Global Chief Risk Officer
JobGlobal Chief Risk OfficerGojo & Company, Inc. is seeking a Global Chief Risk Officer who will build and lead the enterprise-wide risk management function for the Gojo group. You will take ownership of a function that is in its early stages—a Group Risk Policy has been submitted to the Board, initial engagement with group companies’ risk teams is underway, and foundational documents (risk reporting methodology, group risk report templates, group company assessments) are being finalized. Your mandate is to take this foundation and build it into a mature, operating risk governance system across the group.You will initially work with the Group company’s Risk management team and progressively develop in the first 18 to 24 months a team (1 to 2 direct reports possibly based in the field) while overseeing and coordinating with CROs and Risk Heads across all group companies. The role demands someone who can operate both strategically and hands-on: designing frameworks by him/herself in the morning and reviewing group companies risk data in the afternoon.This is a remote working set up from your home office; however, you may need to travel across countries/locations depending on your nature of work.About This OpportunityLearn More and ApplyEmployerGojo & Company, Inc.LocationAnywhere in in Asia, Europe and AfricaDate Posted21 April 2026Closing Date13 May 2026FlexibilityRemote workAbout This OrganizationMore content from this OrganizationView All JobsShare a job from your organization.Submit a JobAbout This OrganizationMore content from this OrganizationBULLETINLearn about upcoming webinars, news and publications.SubscribeLatest from Our BlogView all blog postsBlog 18 March 2026What Would It Take for Financial Education to Lead to Lasting Financial Health?As we celebrate Global Money Week, an Italian initiative provides insights on helping university students convert awareness into sustained saving behavior.Livia Piermattei, Fast Forward FoundationBlog 12 March 2026Digital Finance That Speaks Your LanguageDigital financial literacy programs are most effective when localized, which means more than just translating into the local language. Here are five ways to adapt content to promote safer, more confident digital finance use.Panos Loukos, GSMA Mobile for Development FoundationBlog 25 February 2026Beyond the Checkbox: Can We Get Truly Meaningful Consent?As open finance regimes proliferate, consumer experience frameworks must lay the foundation for consumer empowerment and protection.Michaella Allen, DNA Economics