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Crisis Management


Building Effective SME Response Strategies for Operational Resilience
In today’s fast-paced business environment, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face a variety of risks that can disrupt operations. Whether it’s a cyberattack, a physical security breach, or a natural disaster, being prepared is essential. Developing a clear and practical incident response plan can make the difference between a minor hiccup and a major crisis. This post will guide you through building effective SME response strategies tailored to businesses with physic
Mar 54 min read


Lessons from Failed SMEs: Why Many Businesses Collapse After Success
How growth exposes hidden weaknesses—and what founders must fix before it’s too late Most small businesses don’t fail at the beginning. They fail after things start going well . Revenue picks up. Customers increase. The founder finally breathes. And then—slowly or suddenly—the cracks appear. Cash tightens. Staff leave. A small incident turns into a big problem. Within months, a business that looked “successful” is struggling to survive. This isn’t bad luck. It’s a pattern. Su
Jan 123 min read


Why No Two Risk Profiles Are Alike
And Why “Cookie-Cutter” Risk Assessments Fail Businesses RISK IS OFTEN SPOKEN ABOUT in broad, comforting categories: financial risk, operational risk, compliance risk, reputational risk. These labels are useful—but only at the highest strategic levels. The moment a business relies on generic templates or off-the-shelf checklists to understand its real exposures, it starts to build a false sense of security. At First Forge , we take a clear position on this: no two businesses
Jan 93 min read


What Good Escalation Actually Looks Like
Why escalation is about timing, not panic—and clarity, not control Escalation has a reputation problem. In many organisations, escalation is associated with failure. It is what happens when something has gone wrong, when control has been lost, or when someone is about to be blamed. As a result, people hesitate. They delay. They try to contain issues quietly, hoping they will resolve on their own. By the time escalation happens, it is often already too late. Good escalation do
Jan 82 min read


Why SOPs Fail Under Stress
And why clarity of authority matters more than completeness of process Most businesses have Standard Operating Procedures. They are written carefully, approved formally, and stored somewhere accessible. They remind staff what should happen, in what order, and who is responsible at each step. On paper, they signal preparedness. And then stress enters the system: An incident occurs. A customer escalates. A staff member is injured. A regulator appears without warning. A parent t
Jan 83 min read
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