Kurowski, SebastianSchunck, Christian H.Roßnagel, HeikoSchunck, Christian H.Mödersheim, Sebastian2022-06-072022-06-072022978-3-88579-719-7https://dl.gi.de/handle/20.500.12116/38708Assessing IT-security risks in order to achieve adequate and efficient protection measures has become the core idea of various industry practices and regulatory frameworks in the last five years. Some research however suggests that the practice of assessing IT security risks may be subject to varying outcomes depending on personal, situational and contextual factors. In this contribution we first provide a definition of risk variance as the variation of risk assessment outcomes due to individual traits, the processual environment, the domain of the assessor, and possibly the target of the assessed risk. We then present the outcome of an interview series with 9 decision makers from different companies that aimed at discussing whether risk variance is an issue in their risk assessment procedures. Finally, we elaborate on the generalizability of the concept of risk variance, despite the low sample size in light of varying risk assessment procedures discussed in the interviews. We find that risk variance could be a general problem of current risk assessment procedures.enRisk AnalysisRisk AssessmentRisk ManagementIT-SecurityInformation SecurityRisk variance: Towards a definition of varying outcomes of IT security risk assessmentText/Conference Paper10.18420/OID2022_081617-5468