When we think about "risk management," our minds often go to the tangible: insurance policies, safety compliance checklists, slip-and-fall prevention, or cybersecurity firewalls.
But what about the risk sitting in the C-Suite? What about the operational drag caused by workplace conflict?
In our latest Aclaimant Fireside Chat, we sat down with Princess Castleberry, a corporate risk veteran turned keynote speaker and strategist. After a distinguished career managing risk for giants like Marsh, Pulte Homes, and Kelly Services, Princess has shifted her focus to the often-overlooked intersection of human behavior and enterprise liability.
Her message to modern leaders is clear: If you aren’t managing your behavior, you aren’t managing your risk.
Here are three transformative takeaways from our conversation on how leadership, conflict, and AI fit into the modern risk landscape.
Princess challenges leaders to step back from the spreadsheets and embrace a foundational definition of risk:
"A risk is simply the possibility of harm or loss to something of value."
Before you can manage risk, you have to define what you value. most organizations value profits, innovation, and collaboration. Therefore, anything that harms collaboration—including toxic leadership or unresolved friction—is a Tier-1 risk.
Princess notes that while we often track "financial waste," we rarely track "Conflict Waste." Conflict itself is inevitable (and necessary for innovation), but the waste generated by avoiding, mismanaging, or escalating conflict is a leak in your productivity that needs to be plugged just like any other operational loss.
One of the most powerful moments in the chat was Princess’s "One Word" test.
She often asks leaders: "In one word, how do you intend to make your people feel?" The answers are usually altruistic: Valued. Heard. Empowered.
But then she flips the script: "How do you actually make people feel when you are triggered or stressed?" The answers change dramatically.
This gap between intention and reaction is where risk lives. Princess cited a 2023 study by The Workforce Institute at UKG, which revealed that managers impact employees' mental health as much as their spouses do—and more than their doctors or therapists.
For risk managers, this is a wake-up call. A leader’s inability to manage their own stress isn't just an HR issue; it is a liability that directly impacts the health of the workforce and the bottom line.
As organizations rush to adopt Artificial Intelligence, many are paralyzed by the fear of the unknown. Princess advises taking a standard risk management approach to the future.
She suggests using the classic risk framework—Identify, Assess, Build, Learn—to tackle AI adoption.
Identify: Where are we vulnerable to data privacy issues?
Assess: What is the likelihood and severity of an AI error?
Build: Put common-sense guardrails in place. Don’t ban the technology, but don't force it without controls.
Learn: Allow room for mistakes without excessive punishment, as long as the guardrails are respected.
By integrating technology with "discipline," organizations can capture the commercial value of AI (much like retailers did this past Black Friday) without exposing themselves to catastrophic downside.
Whether it is digitizing your claims process with Aclaimant or training your leaders to manage their stress, the goal is the same: Resilience.
As Princess puts it, "You treat me well, I'll perform... When you don't, we won't."
Risk management is no longer just about protecting the building; it’s about protecting the people inside it.
📺 [Watch the full Fireside Chat with Princess Castleberry here]