Starting point of discussion in this paper is the well established concept of risk and risk management at organisations. However, this concept becomes currently challenged because of new stakeholders requirements as resilience and sustainability. This raises the question for organisations to what extent these three concepts are compatible in management processes and where, at best, a transformation from risk to resilience and sustainability (RRS) can take place. To answer this question a formal framework of management processes in general is presented. For this purpose the St. Gallen Management Model and the (risk) management process according to ISO-31000 is transferred to a Class Diagram (CD) to depict the common view of a management framework. Then, the attributes of classes are identified and specified for RRS by literature research and with regard to operational aspects resulting in a comparative CD. Maturity and level of usefulness are evaluated and ranked. As a result, organisations view RRS mainly as a monetary task which, then, enables them to male a (simplified) transformation towards integrative management processes. However, the usual more comprehensive definitions of these terms and their lack of standardisation contradict this simple approach. The paper shows the use of CDs to compare RRS management processes and the resulting interfaces and tasks for organisations.