Tools for risk planning
- Planning meetings
- Expert judgment
- Analytical techniques
- How sensitive you are to risks (Risk Tolerance) ?
- How much risks your project are exposed to ?
Tools for Risk Identification
- Documentation review
- Information gathering
- Brainstorming
- Delphi technique
- Advantage
- Unlike brainstorming, participants are not under group pressure, since some people can be afraid of disagreeing with others or are too shy to express their opinions freely.
- Disadvantage
- It is time consuming.
- Advantage
- Interview
- Very effective from expert
- Root cause identification
- The advantage of knowing the basic cause is that, although at the surface many risks will seem to be caused by different factors; in reality, many will share the same basic cause(s).
- By using root cause identification, you can control many risks with the same response; thus hitting several birds with one stone.
- SWOT analysis
- SWOT analysis is useful for stimulating your thinking and will make you consider the positive risks as well.
- Checklist analysis
- Your organization might use risks that were identified in previous projects to make a checklist of risks.
- A readymade list can also be used.
- The checklist helps to remind the project team of common and repeated risks in project management as well as of specific risks involving a particular type of project.
- You should update the company’s risk checklist with new risks identified from your project at the closeout phase.
- Assumption analysis
- In assumption analysis, you need to verify the rationality of the assumptions made.
- Diagramming techniques
- Ishikawa diagram
- The fishbone diagram lets you systematically find the causes of a problem arising from different factors.
- Ishikawa diagram
- Process flowcharts
- A flowchart is just a drawing of how a system operates.
- It helps you see the whole process and the links between its elements, thus making it easier to identify possible problems (risks).
- Influence diagram
- It is a technique for identifying risks involving how elements of a system can influence each other.
Tools for Qualitative Risk Assessment
- Risk Matrix and Risk Assessment
- Risk assessment is the tool that you use to prioritize the risks so that you would be able to develop a more efficient and effective risk response.
- Usually, you use a risk matrix to conduct risk assessment.
- The risk matrix is based on the risk formula: Risk exposure = Probability x Severity
- Assessment of the Quality of the Risk Data
- Data quality assessment is concerned with how confident you are about the risk facts.
- Risk categorization
- In risk categorization, you group risks under common sources (categories).
- Risk categorization is based on the Risk Breakdown Structure (RBS), which looks similar to the WBS.
- You can make an RBS for your project, or find a general one that is adopted by the organization.
- Risk categorization can help you in two areas
- Risk Identification
- Because you can use the RBS as a checklist to make sure that you have systematically gone over all the possible sources of risks.
- Risk Response
- When similar risks are grouped together, you may be able to identify common responses to them.
- Risk Identification
- Risk categorization can help you in two areas
- Risk urgency assessment
- This is another way of prioritizing risks (remember, prioritizing risks is the purpose of risk assessment).
- Here, you will rank risks based on how urgent they are.
- If you believe that a risk will happen early on in your project, you have to give it more weight.
Tools for Quantitative Risk Analysis
- Interviews and Expert Judgment
- You sit with experienced people and ask them to provide estimations on probability and severity for risks.
- Sensitivity analysis
- This technique is adopted to identify the risks that have the strongest effect on a project.
- Sensitivity analysis is usually represented by a tornado diagram.
- Expected Monetary Value and Decision Tree Analysis
- These techniques provide you with the anticipated cost(s) of risks.
- Once you know how much each risk may cost, you will be able to compare and rank them.
- Simulation
- You use simulation to evaluate the effect of risks on the project as a whole.
- In simulation, you use mathematical calculations and computers to predict how your project will perform.
- Based on the simulation result(s), you might find that your budget and/or timeframe are not realistic, giving you an opportunity to amend them before embarking on the project.
- You apply simulation to your project with the identified risks before you make a plan to respond to them.
- After making a response plan, incorporate your responses in the simulation model and run it again to see if the result improves (which indicates a good response plan).
Tools for Risk Response Strategies for Threat and Opportunity
- Threat or Opportunity, when to Use it ?
- Avoid or Exploit
- For risks that are too good to miss or too bad to let happen
- Transfer or Share
- For risks (good or bad) you cannot deal with by yourself and need the help of another party
- Mitigate or Enhance
- You balance between risks and resources.
