![]() There are three categories that organizations can divide their resources into when looking to see what risk they should and should not accept: must-haves, should-haves and nice-to-haves. While it’s a complicated process, taking two main steps can point you in the right direction. However, it’s a necessary step that organizations must take, regardless of how much money they’re planning to spend on their security program. Accepting risk is not easy for any organization to do, especially for large, household-name companies that will most certainly show up in headlines if things go south. Step 2: Truly "Accepting" RiskĪlthough we defined and mentioned acceptable risk above, this topic deserves further explanation. This remains true for acceptable risk as well. There is nothing wrong with transferring risk if the company has fully assessed the organizational impacts and agrees on a path forward. Examples of transferred risk may be hiring a third party to store and manage employee data, credit card information or even security processes. Transferred risk is risk that is moved to a third party and/or cyber liability insurance. That means there is risk remaining that the organization will have to accept. ![]() Acceptable risk is the risk that a company acknowledges and chooses not to resolve, transfer or mitigate.Ĭomplete risk protection is not only impossible but also requires a substantial amount of money and resources that the board usually doesn’t want to pay for. This is the hotly debated category it tends to be CISOs’ greatest anxiety source and the board’s greatest money-saver. Once management has identified how much they’re willing to invest to mitigate risk, security leaders can begin to solve the next two categories. The investments in this category will typically go toward resources that reduce the likelihood or impact of risk. (STEP 19) Add some finishing details to the fingers.Mitigated risk is defined as what the company has decided to remedy and what management is providing resources to fix. (STEP 18) Erase unnecessary lines and draw curved lines at the ends of the nails. (STEP 16) Draw curved lines at the backs of the fingers. (STEP 15) Add a curved line to the end of the 3rd finger. Draw a sideways “U” shape for the 4th finger. (STEP 14) Add curved lines to the 3rd finger. Draw a sideways “J”-like shape to draw the 3rd finger. (STEP 13) Draw a line to finish off the 2nd finger. (STEP 12) Draw a partial oval for the next finger. (STEP 11) Draw 2 curved lines on this finger. (STEP 10) Draw a sideways “U” shape for one of the fingers. (STEP 09) Draw a “C” shape for the hand’s thumb. (STEP 08) Draw the bottom and top of the cardboard sleeve. We are drawing the cardboard protective sleeve. (STEP 06) Draw lines on the side of the cup’s lid. ![]() (STEP 05) Draw a shorter curved line above the previous one. (STEP 04) Draw another curved line above the curved line from Step #1. ![]() (STEP 03) Draw a curved line on each side of the cup. (STEP 02) Draw lines between the top and the bottom. (STEP 01) Draw 2 curved lines for the top and bottom of the cup. Written-Out Step by Step Drawing Instructions How to Draw a Realistic Hand Holding a Disposable Coffee Cup – Step by Step Drawing Tutorial This tutorial is broken down into many steps to help you draw it more easily. Today I’ll show you how to draw a realistic hand holding a paper coffee cup, like the kind you get from Starbucks.
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