Most conversations about risk management focus on structure. Who is responsible. Where concerns are escalated. How incidents are logged. These are necessary. But there is a prior question that receives far less attention: how clearly is risk being expressed in the first place?
Risk communication inside organisations rarely fails dramatically. It weakens gradually. A concern is raised carefully rather than directly. A potential impact is mentioned, but softened. A discussion moves forward before an assumption has been fully tested. Each instance feels reasonable in the moment.
But over time, this becomes a pattern. Professionals working in a second language begin making rapid calculations before they speak: Is my English clear enough to say this precisely? Will the nuance survive? Is the effort worth it in a meeting already in motion? Most of the time, they choose a version that is easier to express.
Risk still surfaces. But it arrives less specific, less urgent, and less actionable than the one first observed.
This matters most in industries where communicative precision is a professional requirement — finance, legal, compliance, healthcare. In these environments, the gap between what a professional noticed and what was communicated is not abstract. It has consequences.
Yet governance reviews rarely examine communication quality. The reporting channel exists. The assumption is that if someone has a concern, the language to raise it will be adequate.
That is two assumptions. Only one is typically tested.
When did your organisation last assess not whether risk is being reported — but how precisely?
ELC Coaching helps organisations in regulated industries develop the communicative precision their governance frameworks actually depend on.



