Business risks rarely come with a clear warning.
A key employee may leave. Cash flow may tighten. A major customer may become unhappy. An important process may fail. A competitor may begin taking your market share.
At first, these problems may seem manageable. But when they are ignored, they can quickly damage revenue, operations, customer relationships, and employee confidence.
Most CEOs know that risks exist inside their businesses. The challenge is knowing which risks require immediate attention—and what to do about them.
A 90-day business risk action plan gives you a clear path forward. It helps you identify your greatest risks, set priorities, assign responsibility, and take action before a small problem becomes a costly emergency.
Most business leaders already know where some of their problems are.
You may know that:
The problem is often not a lack of awareness. The problem is a lack of action.
A risk assessment has little value if it does not lead to decisions, deadlines, and accountability.
Your goal is not to remove every possible risk. No business can do that. Your goal is to identify the risks that could cause the most damage and take practical steps to reduce them.
Unmanaged risk can affect every part of a company.
It can lead to:
Waiting until you have all the answers is not a strategy.
CEOs often have to make decisions without complete information. The key is to understand the risk, decide what matters most, and take the best available action.
Your employees do not expect you to predict every problem.
They do expect you to provide direction when a problem appears.
As CEO, you must make five things clear:
You should not personally own every task.
Your role is to set priorities, assign the right person, provide the necessary resources, and hold people accountable for results.
The following six-step process will help you turn business risks into clear and manageable actions.
Start by looking at the main areas of your business.
Ask:
Ask:
Ask:
Ask:
Review areas such as:
At this stage, focus on identifying risks. Do not try to solve everything at once.
Not every risk is equally important.
For each risk, ask two questions:
Score each answer from 1 to 5.
Multiply the two numbers to calculate the risk score.
| Business risk | Likelihood | Impact | Risk score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weak sales pipeline | 4 | 5 | 20 |
| Key employee leaves | 4 | 4 | 16 |
| Largest customer leaves | 3 | 5 | 15 |
| Short software outage | 2 | 2 | 4 |
The score helps you compare risks. However, it should not replace good judgment.
For example, a safety, legal, or compliance issue may require immediate action even if its score is lower.
Do not try to fix every risk at the same time.
When everything is a priority, nothing receives enough attention.
Choose three to five risks that:
Record the other risks and continue to watch them. For the next 90 days, however, focus your leadership team on the risks that matter most.
Each priority needs a clear and measurable result.
Avoid unclear goals such as:
These statements do not explain what success looks like.
Use specific goals instead:
A clear goal allows everyone to understand what must be achieved during the 90 days.
Each priority risk needs one person who is responsible for the result.
Several people may help, but one person must be accountable.
The risk owner should:
The CEO should provide direction and remove major barriers. The CEO should not take over the task whenever progress becomes difficult.
Break the 90-day plan into three 30-day phases.
During the first 30 days:
The goal is to prevent the problem from worsening while you prepare the appropriate response.
During the next 30 days:
This is when planning must turn into real change.
During the final 30 days:
The goal is not simply to finish a list of tasks. The goal is to strengthen the business.
Use the following format for each priority risk:
| Plan item | What to include |
|---|---|
| Risk | The specific problem that could harm the business |
| Possible damage | The revenue, people, customers, or operations at risk |
| Root cause | The main reason the risk exists |
| 90-day goal | The measurable result you want |
| Owner | The person responsible for the result |
| First action | The next step that must be completed |
| Deadline | The date by which the action must be finished |
| Success measure | The number or result used to measure progress |
| Backup plan | What the company will do if the risk occurs |
| Review date | When will leadership check progress |
Review the plan every week or every two weeks. High-risk problems should be reviewed more often.
Do not allow your 90-day plan to disappear inside a folder or spreadsheet.
Create a one-page dashboard that shows:
Keep the dashboard simple.
It should help your leadership team make decisions quickly. If it takes hours to update, it is too complicated.
Falling sales may look like a sales problem. The real cause could be poor customer service, unclear marketing, weak follow-up, or a product that no longer meets customer needs.
Look beyond the visible problem.
A long list of urgent projects will weaken focus.
Select a small number of risks and address them well.
The CEO needs to stay informed, but should not personally manage every action.
Assign ownership and require regular updates.
Meetings, emails, and reports are activities. They do not prove that the risk has been reduced.
Measure results such as:
Reducing a risk is important. Preparing for the risk is equally important.
For example, cross-training employees reduces the risk of losing a key employee. A written transition plan explains what the company will do if that employee actually leaves.
You need both.
Business conditions change throughout the year.
Review your most important risks during regular leadership meetings—not only during annual planning.
A focused risk plan can help your company achieve:
Risk will always be part of business.
The advantage comes from seeing it early, understanding it clearly, and acting before the situation forces you to respond.
You may already know where your company is vulnerable.
What you may not have is a clear process for deciding which risks matter most and what your team should do next.
Coastal Barrier helps CEOs and leadership teams identify financial, operational, leadership, and growth risks. We then turn those risks into a focused 90-day action plan with clear responsibilities, deadlines, and measurable results.
Do not wait for a manageable risk to become a costly emergency.
Schedule an initial consultation with Coastal Barrier and begin building your 90-day business risk action plan.
Learn more at CoastalBarrier.com
Business risks become more expensive when leaders wait too long to act. Download the risk snapshot checklist to identify your biggest risks, schedule an initial consultation with Coastal Barrier, and begin building your 90-day business risk action plan.
Learn more at CoastalBarrier.com