In the series A Song of Ice and Fire which begins with the book A Game of Thrones, by George RR Martin, we are introduced to the Wall and the Night’s Watch. The Wall is an immense fortification on the northern border of the Seven Kingdoms that defends the realm from “what lies North [...]
Posts Tagged ‘A Game of Thrones’
The Night’s Watch and the Wall of risk management
Posted in Books, leadership, My Opinions, Risk management, tagged A Game of Thrones, audit, CRO, Night's Watch, risk management, Wall, Westeros on January 20, 2012 | Leave a Comment »
Maslow, Ned Stark and the Common Good
Posted in Books, leadership, My Opinions, Office and culture, tagged A Game of Thrones, budget, leadership, Ned Stark, spending, ted coine, Tom Coburn, waste on December 23, 2011 | 3 Comments »
Last week Ted Coine asked ‘what ever happened to the Common Good?’ At some point people stopped doing the right thing and started putting their individual selfish interests ahead of those of their organizations, countries or kingdoms: UBS, the nation of Greece, Queen Cersei, etc. These days we see squabbling in Washington over the budget [...]
Ned Stark. Hand of the King. Chief Risk Officer.
Posted in Books, ERM Basics, My Opinions, tagged A Game of Thrones, CRO, Hand of the King, Ned Stark, risk, risk management, Wintelfell on December 7, 2011 | Leave a Comment »
Eddard (Ned) Stark, Lord of Winterfell, is a protagonist in the book A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin. He is principled and tells the truth and believes in honour and justice. Ned would make an excellent Chief Risk Officer. When King Robert Baratheon asked him to become the Hand of the King – [...]