The trickster in the boardroom – Unmasking the insider threat
Risk Principles: Insider threats; sabotage risk; misaligned incentives
Key Lessons: Disruption often comes from within. Monitor cultural vulnerabilities and manage those who may undermine stability for personal gain.

In the high-stakes world of Norse mythology, no figure is as polarising as Loki. A master of disguise, a weaver of lies, and a genius of manipulation, Loki is not an external enemy at the gates; he is a member of the inner circle. He sits at the table with Odin and Thor, privy to the divine realm’s greatest secrets and most profound vulnerabilities.
Loki doesn’t bring down walls with brute force. He dismantles them from the inside, one subtle deception at a time. For modern leaders, Loki is the ultimate metaphor for the insider threat -the risk that doesn’t come from a hacker in a distant land, but from the person with the keys to the kingdom.
The Risk Lesson: When integrity is the only shield
Loki’s character offers a visceral warning about ethical breaches and the corrosive impact of deception. In Asgard, his pranks often seemed minor until they weren’t. In business, a ‘small’ ethical shortcut can be the catalyst for an organisational Ragnarök.
- The insider threat: The shape-shifter within: Loki operates from within the Aesir, intimately familiar with their strengths and weaknesses. This mirrors the modern insider threat – individuals who exploit their legitimate access to harm the entity. Whether driven by malice, negligence, or being compromised, these ‘tricksters’ bypass external defenses because they are already inside.
Imergo Insight: Robust internal controls and behavioural monitoring are essential, but they are secondary to a strong, transparent ethical culture that leaves no room for shadows.
- The power of deception: Beyond brute force: Loki rarely uses a sword; he uses social engineering. He exploits trust and manipulates narratives to achieve his ends. In the corporate world, this manifests as fraud, IP theft, or the subtle manipulation of data to drive disastrous decisions. When trust is weaponised, the most sophisticated firewalls become irrelevant.
- The erosion of trust: The slow decay: Every scheme Loki hatched left a trail of suspicion. Over time, the camaraderie of the gods was replaced by resentment and doubt. Ethical lapses don’t just cost money; they destroy the ‘social glue’ of an organisation. Once employee morale and stakeholder relationships are poisoned by deceit, long-term value destruction is inevitable.
- The ‘minor’ deception: The path to Ragnarök: The death of Baldur – the most beloved of gods – wasn’t a sudden act of war. It was the culmination of Loki’s ‘minor’ manipulations. This serves as a stark reminder: there is no such thing as a small ethical compromise. The ripple effects of internal trickery can escalate with terrifying speed, leading to catastrophic outcomes that no one saw coming.
Beyond the myth: Asgardian wisdom for modern leaders
The Norse myths compel us to look past the immediate and think about existential preparedness.
- Internal vigilance: Are you looking for ‘tricksters’ within, or are you only focused on the external “wolves”?
- The integrity renewal: If Asgard represents your organisation, is your culture robust enough to prevent a single point of ethical failure from causing widespread damage?
Trust, once broken by deceit, is a treasure nearly impossible to reclaim. By embracing the lessons of Loki, organisations can move beyond a checklist-driven approach to risk and cultivate a more discerning, resilient, and ultimately, more human strategy.
