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As Risk Velocity Increases, Risk Intelligence is Vital to Meet Duty of Care

The need for risk intelligence in retail has grown significantly in the last year. Between Black Lives Matter protests, right-wing demonstrations, and rallies related to COVID-19, there were 16,670 demonstrations recorded in the US in 2020, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project. โ€œTo say it was widespread, would certainly be an understatement,โ€ said Ryan Long, director of global intelligence for McDonaldโ€™s.

Ryan Long
Ryan Long

Although public protests may not run as hot this year or next, weโ€™ve entered a new era of vocal demonstrations and protests, with social media removing any โ€œbarrier to entryโ€ for issue groups that want to mobilize and be heard, according to Long. Consequently, โ€œthe spotlight on a businessโ€™s duty of care hasnโ€™t been brighter since 9/11,โ€ he said, noting the complicating fact that the โ€œspeed with which these events can happen is faster than ever.โ€

Retailers have certainly taken notice, recognizing the high stakes for appropriately responding to risks of vandalism and business disruption while, in many cases, simultaneously demonstrating concern for the subject of protests. Itโ€™s made risk intelligence gathering a growing priority for many retailers.

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So, as retailers look to build up their intelligence capabilities, what should they keep in mind?

Tips for Predicting Triggers, Readying a Response

Presenting at the NRF Converge conference in June, Long said there is no harder question to answer than the one that matters mostโ€”namely, โ€œWhatโ€™s going to happen next?โ€ But while risk intelligence programs arenโ€™t crystal balls, they can help position a retailer upstream of fast-moving events, as well as demonstrate care for its people. โ€œIt all comes down to being in a position where you are trying to proactively answer questions rather than reacting to events. That is not the state you want to be in,โ€ said Long. He offered several recommendations for effectively building risk intelligence capability.

1. Beware of the โ€œcollectorโ€™s trap.โ€ The ability to gather information about potential events that could disrupt retail operations is practically infinite, and more information doesnโ€™t guarantee a retailer is any closer to preparing against them. โ€œWe can spend all our time searching, and searching, and searching instead of focusing on developments that could impact our organizations,โ€ Long warned. Narrowing information sources to the most valuable and strategic use of search tools like โ€œGoogle Alertsโ€ can help keep intelligence-gathering focused.

Distinguishing the โ€œsignal from the noiseโ€ is a vital aspect of gathering intelligence for an early warning of disruptive events, suggested Longโ€”because that is what an organization needs to start preparing, which is ultimately the most meaningful part of mitigation.

2. Study your business. To create a valuable early warning system, intelligence analysts need to as well-versed about a retail organizationโ€™s myriad component parts as they are about the risk environment. Because it is that understanding that allows an intelligence team to contextualize risk information for the business and discard the noise, suggested Long. It is why he generally believes that an in-house intelligence team or a GSOC is preferable to outsourcing risk intelligence monitoring and analysis.

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A successful early warning system focuses on asking questions about risk with respect to company assets, priorities, and risk tolerance. โ€œQuestions about whatโ€™s likely to happen next, which specific stores could be impacted next week and how significantlyโ€”asking and answering those provide a roadmap,โ€ said Long.

3. Recognize value beyond prediction. If risk intelligence programs canโ€™t accurately predict events, what good are they? โ€œOne of the underrated aspects is providing psychological safety for your workforce and to reduce anxiety around what could happen, and so they know that someone is looking out for them and working to protect their health and safety,โ€ said Long. โ€œOur workforce wants to know they are being prioritized, and these days itโ€™s not only appreciated, but also expected. Internal perception of security is critical to employeesโ€™ psychological safety.โ€

Additionally, Long says there is value in ascertaining a picture of risk events even if itโ€™s a little blurry. โ€œEven if I donโ€™t have all the details, I would much rather provide our organization a heads-up that something could happen. Thatโ€™s better than letting them be blindsided by events even when we canโ€™t perfectly prepare,โ€ he said. If security leaders can reduce the organizationโ€™s uncertainty, even by a small margin, they have more time to plan, communicate, and prepare the organizationโ€”and there is value in that, Long said.

4. Gain friends in key places. โ€œWithout our professional networks, I donโ€™t know where we would be,โ€ said McDonaldโ€™s Long, who notes that he is regularly in touch with his irsk intelligence professional counterparts. โ€œYou want to make friends before you need them,โ€ he said. โ€œThere is no better resource for learning that something might be coming your way.โ€

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For retailers without a team of analysts, it can help to tap into intelligence groups to โ€œfill the void,โ€ said Long, citing the value of groups like The Association of International Risk Intelligence Professionals (AIRIP). โ€œWe are a professional community and by sharing near real-time information and connecting with one another when we need help, we can build a more powerful defense. The bottom line is that resource sharing is a force multiplier.โ€

5. Manage expectations. Stakeholders need to have clarity on what a risk intelligence group can and canโ€™t predict. โ€œItโ€™s incredibly challenging to know exactly whatโ€™s going to happen next,โ€ said Long. Indeed, he says that while there is more information about the world than ever, itโ€™s also getting more difficult to predict events.

Resilience is about identifying vulnerabilities to an organization and building plans around those vulnerabilities, according to Long. โ€œWeโ€™re not going to see everything before it happens, so we have to maintain an ability to be nimble to develop resilience. You need a system that can roll with the punches.โ€

Risk Intelligence Best Practices

McDonaldโ€™s global intelligence director offered other recommended practices and ideas.

  • Historical reviews are worthwhile, as civil unrest and rioting does tend to repeat itself. โ€œItโ€™s smart to look at hot spots from the past. They do go to the same places over again.โ€
  • Maintaining an awareness of where your personnel is at all times is fundamental.
  • Having visible security measures can provide a measure of deterrence from civil unrest.
  • Scenario planning is key to building resilience, especially valuable for resource-strapped teams, and can define critical gaps to a retailerโ€™s most sensitive assets.
  • Set internal thresholds for when to act and define procedures for both leadership and employees to follow in the event of security risks from social unrest.

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