Readings
The course material may comprise two recent books, a collection of
professional and academic articles, current policy studies and
working papers.
Andersen, T. J., Garvey, M. and Roggi, O., Managing Risk and
Opportunity: The Governance of Strategic Risk-Taking, Oxford
University Press, Oxford, England, 2014. (ISBN: 978-0-19-968785-5)
Andersen, T. J. and Schrøder, P. W., Strategic Risk Management
Practice: How to Deal Effectively with Major Corporate Exposures,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England, 2010. (ISBN:
978-0-521-13215-2)
Relevant articles, policy papers, and case examples will be
available on the course site.
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COURSE SCHEDULE AND READINGS:
Strategic Risk Management of Multinational Enterprise – Fall 2017
Note: Adjustments to the assigned readings may occur (The readings
are listed in alphabetical order for each session)
The course will be structured around 11 three-lecture class
sessions (one session per week) during the fall semester in weeks
36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47.
All course activities including the exam are conducted in English.
Readings
1. Essential Risk Management Concerns
Content: The concepts of risk, uncertainty, and change are
introduced in the context of multinational organizations and the
relevance of strategic responsiveness is discussed. Readings:
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 1 in Strategic
Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o Power, M. 2005. ‘The Invention of Operational Risk’, Review of
International Political Economy, 12(4), pp. 577-599.
o Slywotzky, A. J. and Drzik, J., 2005. ‘Countering the Biggest
Risk of All’, Harvard Business Review, 82, pp. 78-88.
Case: KN Energy, Inc. (A)
4
2. Multinational Market Exposures
Content: We identify potential international risk factors in
multinational risk management and consider alternative business
responses to deal with them.
Readings:
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 2 in Strategic
Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o Andersen, T. J., 2006. ‘A Multinational Risk Management
Framework’, Chapter 7 in Perspectives on Strategic Risk Management,
CBS Press, pp. 131-146.
o Ghoshal, S., 1987. ‘Global Strategy: An Organizing Framework’,
Strategic Management Journal, 8, pp. 425-440.
o Miller, K. D., 1992. ’A Framework for Integrated Risk Management
in International Business’, Journal of International Business, pp.
311-331.
Case: Nissan Motor Company Ltd.
3. Real Options Reasoning
Content: We consider the conventional financial option perspective
and extend this to real options that can address business and
corporate exposures.
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 4 in Strategic
Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o Andersen, T. J., 2006. ‘Strategic Exposures and Real Options’,
Chapter 10 in Global Derivatives: A Strategic Risk Management
Perspective, Pearson Education, pp. 357-396.
o Leuhrman, T. A. 1998. Strategy as a Portfolio of Real Options,
Harvard Business Review, 76(5), pp. 89-99.
o Miller, K. D. and Waller, H. G., 2003. ‘Scenarios, Real Options
and Integrated Risk Management’, Long Range Planning, 36, pp.
93-107.
Case: Samsung
4. Global Operating Structures
Content: The multinational corporation sources inputs and
distributes goods and services on a global scale where a flexible
operating structure enhances the ability to deal with external
events.
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 5 and 6 in
Strategic Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o Christopher, M. and Peck, H., 2004. ‘Building the Resilient
Supply Chain’, International Journal of Logistics Management,
15(2), pp. 1-13.
o Kogut, B. and Kulatilaka, N. 1994. ‘Operating Flexibility, Global
Manufacturing, and Option Value of a Multinational Network’,
Management Science, 40(1), pp. 123-139.
o Manuj, I. and Mentzer, J. T., 2008. ‘Global Supply Chain Risk
Management Strategies, International Journal of Physical
Distribution & Logistics Management, 38(3), pp. 192-223.
Practice: PwC and the MIT Form for Supply Chain Innovation: Making
the right risk decisions to strengthen operations performance
Case: Can LEGO Snap Together a Future in Asia? (HBS Working
Knowledge - online)
5
5. The Governance of Risk Management
Content: The multinational risk management process is a function of
the governance structure imposed on the organization – we review
the core arguments for contemporary guidelines.
Readings:
o Andersen, T. J., Garvey, M. and Roggi, O. 2014. Chapter 1 in
Managing Risk and Opportunity, Oxford University Press.
o Ashbaugh-Skaife, H., Collins, W., Kinney, W. R. and Lafond, R.
2009. ‚‘The Effect of SOX Internal Control Deficiencies on Firm
Risk and Cost of Equity‘, Journal of Accounting Research, 47(1),
pp. 1-43.
o Bargeron, L., Lehn, K. M. and Zutter, C. J., 2010.
‚Sarbanes-Oxley and Corporate Risk-Taking’, Journal of Accounting
and Economics, 49, pp. 34-52.
o Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (2015). Guidelines:
Corporate Governance Principles for Bank, Bank For International
Settlements, Basel: Switzerland [available on-line]
o The RiskMinds 2009 Risk Managers’ Survey: The Causes and
Implications of the 2008 Banking Crisis.
Case: Lehman Brothers (A)
6. Enterprise Risk Management Rationales
Content: We extend the discussion of enterprise risk management and
its applications and consider different rationales in support of
the risk management concept.
