The Risk Analysis and Review (RAR) phase is a foundational component of the Business Continuity Management (BCM) Planning Methodology for SHINE Children and Youth Services. As a social service organisation dedicated to empowering children, youth, and families facing adversity, SHINE must ensure that its programmes and support systems remain dependable, even when unexpected disruptions occur.
This chapter outlines the systematic process of identifying, assessing, mitigating, and continuously monitoring risks that could impact SHINE’s operations, service delivery, and ability to safeguard its beneficiaries. Through a structured RAR process aligned with ISO 22301, SHINE enhances its organisational resilience, strengthens preparedness, and ensures that its mission—providing timely, quality care and developmental support—continues uninterrupted, regardless of circumstances.
The purpose of this chapter is to systematically identify, assess, mitigate, and monitor the risks that could threaten SHINE’s ability to deliver its mission of supporting children and youth from disadvantaged backgrounds. By embedding a structured Risk Analysis & Review process, SHINE can proactively protect its operations, staff, service users, and reputation — thereby safeguarding continuity of care.
In the first step, SHINE must compile a comprehensive list of both internal and external risks that could disrupt its operations. Given SHINE’s nature as a social service and youth care provider, some relevant risk categories and examples include:
By casting a wide net, SHINE ensures its RAR process captures all plausible threats, even those that may seem remote — because BCM aims to maintain continuity during unexpected disruptions.
Once risks are identified, SHINE must assess likelihood (how probable it is that a risk will occur) and impact (the severity of consequences if it occurs). The combination yields a risk rating, which enables prioritisation. This follows standard BCM practice where “risk likelihood × risk impact = risk rating/risk level.”
Here is an illustrative risk-assessment table for SHINE (simplified):
|
Risk |
Likelihood* |
Impact* |
Risk Level (Rating) |
Notes / Rationale |
|
Volunteer shortage / high attrition |
Medium |
High |
High |
Many SHINE programmes (mentoring, reading, group work) rely heavily on volunteers; volunteer dropout affects service continuity. |
|
Staff unavailability due to illness/burnout |
Medium |
High |
High |
Affects core service delivery — counselling, educational psychology, and social work. |
|
Data breach/confidentiality breach |
Low–Medium |
Very High |
High |
Risk to client privacy, legal compliance, and reputation. |
|
Suspension of face-to-face programmes due to public health crisis (e.g., pandemic) |
Low–Medium |
Very High |
High |
Could disrupt critical services; may affect many clients simultaneously. |
|
Surge in demand for services beyond capacity |
Medium |
Medium–High |
Medium–High |
Strained resources, longer waiting lists, and compromised quality. |
|
Premises damage (fire, flood, structural) |
Low |
High |
Medium–High |
Displacement may interrupt operations; need alternative locations. |
|
IT system failure |
Low–Medium |
Medium |
Medium–High |
Disrupt scheduling, client records, teletherapy, and communications. |
|
Reputational risk from misconduct / negative publicity |
Low |
Very High |
High |
Could undermine trust, funding, and stakeholder confidence. |
|
Funding/subsidy reduction / regulatory change |
Medium |
High |
High |
May affect financial sustainability and, ability to maintain programmes. |
* These are illustrative — SHINE should calibrate “likelihood” and “impact” definitions according to internal context, historical data (if available), and expert judgment (staff, management, volunteers).
This assessment allows SHINE to focus first on High and High-to-Medium risk items for mitigation or treatment.
After assessment, SHINE should define and implement controls, procedures, and strategies to reduce the likelihood and/or impact of high-risk threats. Some example mitigation measures for SHINE:
Each mitigation control should be documented, approved by management, and integrated into SHINE’s overall BCM / crisis management plan.
Risk Analysis & Review is not a one-time exercise. Instead, it must be ongoing to remain relevant as internal or external conditions change. For SHINE, a continuous review process might involve:
This cyclical approach ensures that SHINE remains resilient over time, adapts to evolving risks, and can continue to fulfill its mission effectively even under adverse conditions.
By embedding a robust RAR process, SHINE gains several advantages critical to its mission:
In short, a well-conducted Risk Analysis & Review underpins the sustainability and reliability of SHINE’s continuity-of-care commitment.
The Risk Analysis and Review phase equips SHINE Children and Youth Services with the insight and preparedness necessary to navigate a complex and evolving risk environment. By thoroughly identifying potential threats, evaluating their likelihood and impact, and implementing targeted mitigation strategies, SHINE ensures that disruptions do not compromise the quality or continuity of care provided to children and youth.
Continuous review acts as a safeguard, enabling SHINE to adapt its risk profile in response to internal changes, emerging vulnerabilities, and shifts in the broader social service landscape. With a dynamic and proactive RAR process integrated into its BCM framework, SHINE is better positioned to maintain operational stability, protect its stakeholders, and uphold the trust placed in it by families, partners, donors, and the broader community. Through this chapter, SHINE affirms its commitment to organisational resilience and reinforces its capability to sustain its mission even under challenging conditions.
Ensuring SHINE’s Mission Through Effective BCM
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