewing technology stocks.”

Managing a strategic risk is perhaps the hardest thing for a company to do. It takes considerable vision, and even more effort, to redirect operations in another direction or — harder still — revamp a business model. But any company that thinks it can last for decades doing the exact same thing it has always done is likely fooling itself.

We can all learn a lot about risk management from the IBM turnaround.

The 42 Best Insurance Blogs

For the second year in a row, we here at the Risk Management Monitor are honored to announce that we have been named by LexisNexis as one of the world’s top insurance blogs. The company recognizes the best of the best each year and recently released its best insurance blogs of 2011 winners.

I’m not familiar with all of the those listed, so I can’t speak to their overall quality, but I will certainly be poking around all week to find some new good sources of content. And I do know that some of these listed are indeed stellar. Congrats in particular to some of my favorite industry blogs, including InsureReinsureGC Capital Ideasreinsurance girl’s blog and Terms + Conditions.

Here is how LexisNexis describes its list.

These top blogs offer some of the best writing out there. They contain a wealth of information for all segments of the insurance industry, and include timely news items, expert analysis, practice tips, frequent postings and helpful links to other sites and sources.

These sites demonstrate the power of the blogsphere, by providing a collective example of how bloggers can—and do—impact and influence the law and the business of insurance.

And here’s the full list (in alphabetical order):

  1. Ask Tim (Independent Insurance Agents and Trusted Choice)
  2. Binding Authority (Randy J. Maniloff)
  3. Boston ERISA and Insurance Litigation Blog (Stephen Rosenberg)
  4. Corporate Insurance Blog (Scott Godes)
  5. Coverage Counsel (Mura & Storm)
  6. CyberInquirer (Cozen O’Connor)
  7. Disability Insurance Lawyer Blog (Frankel & Newfield)
  8. Gauntlett on Intellectual Property/Antitrust Insurance (David A. Gauntlett)
  9. GC Capital Ideas (Guy Carpenter)
  10. GlobalTort (Kirk Hartley, Steve Sellick and Tim Greene)
  11. Healthblawg (David Harlow)
  12. Health Care Law Reform (McDermott Will & Emery)
  13. Insurance Claims and Issues (Dennis Wall)
  14. Insurance Class Actions Insider (Wystan Ackerman)
  15. Insurance Coverage Corner (Carlock, Copeland & Stair)
  16. Insurance Coverage Law Blog (Dunn Carney Allen Higgens & Tongue LLP)
  17. Insurance Coverage Law in Massachusetts (Nina Kallen)
  18. Insurance Litigation and Regulatory Law Blog (Barger & Wolen LLP)
  19. Insurance Law Hawaii (Tred R. Eyerly)
  20. InsureReinsure (Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP)
  21. Life, Health and Disability Insurance Blog (Barger & Wolen LLP)
  22. Life Insurance Law Blog (Currin Compliance Services LLC)
  23. Loree Reinsurance and Arbitration Law Forum (Loree & Loree)
  24. National Insurance Law Forum (National Insurance Law Forum)
  25. Nevada Insurance Law Blog (Mills & Associates Law Firm)
  26. No-Fault Defender (Jason Tenenbaum)
  27. North Carolina Insurance Law (George Simpson)
  28. PLUS Blog (Professional Liability Underwriting Society)
  29. Policyholder Perspective (Farella Braun + Martel LLP)
  30. Property Insurance Coverage Law Blog (Merlin Law Group)
  31. Reinsurance Focus (Jorden Burt LLP)
  32. reinsurance girl’s blog (Rein4ce)
  33. Reinsurance Law Blog (Stauffer & Nathan)
  34. Risk Management Monitor (RIMS)
  35. Subrogation & Recovery Law Blog (Cozen O’Connor)
  36. Tennessee Insurance Litigation Blog (Brandon McWherter and Parks T. Chastain)
  37. Terms + Conditions (Insurance Information Institute)
  38. The D&O Diary (Kevin M. LaCroix)
  39. The Insurance and Reinsurance Report (Goldberg & Segalla)
  40. Tort Talk (Dan E. Cummins)
  41. Traub Lieberman Insurance Law Blog (Brian Margolies)
  42. Zalma on Insurance (Barry Zalma)

Thailand Flood Disrupts Global Supply Chain

Thailand is underwater. The current flood is the worst the nation has faced in 50 years and hundreds have died. It’s a tragic disaster affecting millions, but it is also one that is having profound affects on the global supply chain.

For example, according to the global supplier database provider Panjiva (which had this interesting profile written about it last year), the United States imports more than one third of all its incoming hard drives from Thailand. And the reliance on these sales goes both ways: “By dollar value, hard drives are Thailand’s biggest export category to the United States — about $1.5 billion to-date,” says Panjiva.

They don’t provide precise numbers on the effect the flood has had so far — it is likely just too soon to know. But the disruption will be significant. Panjiva notes that the overall second quarter exports to the United States from Japan, which was hit by the most economically devastating disaster in history in March, fell 7% compared to the same period in 2010. Thailand’s economy is only 4% that of Japan’s, and the scale of disaster is hard to compare to the epic quake and tsunami that devastated an island nation whose $5.5 trillion 2010 GDP was the world’s third highest, but the effects will certainly be felt in parts of the tech world.

The number gurus at Panjiva have also detailed a few more of the economic products likely to be most affected: coconuts, shrimp, rice, pineapples and furniture. See the graphic below for a breakdown of how much each of these major commodities will affected by the floods.