Virtual Training Humanitarian, Gender Equality, and Social Protection

Disaster Risk Management Online Course

Join our virtual, live instructor-led session and master Disaster Risk Management Training from anywhere in the world.

5 Days Duration
Live Online Delivery
7 Dates Available
Certificate Included
Empower your organization with actionable disaster risk management strategies to protect lives, assets, and reputations.

Upcoming Virtual Training Schedules

Join from anywhere in the world with our live instructor-led sessions

Code Start Date End Date Duration Fee
DRMT-11 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
DRMT-11 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
DRMT-11 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
DRMT-11 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
DRMT-11 Weekend (4 Weeks) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
DRMT-11 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
DRMT-11 Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 850 Reserve my seat → Register my team →
Training Date
to
5 Days
USD 850
DRMT-11
Training Date
to
4 Weeks
USD 850
DRMT-11
Training Date
to
5 Days
USD 850
DRMT-11
Training Date
to
4 Weeks
USD 850
DRMT-11
Training Date
to
4 Weeks
USD 850
DRMT-11
Training Date
to
5 Days
USD 850
DRMT-11
Training Date
to
5 Days
USD 850
DRMT-11

Here's What You'll Learn

Each module tackles real challenges you face in your role

1

Foundations of Disaster Risk Management for Real-World Operations

2

Hazard Identification and Context Mapping

3

Vulnerability, Exposure, and Capacity Assessment

4

Risk Analysis, Ranking, and Prioritization That Leadership Accepts

5

Disaster Risk Reduction Strategies and Practical Mitigation Planning

6

Preparedness Systems and Contingency Planning That Actually Works

7

Incident Management and Emergency Response Workflows

8

Early Warning Systems and Decision Triggers

9

Risk Communication and Stakeholder Coordination Under Pressure

10

Recovery Planning, Continuity, and Building Back Better

11

Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning for Disaster Risk Management

12

Compliance, Donor Expectations, and Documentation for Accountability

Market-specific guidance for Sweden

A country-aware view of the pressures, proof points, and practical tools that shape how this course applies locally.

Why this course matters in Sweden

Strategic context for the risks, opportunities, and capability gaps this training addresses locally.

Disaster risk management matters in Sweden because organisations face a mix of climate-driven hazards, supply-chain dependence, and high expectations for continuity in public services, healthcare, transport, energy, and critical infrastructure. This course helps leaders decide how to protect people, keep essential services running, and document preparedness in a way that stands up to scrutiny from boards, regulators, insurers, and auditors. It is especially relevant for operations, HSE, security, facilities, IT, procurement, HR, and crisis-management teams that must coordinate the first response and recover quickly. In practice, the business decision it supports is whether the organisation can continue operating safely and credibly through disruption rather than react after losses occur.

Climate and continuity are now linked

Swedish organisations need preparedness that covers flooding, storms, heat, and other disruption scenarios alongside business continuity, because extreme weather can affect facilities, transport links, utilities, and service delivery at the same time.

Supply-chain resilience is a board issue

Many Swedish firms rely on cross-border logistics and external service providers, so disaster planning must include vendors, critical inputs, and recovery priorities outside the organisation’s own walls.

Response quality depends on coordination

The strongest operational gains come from training teams to make decisions in the first hour, escalate cleanly, and communicate consistently across technical and non-technical stakeholders.

This training is timely in Sweden because resilience planning increasingly sits at the intersection of climate adaptation, operational continuity, and critical-infrastructure protection. As organisations face higher expectations to demonstrate preparedness rather than merely describe it, teams need practical methods for response, recovery, and documented decision-making.

Tools and platforms relevant to this field

3

Field-relevant examples that may be featured in training where they support the confirmed scope. Exact coverage depends on participant needs and delivery format.

  • Microsoft 365 Microsoft
    Used for incident communication, task coordination, document control, and rapid distribution of emergency instructions across dispersed teams.
  • ServiceNow ServiceNow
    Used to manage incident workflows, escalation paths, service restoration priorities, and post-incident tracking in larger organisations.
  • SAP S/4HANA SAP
    Used by organisations that need to protect core operations and supply-chain visibility during disruption, especially where recovery depends on finance, procurement, and logistics data.

Where this course runs

Disaster Risk Management Training is delivered in the cities below — pick the one that fits your schedule.

Real Results from Real Professionals

Thousands of professionals have transformed their careers through our training programs. Now, it's your turn.

Trusted by 100+ organizations across 40+ countries

Premier Bank
Amnesty International
UNDT SACCO
UNFPA
USAID
AMREF Health Africa
KENTRADE
CPF
UFIA
UNICEF
Central Bank of Kenya
UNDP
GIZ
Premier Bank
Amnesty International
UNDT SACCO
UNFPA
USAID
AMREF Health Africa
KENTRADE
CPF
UFIA
UNICEF
Central Bank of Kenya
UNDP
GIZ
Barbours
Bank of Rwanda
RFA
Dahabshil Bank
Dorcas Aid
Finn Church Aid
KCB Foundation
Ministry of Education Saudi Arabia
NSSF Uganda
RBA
Reserve Bank of Malawi
WASREB Kenya
Virginia Commonwealth University
Barbours
Bank of Rwanda
RFA
Dahabshil Bank
Dorcas Aid
Finn Church Aid
KCB Foundation
Ministry of Education Saudi Arabia
NSSF Uganda
RBA
Reserve Bank of Malawi
WASREB Kenya
Virginia Commonwealth University