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At the November 2025 meeting of Rotary Club Bangkok GRAD, Diego Sala of Siam Trade Development delivered a casual business talk titled “Real Life, Real Risks: Because Reality Doesn’t Come with a Manual.”
The session explored how individuals and organisations can develop a more mature and practical relationship with risk. Rather than treating risk management as a purely technical or compliance-driven subject, Diego approached the topic from a broader human and business perspective.
He opened the talk by challenging the idea of total safety. In his view, safety is often a fragile feeling of control, while risk is a permanent part of real life. The key question is not whether risk can be removed completely, but whether we are able to recognise it, understand it, accept it where necessary, and reduce it where possible.
Diego connected this philosophy with personal experiences from motorsport and offshore sailing — two disciplines that shaped his way of thinking about probability, exposure, preparation, and decision-making long before he applied those ideas professionally. These examples helped make the topic accessible and practical for the audience.
The discussion then moved into a business context. Diego shared how Siam Trade Development reviewed its own operations after discovering that growth in revenue, clients, and activity did not automatically mean healthier business performance. A deeper analysis revealed risks connected with supply chains, intermediaries, client expectations, internal processes, and the quality of communication.
This experience led to the introduction of a more structured risk filter based on ISO 31000 principles. Diego explained that risk management is not only about avoiding danger. It is also about choosing better clients, protecting long-term value, saying no to toxic situations, and making decisions with more clarity.
The second part of the session focused on the practical application of ISO 31000. Using an example from snack import and distribution in Thailand, Diego walked the audience through key steps such as risk identification, risk analysis, risk evaluation, risk treatment, and continuous monitoring.
The case study showed how regulatory, supply chain, market, commercial, and reputational risks can be assessed in a structured way. Some risks may be acceptable, such as testing a new flavour in the market. Others, such as unstable suppliers or missing nutritional labelling, require direct action before they create larger problems.
The conversation also touched on the impact of artificial intelligence and the speed of modern business. Diego reflected on how speed without depth, volume without quality, and automation without understanding can create new risks for companies and professional service providers.
True to the casual business talk format, the meeting became a conversation rather than a one-way lecture. Participants asked questions, shared observations, and discussed how different industries understand and manage risk.
The evening highlighted an important message for entrepreneurs and business leaders: real risk management is not about fear. It is about awareness, discipline, and the courage to make better decisions before problems become unavoidable.
Rotary Club Bangkok GRAD thanks Diego Sala for an honest, practical, and experience-driven session, and extends appreciation to all participants who joined the discussion and contributed to the open atmosphere of the meeting.
P.S.
As a practical continuation of the ideas discussed during the session, Siam Trade Development offers a remote ISO 31000 risk management assessment for businesses in Thailand. The service helps companies review their processes, identify key risks, improve decision-making, and strengthen operational resilience. It also positions ISO 31000 as a gateway to ESG by integrating risk awareness, responsible governance, and sustainable decision-making into everyday business practice.
Learn more:
https://www.siamdevelopment.com/iso-31000-risk-management-esg/