View printer-friendly version |
Back |
Organizations Are Least Prepared for Crises that Pose the Greatest Risk, According to FTI Consulting-Sponsored General Counsel Survey
|
More Than Two-Thirds of Surveyed Organizations Do Not Conduct Crisis Scenario Drills Based on Learnings from Past Events
About 60% of GCs Surveyed Reported Being More Involved in Organizational Crisis Management Strategy
Close to 70% of Surveyed Organizations Lack a
Economist Impact’s survey on the role of the general counsel in a crisis canvassed 600 primary legal decision makers across
More than two-thirds of organizations surveyed did not incorporate lessons from past crises into trainings and crisis drills. This gap will leave many organizations vulnerable to the impacts of a crisis or black swan event, particularly against a backdrop of a series of disruptive external events, such as cyber attacks and data breaches, macroeconomic shocks, political disruption and geopolitical conflicts.
“The reality today is that the number and variety of major corporate events and crises that companies can face has soared,” said
With the increasing frequency, complexity and unpredictability of crisis events over the past five years, about 60% of all GCs surveyed reported being more involved in their organization’s crisis management strategy. However, their involvement is not uniform across the globe. A higher share of GCs in
Artificial intelligence (“AI”) or machine learning (“ML”)-based modeling can be particularly powerful in delivering comprehensive, granular and precise crisis impact assessments. Yet, more than half of surveyed organizations are not deploying AI or ML-powered modeling for crisis management. One possible reason is a gap in skills needed to run impact analyses and utilize technology solutions, which was cited by three in 10 GCs as one of the top five challenges preventing their organizations from being more prepared for crisis events.
Close to 70% of surveyed organizations lack an identified ad-hoc, cross-functional crisis response team or a pre-selected list of external crisis response advisors that can assemble easily when a crisis arises. When asked to select the top priorities of their legal department to better prepare for the next crisis based on learnings from past events, 42% of GCs cited the creation of a well-rounded crisis response team among their top three priorities. Increased spend on crisis preparedness activities, tools, technology enhancements, external advisors or vendors (40%) and adopting more advanced technologies for crisis monitoring and impact analysis (33%) were the other two top priorities.
Additional key survey findings include:
- More than two-thirds of GCs in financial services, banking and insurance have expanded the scope of their early-warning monitoring and analysis exercises across strategic partners beyond legal, compared with less than half across all surveyed organizations.
- GCs in manufacturing are more involved in managing crises and their impacts (72%) than their peers in financial services, banking and insurance (68%), IT/technology, media and telecommunications (64%), energy, oil and gas (63%), retail (62%) and healthcare and life sciences (54%).
- Nearly 40% of respondents said they did not have a contingency plan in place for a cyber attack or a supply-chain failure.
For additional findings, view the full report: Turbulent waters, trusted anchors: The general counsel’s evolving role in navigating crises.
Demographics and Methodology
The survey field work was conducted online and by telephone between April to
About
555 12th Street NW
+1.202.312.9100
Investor Contact:
+1.617.747.1791
mollie.hawkes@fticonsulting.com
Media Contact:
+1.617.897.1545
matthew.bashalany@fticonsulting.com
Source: FTI Consulting, Inc.