I'm looking for some market intelligence... what area is growing fast and in what geographies. Is it because there isn't enough talent, or there is excess demand?
I was asked many times this question and I just want to hear the real practitioners’ opinion so everyone can contribute and profit from the crowd sourcing.
My guess- IT related implementations, compliance, Basel III, ERM, counterparty risk, programming and Quant skills
Looking forward for your active participation.
Replies
Risk management is becoming more prevalent in Asia, Africa and certain regions in LAtin America. However, it seems that first we need to have a clearer standard definition for risk (ISO 31000, COSO, etc,.). It would be nice to sort of bring together all these into some international accepted standard so that we can then "talk the same talk".
As for priorities in risk, depending on where you are located (industrialized/non-industrialized) then risk needs to be defined and documented for each particular institution and based on guidelines from Basel II and/or III (which is a challenge).
Lets get all the basic risks under control (market, operational, etc,.) and then we can focus on what is the new focus.
BTW, also would be nice if someone can indicate where a --(simplified) Risk manual is available....or at least someone to post a "generic" Table of Contents?
I feature FRM, highly relevant hedge funds experience, and extensive, senior level as well as hands-on IT skills. I've been in job search in the NYC area for several years with hardly a nibble.
-- for what it's worth
There is demand but little available money and even less experience for non-financial risk Management in Japan.
As usual, people tend to the easy-to-understand-hard-to-treat Business Continuity and Reputation risks. More important Strategy risks are often forgotten because people do not find the way to mitigate them. But Strategy Risks should not be mitigated, they should be optimized during the strategy decision process.
The main necessary skill in that non-financial area is less the technicalities of Risk Management than a good understanding of how companies work inside.
The vast majority of the pool of available Risk Management talent developed their experience at organizations where the practice of Risk Management has been far too silo-ed for a present day effective GRC. Risk Management is a new professional category. Risk management practices, however, have developed and been employed for many years. These practices evolved in many areas of organizations for many purposes. As such, there are different standards of terms and best practices. Metrics of quantifiable and characterization descriptions for non quantifiable risks are not widely applied across silos. Even the definitions of what risks exist are not universally agreed upon at the enterprise level.
While risk professional organizations including PRMIA, GARP and RIMS have fostered convergence of risk management practice, few available candidates hold designations such as the Professional Risk Manager (PRM), Financial Risk Manager (FRM) or RIMS Fellow (RF).
Richard Ellis, PMP PRM
Joy Das said:
To add to the lists submitted by others, I would also add International Financial Reporting Standards and conversion from US GAAP in particular; compliance with the revised International Standards for the Practice of Internal Auditing, which are not daunting but do have nuances for internal audit charters, external review of internal audit practices and attestation of compliance; and last but not least, methods for convincing management that serious risk assessment is an act of self preservation as well as a good thing in general. There is so much ego involved in this last element that it is difficult to convince management that they are not all knowing and that their risk assessment processes should be transparent, documented and effective.
And to answer the basic question: no, there is not enough talent. We have tons of traditionalists, but not enough people who can think outside the box and really examine corporate risks, and then to expose those risks and mitigate them in a way that managements will accept.
I believe that earlier people have rightly commented on areas of operational risk, IT, finance and market risk. Not mentioning credit risk as this is a much more matured field.
I want to emphasise that overall management skills with indepth understanding and application of risk management and right governance align to business growth is the main skill set of CRO. This shapes the tone at the top. I believe that amount of skills at junior level cum MIS will not be of much use if the same is not applied in decision making by senior management. Even though many CROs are upcoming, there are few who are making timely influence and application. I think this can be attributed to lack of understanding of overall strategy cum growth of the institution, voice of risk manager not heard at top and proactivce steps not taken by risk manager cum the credibility.
Stella A. Attakpah said: