Fundamentals of Risk Management
Map your path since last career planning Take the time to reflect on your course and note why it looks the way it does. 3
Download 3.45 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
Fundamentals of Risk Management
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Reputation and the business model Components of the business model
2
Map your path since last career planning Take the time to reflect on your course and note why it looks the way it does. 3 Reflect on your likes and dislikes, needs and wants Use this list to examine your current job and career path. 4 Examine your pastimes and hobbies Decide if you can make a hobby into a career because people do it all the time. 5 Make note of your past accomplishments One of these may trigger researching and planning a career shift. 6 Look beyond your current job for transferable skills Every job requires a certain set of skills and it is better to define yourself in terms of skill sets. 7 Review career and job trends Having information about career trends is vital to long-term career planning success. 8 Set career and job goals Develop a roadmap for your job and career success through goal setting. 9 Explore new education and training opportunities What types of educational experiences will help you achieve your career goals. 10 Research further career/ job advancement opportunities Picture yourself in the future and develop multiple scenarios of that future. Career planning can have multiple benefits, from goal setting to career change, to a more successful life. Here are 10 steps to success: Career success 20 Reputation and the business model Components of the business model All organizations will have a business model that represents how they deliver the customer offering. Organizations that are public sector, third sector or would other- wise consider themselves to be a non-commercial organization will still have a means of delivering their vision and/or mission statement. The means of delivering the defined customer offering is the business model of the organization. In summary, customers receive the offering from the organization because it utilizes the resources that it has available. The customer offering is underpinned by the resilience of the organization and by arrangements to ensure that the organization remains sustainable. Figure 20.1 illustrates the components of the business model as customer, offering, resources and resilience (CORR). Each of these components is described in more detail in Figure 20.1, and they can be summarized as follows: ● ● Customer includes analysis of customer segments, recruitment and retention, as well as how products or services will be delivered. ● ● Offering refers to the customer value proposition and the related benefits that are delivered to those customers. ● ● Resources include the data, capabilities and assets of the organization, as well as partnerships and networks. ● ● Resilience of the organization is reputational (based on ethos and culture) and financial resilience (based on expenditure and revenue). The importance of the business model is that it represents how the operational and compliance core processes work together to deliver the customer experience. It is important for organizations to understand the business model, so that they can undertake a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) analysis of the existing business model. A risk assessment of the existing business model will enable the organization to evaluate the efficiency of the existing arrangements and identify Download 3.45 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling