Professional Profile
ERM, BCM, & Crisis Management Expert
9 years of cross-functional experience specialized in bridging the gap between frontline operations and strategic risk resilience.
Experience Summary
Risk Management & Resilience | 4 Years
ERM & BCM: Designing and implementing Enterprise Risk Management frameworks and Business Continuity plans to safeguard organizational stability.
Crisis Management: Leading response strategies for high-stakes incidents, ensuring minimal disruption to people, assets, and reputation.
Governance: Conducting risk assessments and audits to ensure compliance with global standards and internal policies.
Core Operations | 5 Years
Operational Excellence: Managed end-to-end workflows and process optimization to drive efficiency and output.
Process Improvement: Identified bottlenecks and implemented scalable solutions within fast-paced operational environments.
Stakeholder Management: Orchestrated cross-departmental collaboration to align daily operations with long-term business goals.
Core Competencies
Business Impact Analysis (BIA)
Disaster Recovery Planning
Operational Risk Mitigation
Policy Development & Governance
Incident Response & Leadership
Education & Technical Skills
Expertise: ISO 31000 (Risk), ISO 22301 (BCM), Crisis Protocols.
Tools: Risk Management Software, Data Analytics, Project Management suites
Very obvious dilemma for this world's scenario right now.
I would love to answer this because it's mine as well as everyone's problem or better say deal in the professional life.
It's always about priority and prioritising things. In my experience I follow this rule:
1. Urgent, Important
2. Urgent , Not Important
3. Important , Not Urgent
4, Not Urgent, Not Important
This 2X2 matrix worked well for me.
Just list down your work and prioritise accordingly. I am sure you will start to balance things where you are stuck.
We have to do everything, but this is also true that you can't do it at once. You need to put first thing first and work accordingly to complete it.
It is simple if you have a good discipline in it. I have succeeded in managing things.
I am sure it will help!!
Only one call away for discussion. Cheers!!
Mental Illness. In my view it is just a state of mind. If you have control over your emotions and thoughts, then you can beat it with a blink of your eyes. It's just that, your situations, good or bad has gone upto your brain and now you are not able to tackle it.
It happens to everyone may be the illness last for a day for some people and for many months for some. But the person who comes out of this illness has to make himself strong mentally and emotionally.
You don't have to go into spiral of things, you just have to be strong and logical.
Think through, is the situation because of which you are suffering is caused by which factors...go till the root cause.
Next, you have to analyse, are the causes which came up were "Controllable" or "Uncontrollable"
Then after getting the answer are the mitigations within your limits or out of it. Just with these few steps you will get to the logical solution, which ultimately will help you and your mind to think logically rather than blaming on things which are not thought through and ultimately worsening the state of mind and resulting into illness.
Hope it will help!
Always ready connect to discuss any situation. Gone through these things a lot. Cheers!!
Crisis Management Enterprise Risk Management Business Continuity Dashboards