How to Manage Incentives
How to Manage Incentives
Introduction
Operational Risk in Four Letters
An Invisible Framework
Small is Beautiful in OpRisk Management
The Business Value of ORM
How to Minimise ‘People Risk’
The Missing Piece
Risk Appetite and Framework
From Russian Roulette to Overcautious Decision-making
The Importance of Preventive KRIs
How to Build Preventive Key Risk Indicators
Unlocking KRIs
Six Steps for Preventive KRIs
Have Your Cake and Eat It
Conduct, Not ‘Conduct Risk’
How to Manage Incentives
Is Reputation Risk Overstated?
What Regulators Want
Conduct & Culture
OpRisk Takes Forward Steps at OpRisk Europe 2014
Modern Scenario Analysis
The Rogue’s Path
Rogue Trading No Training: The Connections
What Brexit Teaches OpRisk
OpRisk Survey Shows the Insidious Effects of Political Risk
Discarding the AMA Could Become a Source of OpRisk
UCL Research Shows that SMA Reforms Introduces Capital Instability and Discourages Risk Management
Memo to Bank CEOs: Treat OpRisk with More Respect
Don’t Let the SMA Kill OpRisk Modelling
Incentive management is a crucial issue for all parties involved in the risk management of organisations. Regulators face the constant challenge of inciting banks to pay proper attention to operational risk management. Operational risk managers and quality specialist struggle to make their voice heard in many sectors. Line managers try countless remuneration structures and levels to see staff working as they expect.
This paper combines findings of some of the best research in incentive management, corporate culture and behavioural psychology. It proposes the MESAR model, an original approach articulated around five actions to manage incentives: Motivate, Enable, Support, Assess and Reinforce.
Incentive management is more than remuneration structure, reward is more than money, deterrent is more than fines.
Motivating people goes beyond remuneration; we all thrive to be valued, in our own eyes and in the eyes of others. We need to feel that what we do is important, or at least that it makes a difference. We need to be recognised by our peers and mentors in what we do well. Money is one way to show value but is by no means enough. Research shows that money is a powerful
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