From Ritual to Resilience: Replacing the Risk Matrix With a Velocity × Impact Framework
Abstract
Risk matrices, constructed on the Likelihood × Impact paradigm, have become the dominant artifact in enterprise risk management. While their colorful grids offer the illusion of precision and control, they suffer from a profound methodological weakness: likelihood scoring is not a measure of risk, but a proxy for ignorance. This paper delivers a comprehensive critique of the traditional risk matrix, drawing on critical scholarship to demonstrate its structural flaws, cognitive biases, and governance limitations. We argue that the prevailing model perpetuates a ritual of false precision, reinforcing compliance optics while failing to support strategic decision-making. In its place, we propose a Velocity × Impact framework, which reframes risk prioritization around two critical dimensions: time-to-impact (velocity) and strategic consequence (impact). The central thesis of this paper is clear: likelihood is a proxy for ignorance, while velocity is a proxy for urgency. By abandoning the ritual of probability scoring and embracing velocity-based intelligence, organizations can transition from a posture of passive compliance to dynamic readiness, ensuring that governance is not merely performative but operationally resilient.
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PDFDOI: https://doi.org/10.5430/ijfr.v17n3p1

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
International Journal of Financial Research
ISSN 1923-4023(Print) ISSN 1923-4031(Online)
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International Journal of Financial Research