- You work on the components of risks (probability and impact) to reduce threats and improve opportunity as much as you can.
- Accept
- This is for risks that you cannot control through any of the above strategies.
- If they happen, they happen.
- However, you can put some money aside to deal with them (called contingency reserve).
- Avoid or Exploit
- Risk Response Strategies approach
- It is better to use a mix of strategies.
- You can use decision trees to choose between strategies.
- You cannot always just choose any strategy you want.
- There will be risks that you will not be able to avoid or transfer.
- You can identify primary and secondary strategies.
- For example, you plan to avoid a risk, but after initial failure, you try to mitigate it.
- Risk response will require some change(s) in the project plan (resources, time, quality, contract terms, etc.).
- If you accept a risk, you usually have to allocate a budget to deal with it if it occurs.
- That budget is referred to as contingency reserve.
- Strategies for threats
- Avoid
- Avoiding a risk means that you do not want it to happen, ever, and, hence, you try to eliminate it.
- You will be willing to invest resources or change your project plan to do that.
- Transfer
- Transfer is a strategy that usually applies to threats that you do not have any experience dealing with.
- You may also apply this strategy if you find it more practical to let others handle some of the project risks.
- Mitigate
- This strategy applies to risks that you cannot avoid or transfer.
- It is like doing the best you can with the available resources to reduce the risks (by reducing their probability or severity or both).
- Avoid
- Strategies for opportunities
- Exploit
- Here, you don’t want to lose an expected opportunity.
- You try to manage your resources so that the opportunity will not be wasted.
- You can think of it as the opposite of avoiding a risk.
- Share
- In your project, you can have an opportunity but do not have the expertise or resources to benefit from it.
- In this case, it is better to share some of the benefits with someone who can actually make it happen than lose it all.
- Enhance
- Similar in concept to mitigation, you want to improve chances of an opportunity by increasing its probability or positive impact.
- Exploit
- Strategy for both Threats and Opportunities
- Accept
- If there is no suitable strategy for dealing with threats or opportunities, then you may choose to accept them.
- All strategies mentioned so far will involve some modification in the project plan, but if you accept a risk, you just let it happen (if it happens at all; remember that risks are in the future and they may or may not happen).
- Passive Acceptance
You do nothing regarding the risk; for example, if an equipment delivery is delayed, you just wait. - Active Acceptance
- Contingency reserve
- You assign extra money, time, resources aside, in order to deal with the risks.
- This is called a contingency reserve; for example, if an equipment delivery is delayed, you rent one to perform the task.
- Management reserve
- It is money set aside for unplanned and unidentified changes to the project.
- The project manager might need approval to use it.
- This reserve is not part of the cost baseline.
- The management reserve is usually predetermined in companies.
- For example, it may be 2.5% of the budget for each project.
- As for the contingency reserve, it is identified based on calculations and reasoning.
- Contingency reserve
- Passive Acceptance
- Accept
- Contingency planning
- Contingency planning is a risk response tool that is used when the risk actually happens.
- It involves monitoring triggers.
- Triggers are early indicators that a risk is going to happen.
- Expert judgment
- This is another tool that is used in risk response.
- You might consult an expert to advise you on how to deal with risks and control them.
- Using experts is justified because they have a better understanding of risks in their field of expertise.
- Note that you use the judgments of experts at different times, when identifying risks, analyzing risks and responding to risks.
Tools for Risk Monitoring and Control
- Risk Reassessment
- Status Meetings
- Risk Audits
- Your goal is to verify that the risk identification, assessment and response activities done during the planning phase were adequate.
- Reserve analysis
- Here, you will simply investigate how much has remained and whether it will be enough to cover the remaining risks.
- Performance measurement
- If actual performance is poor compared to the planned performance, you should check for new risks or re-examine previously identified risks.
- Variance and trend analysis
- Variance and trend analysis are monitoring and forecasting methods used to monitor project performance.
- They utilize techniques like the earned value analysis to predict future performance based on past and current one(s).
PMI-RMP Certification exam flashcards
Created : 22/05/2022