程序代写案例-IRDR 0017
时间:2022-04-07
IRDR 0017 - Develop a Horizon Scan report Clarifications and FAQs
Develop a horizon scan report (1700 words allowed, plus references). Do not exaggerate on the word
count, you have 10% tolerance and must exercise common sense. Imagine you need to persuade the
board of a small, medium-size or large organization (SME) to focus its resources on the 3 threats that
you are identifying and adopt some of the solutions/mitigations that you are suggesting as a
consequence of this identification (if any). Please chose an SME, or a public utility, or an emergency
facility (such as a Fire Brigade operations centre) or something else that you are interested in. It can
be in your hometown, in London, or somewhere else in the world. Please check the marking scheme
available.
Deadline.
31 March 2022. The deadline, can be moved e.g. to Sunday 10
th
April 2021 to avoid conflict with
IRDR0003, but this needs to be brought forward by the students reps by the first week of March.
Making will start soon afterwards.
Clarification 1. What is it the meaning of “Horizon Scanning”?
Horizon scanning is used to monitor and identify potential threats to an organization, considering
longer term change and underlying trends. It is strictly connected with the process of examining and
assessing risks, but it’s not the same. You will find it described shortly at p. 159 of the mandatory
reading “Business Continuity for Dummies” and related to Chapter on examining risk. Remember that
at the local level you may find risk registers to support your choices... But you can also disagree with
them as soon as you argue why and have solid sources (e.g. a new NATO report).
Clarification 2. What is it the meaning of “SME”?
Category definition: ‘The category of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) is made up of
enterprises which employ fewer than 250 persons and which have an annual turnover not exceeding
EUR 50 million, and/or an annual balance sheet total not exceeding EUR 43 million.’ Keep the same
threshold of common sense even if you are looking as something in the public sector.
Clarification2/bis: How small?
Yes, family businesses and micro enterprises (e.g. microbreweries) can be considered for this the
report. You may also be willing to get in touch with them to use this task to help them.
Clarification 3. What do you need to demonstrate?
1. The capacity to produce clear augment, a consistent structure, and conclusions supported by
the state of art.
2. Critical analysis that integrates the teaching of the module so far, in particular with respect to
the BCM process.
3. Clear communication and consistent references.
Clarification 4. How do I develop the report?
1. Start by describing the organisation and its context.
2. Use this knowledge to develop a rationale that defines three threats (no more, no fewer) on
which the chosen organisation should focus its planning resources in the next year. Try to prioritise
them.
3. Explain why the threats that have been chosen are the most important ones, and why you are
prioritizing them as such. You can propose solutions or mitigation measures as a consequence of
your rationale. Support your points with, for example, literature, news and reports.
You can make assumptions about the outputs of the Business Impact Analysis. However, you should
explain something about the basis of the assumptions and note their possible limitations. In other
words, you are not asked to know all the details of the organization as you may not have all the data.
What you are asked to do is to make rational assumptions and elaborate a credible horizon scan report
based on the details you possess. Remember to check the marking scheme.
Clarification 5 - Do. AKA: Gianluca, what are your suggestions for doing a good report?
1. Be smart, critical and creative. You do not have to focus only on the most evident threats.
Providing you can support your choice with evidence or rational argument, all will be well.
2. Try to use official sources and reports where you can. Be persuasive and consistent.
3. Have fun with this task. You can experiment within the limits of thinking critically and
rationally. Are you 'crying wolf' or demonstrating that the wolf is waiting outside the door?
Clarification 6- Don’t. AKA: Gianluca, what are the things that you do not want to see in the
report?
1. Confusion between creative and being inconsistent, underestimating this task. Remember this
is a report for a board and you need to ground what you are saying. This exam is developed
thinking about what you may do in your future jobs.
2. DO NOT USE WIKIPEDIA and try to check as many of your sources as possible. Want to fail
exam? Cite Wikipedia or the Daily Express to support what you did, it is the shortcut to annoy
the Module Tutor. Please use your critical thinking. You are at UCL.
3. Not all the reports will be excellent...But if you use your brain, most likely you will do at least
a sufficient work. The bottom line is: whatever you write, it has to be your own work. DO NOT
PLAGIARISE or copy and paste from the reports you find. This will seriously annoy the Module
Tutor, and it can cost you a heavy disciplinary action. You are doing this module for yourself,
not for anybody else. Together with the link in Moodle, if you have doubts please check:
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/ioe-writing-centre/reference-effectively- avoid-plagiarism/avoiding-
plagiarism
Clarification 7- How do we categorise threats?
