The purpose of Risk Management (RSKM) is to identify potential problems before they occur so that risk handling activities can be planned and invoked as needed across the life of the product or project to mitigate adverse impacts on achieving objectives.
Tip
The practices in RSKM also apply to identifying, evaluating, and maximizing (or realizing) opportunities.
Risk management is a continuous, forward-looking process that is an important part of project management. Risk management should address issues that could endanger achievement of critical objectives. A continuous risk management approach effectively anticipates and mitigates risks that can have a critical impact on a project.
Tip
In a dynamic environment, risk management must be a continuous process of identifying, analyzing, and monitoring risks.
Effective risk management includes early and aggressive risk identification through collaboration and the involvement of relevant stakeholders as described in the stakeholder involvement plan addressed in the Project Planning process area. Strong leadership among all relevant stakeholders is needed to establish an environment for free and open disclosure and discussion of risk.
Tip
Without a free and open environment, many risks will remain undisclosed until they surface as problems, when it is often too late to address them. Free and open discussions should involve the following parties:
• Customers and other stakeholders when the acquisition strategy is being formulated
• Potential suppliers when negotiations are taking place
• Suppliers when the supplier agreement is being established and throughout the project
Risk management should consider both internal and external, as well as both technical and non-technical, sources of cost, schedule, performance, and other risks. Early and aggressive detection of risk is important because it is typically easier, less costly, and less disruptive to make changes and correct work efforts during the earlier, rather than the later, phases of the project.
When the project identifies and assesses project risks during project planning and manages risks throughout the life of the project, risk identification includes identifying risks associated with the acquisition process and the use of a supplier to perform project work. Initially, the acquisition strategy identifies risks associated with an acquisition. The approach to the acquisition is planned based on those risks. As the project progresses to the selection of a supplier, risks specific to the supplier’s technical and management approach become important to the success of the acquisition.
Tip
For an acquisition organization, sources of risk are not just technical, but are often programmatic and related to funding.
These risks refer to the capability of the supplier to meet contractual requirements, including schedules and cost targets. When the project selects a supplier and awards the supplier agreement, the acquirer continues to manage project risks, including risks related to the supplier meeting its contractual requirements. Typically the acquirer does not manage risks being addressed or managed by the supplier.
Tip
Although it may be valuable to manage risks jointly with the supplier, recognize that there are supplier risks, acquirer risks, and shared risks. Each type of risk needs to be managed by the appropriate stakeholders.
Industry standards can help when determining how to prevent or mitigate specific risks commonly found in a particular industry. Certain risks can be proactively managed or mitigated by reviewing industry best practices and lessons learned.
Risk management can be divided into the following parts:
• Defining a risk management strategy
• Identifying and analyzing risks
• Handling identified risks, including the implementation of risk mitigation plans as needed
Hint
Make sure you include end users is the risk management process. Capabilities are acquired to mitigate operational risk; however, the deployment of new capabilities may increase operational risk if they are not managed properly.
Both the acquirer and supplier should understand project risks and how to modify the risk management strategy and plans as a project progresses through its lifecycle. Managing project risks requires a close partnership between the acquirer and supplier. Both should share appropriate risk management documentation, understand the risks, and develop and execute risk management activities.
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For more information on helping end users participate in the risk process, see the SEI report, “A Taxonomy of Operational Risks” (CMU/SEI-2005-TN-036).
The complexity of an acquirer-supplier relationship increases the need for early and aggressive risk identification. For example, acquirer capabilities, supplier experience working with the acquirer, financial stability of the supplier, and availability of well-defined dispute resolution processes all influence the risk of a project.
As represented in the Project Planning and Project Monitoring and Control process areas, organizations initially may focus on risk identification for awareness and react to the realization of these risks as they occur. The Risk Management process area describes an evolution of these specific practices to systematically plan, anticipate, and mitigate risks to proactively minimize their impact on the project.
Tip
A precondition to efficient risk management is to have shared and consistent project objectives among customers, the acquisition organization, and suppliers. Project objectives provide focus to risk management and help guide its activities.
Although the primary emphasis of the Risk Management process area is on the project, these concepts can also be applied to manage organizational risks.