Readings:
o Andersen, T. J., Garvey, M. and Roggi, O. 2014. Chapter 2 in
Managing Risk and Opportunity, Oxford University Press.
o Froot, K. A., Scharfstein, D. S., and Stein, J. C., ‘A Framework
for Risk Management”, Harvard Business Review, 1994, 76(6), pp.
91-102.
o Merton, R. C., ‘You Have More Capital Than You Think’, Harvard
Business Review, 83(11), pp. 84-94. o Nocco, B. W. and Stulz, R. M.
2006. ‘Enterprise Risk Management’, Journal of Applied Corporate
Finance, 18(4), 8-20.
o Pagach, D. and Warr, R. 2011. ‘The Characteristics of Firms That
Hire Chief Risk Officers’, The Journal of Risk and Insurance 78(1),
185-211.
Practice: Risk Management Frameworks (COSO, ISO 31000, IRM).
7. Strategic Risk Management Practice
Content: We discuss how effective risk management in a
multinational organization constitutes a combination of managed
risk awareness and prudent risk-taking behaviour.
Readings:
o Andersen, T. J., Garvey, M. and Roggi, O. 2014. Chapter 4 in
Managing Risk and Opportunity, Oxford University Press.
o Andersen, T. J. and Læssøe, H. 2014. Effective Strategic Risk
Management Practice: Responding Faster to Updated Information
(working paper).
o Frigo, M. L. and Læssøe, H. 2012. ‘Strategic Risk Management at
the LEGO Group’, Strategic Finance, February, pp. 27-35.
6
Executive visit: Hans Læssøe, Senior Director, Strategic Risk
Management, The LEGO Group.
Case: LEGO – RIMS Risk Management Challenge
8. The Challenges of Enterprise Risk Management
Content: In this session we discuss organizational challenges of
conventional enterprise-wise risk management practices and consider
possible alternatives.
Readings:
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 6 and 7 in
Strategic Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation, 2006.
Eurocontrol Experimental Centre: Revisiting the “Swiss Cheese”
Model of Accidents, EEC Note No. 13/06.
o Schoemaker, P. J. H. and Day, G. S. 2009. ‘How to Make Sense of
Weak Signals, MIT-Sloan Management Review, 50(3), 81-89.
o Vaughan, D. 2005. ‘System Effects: On Slippery Slopes, Repeating
Negative Patterns, and Learning From Mistake?’, Chapter 3 in
Starbuck, W. H. and Farjoun, M. (eds.), Organization at the Limit:
Lessons from the Columbia Disaster, Blackwell Publishing, Malden,
MA, pp. 41-59.
Case: TEPCO and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant
9. Aspects of Proactive Risk Management
Content: We discuss how current risk management practices may fail
to adapt to unexpected risks and consider proactive multinational
risk management approaches to deal with this.
Readings:
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 8 in Strategic
Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o Andersen, T. J., 2012. ‘Multinational Risk and Performance
Outcomes: Effects of Knowledge Intensity and Industry Context’,
International Business Review, 21, pp. 239-252.
o Andersen, T. J., 2009. ‘Effective Risk Management Outcomes:
Exploring Effects of Innovation and Capital Structure’, Journal of
Strategy and Management, 2(4), pp. 352-379. o Damodaran, A. 2008.
‘Strategic Risk Management’, Chapter 11 in Strategic Risk Taking: A
Framework of Risk Management, Wharton School Publishing, 341-365.
o Torp, S. (2016). ’Effective Risk Management: Do We Have the Right
Management Skills and Employee Competences?’ in Andersen, T. J.
(ed.) Routledge Companion to Strategic Risk Management.
Case: Disaster Recovery Testing (DiRT) in Google.
10. Cognitive Biases in Risk Management
Content: In this session we will consider how the individual
cognition of key decision makers can create its own exposure by
inducing biases and discuss possible remedies.
Readings:
7
o Andersen, T.J. and Schrøder, P. W. 2010. Chapter 9 in Strategic
Risk Management Practice, Cambridge University Press.
o Mitroff I. I. and Silvers, A. 2010. ‘Screwing Up Royally - An
Introduction to Errors of the Third and Fourth Kind’, Chapter 1 in
Dirty Rotten Strategies: How We Trick Ourselves and Others Into
Solving the Wrong Problems Precisely, Stanford Business Books,
1-28.
o Weick, K. E. and Sutcliffe, K. M. 2001. ‘What Business can Learn
from High Reliability Organizations’, Chapter 1 in Managing the
Unexpected, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, pp. 1-23.
Case: Porsche (A) (European Case Clearing Corporation #310-267-1)
11. Strategic Risk Management - Overview
Content: The basic course content is revisited and contextualized.
The final completion of the written exam reports (term papers) can
be discussed.
Readings:
o Andersen, T. J., Garvey, M. and Roggi, O. 2014. Chapter 5 in
Managing Risk and Opportunity, Oxford University Press.
o Miller, K. D., 2009. ‘Organizational Risk after Modernism’,
Organization Studies, 30(2), pp. 157-180.
o Power, M. 2009. ‘The Risk Management of Nothing’, Accounting,
Organizations and Society (34), 849-855.
Case: British Petroleum: From Texas City to the Gulf of Mexico and
Beyond
The Written Report (final exam) is due no later than (to be
determined)
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