For this report, please consider threats intended as Threats as “Potential cause of an unwanted
incident, which may result in harm to individuals, assets, a system or organization, the environment,
or the community” and be consistent in the use of this term. Please check out two support documents
available on Moodle:
Coburn, A.W.;, Bowman, G.; Ruffle, S.J.; Foulser-Piggott, R.; Ralph, D.; Tuveson, M.; 2014, A Taxonomy
of Threats for Complex Risk Management, Cambridge Risk Framework series; Centre for Risk Studies,
University of Cambridge. This is uploaded on Moodle.
Alternatively: United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction/International Science Council, 2020,
Hazard Definition and Classification Review 2020, UNDRR. Available at:
https://www.undrr.org/publication/hazard-definition-and-classification-review
Clarification 8- Can I use appendices? Are they counted in the main word count?
Yes, you can use appendixes and they are not counted in the word count. However, they should not
include anything essential for understanding the core text, and they should not be abused. Appendices
that do not add anything of real value are NOT welcomed.
Taking the example of the excellent report of A that I uploaded for you to check out, Appendix A and
E should have been at least summarized in the core text. This influenced the mark. Appendices were
all really good, and it was fine to include here the definitions. However, it’s also true that some part
of the report could have been much more synthetic... But up to a point. Using this and other classwork
for benchmarking, the world limit moved from 1500 words + tolerance in 19/20, to 1700words +
tolerance. Realistically, you should be able to do something good with 1700k words and using smartly
the Appendices.
Clarification 9- Where shall we start from?
You may be interested to look at:-
DRI International (2019) Fifth Annual Global Risk and Resilience Trends Report.
Available at: https://drii.org/crm/presentationlibrary
BCI (2019) Horizon Scan report 2019. https://www.thebci.org/resource/horizon-scan- report-
2019.html
Clearly, check out also the updated versions if they are available. And think beyond/laterally from
COVID19.
Clarification 10- Is there a minimum size for SME? Can I choose a larger organisation than a SME?
You can take a very small business. Technically, up to 10 employees we are talking about micro
companies and micro enterprises, such as a family business…But they could be very interesting and
challenging, so why not? For example, think about a Hi-Tech Start-up and Steve Job’s garage. Just be
clear about the rationale, and why you are choosing it. The bottom line: if it’s a micro, it may look like
you are doing an easier job so highlight well why it is so interesting and why it is worth it! For example,
you could try to see if you can help them with your report.
Going larger: yes, you can. It’s your take. As I wrote on Moodle: "You may decide to go for a large
organisation but expect that everything will be more complicated, and you will have to be more careful
in the task".
Clarification 11- This report focuses on the solutions of the three threats or an explanation on why
we choose these three threats?
The task core says: “Produce a horizon scan report suggesting on which 3 threats a certain organisation
of your choice should focus its resources”. In the marking scheme it is specified in the development of
the rationale that you need to include "analysis and evaluation of the threats and their implications".
The solutions are a consequence, it’s the implication included in the marking scheme. If you take a
look to the example of the chocolate factory that you have on Moodle, the author arrives to the
extreme of putting mitigations and solutions in the annexes. This is a bit too much and was done
because that year’s word count was much less, and one of the previous the FAQs specifies though that
the annex "A and E should have been at least summarized in the core text". AKA: that mitigations and
solutions are not the focus of the report, is an element that should or may become natural as part of
the development of your rationale.
Clarification 12- When can I use news?
You can do all possible efforts to use official sources and reports, but is some cases there is nothing
but a news that you can use. That’s fine. This will happen in particular if you are considering something
like an isolated location, or if you need an example of something happened in the context of your case
study. The bottom line is not to use e.g. a newspaper as primary source to support the
rationale when something else more well-structured is available. For example, if you are
talking about the power failures in London use the Risk Register instead of an article by the
local press that drives unsubstantial considerations about the problem (I have seen it in a
thesis). Try also to use the most reliable news source that you can find (e.g. news agencies),
and avoiding others that are known to be quite problematic (e.g. tabloids, blogs).