Refer to the Solicitation and Supplier Agreement Development process area for more information about establishing supplier agreements.
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PP and PMC contain risk management related practices. See PP SP 2.2, “Identify Project Risks,” and PMC SP 1.3, “Monitor Project Risks.”
Refer to the Decision Analysis and Resolution process area for more information about analyzing possible decisions using a formal evaluation process that evaluates identified alternatives against established criteria.
Refer to the Project Monitoring and Control process area for more information about monitoring project risks.
Refer to the Project Planning process area for more information about identifying project risks and planning stakeholder involvement.
Hint
Relevant stakeholders external to the project bring perspectives and insight into the process of identifying and evaluating risks—especially when the project is contributing to a system of systems. It is important to maintain a dialog on related risks pertaining to other systems within the system of systems.
Preparation for risk management is conducted.
Tip
If your project uses safety and security analysis methods, incorporate these methods as part of the risk management strategy.
Prepare for risk management by establishing and maintaining a strategy for identifying, analyzing, and mitigating risks. Typically, this strategy is documented in a risk management plan. The risk management strategy addresses specific actions and the management approach used to apply and control the risk management program. The strategy typically includes identifying sources of risk, the scheme used to categorize risks, and parameters used to evaluate, bound, and control risks for effective handling.
Determine risk sources and categories.
Identifying risk sources provides a basis for systematically examining changing situations over time to uncover circumstances that affect the ability of the project to meet its objectives. Risk sources are both internal and external to the project. As the project progresses, additional sources of risk can be identified. Establishing categories for risks provides a mechanism for collecting and organizing risks as well as ensuring appropriate scrutiny and management attention to risks that can have serious consequences on meeting project objectives.
Acquirers initially identify and categorize risk sources and categories for the project and refine those sources and categories over time (e.g., schedule, cost, sourcing, contract management, supplier execution, technology readiness, human safety, reliability related risks, other issues outside the control of the acquirer). The supplier is also a source of risk (e.g., financial stability of the supplier, the possibility of the supplier’s acquisition by another organization).
Tip
When placed under stress, people may lose perspective when it comes to risks. Some risks (e.g., those external to the project) may be given too much emphasis and others too little. Having a list of risk sources, both internal and external, helps bring objectivity to the identification of risks.
Example Work Products
1. Risk source lists (external and internal)
2. Risk categories list
Tip
In a typical project, risks and their status change over time. A standard list of risk sources enables a project to be thorough in its identification of risks at each point in the project.
Subpractices
1. Determine risk sources.
Risk sources are fundamental drivers that cause risks in a project or organization. There are many sources of risks, both internal and external to a project. Risk sources identify where risks can originate.
Tip
Disruption to the continuity of operations is an external source of risk. If neglected, it may have huge consequences. If mitigated, the mitigation effort often proves to be cost-effective.
Many of these sources of risk are accepted without adequately planning for them. Early identification of both internal and external sources of risk can lead to early identification of risks. Risk mitigation plans can then be implemented early in the project to preclude occurrence of risks or reduce consequences of their occurrence.
2. Determine risk categories.
Risk categories are “bins” used for collecting and organizing risks. Identifying risk categories aids the future consolidation of activities in risk mitigation plans.
Tip
Categories are used to group related risks that can often be addressed by the same mitigation activities, thereby increasing efficiency.
A risk taxonomy can be used to provide a framework for determining risk sources and categories.
Tip
Risks are often grouped by lifecycle phase.
Define parameters used to analyze and categorize risks and to control the risk management effort.
Parameters for evaluating, categorizing, and prioritizing risks include the following:
• Risk likelihood (i.e., probability of risk occurrence)
• Risk consequence (i.e., impact and severity of risk occurrence)
• Thresholds to trigger management activities
Risk parameters are used to provide common and consistent criteria for comparing risks to be managed. Without these parameters, it is difficult to gauge the severity of an unwanted change caused by a risk and to prioritize the actions required for risk mitigation planning.
Projects should document the parameters used to analyze and categorize risks so that they are available for reference throughout the life of the project because circumstances change over time. Using these parameters, risks can easily be re-categorized and analyzed when changes occur.
The project can use techniques such as failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) to examine risks of potential failures in the acquisition strategy, acquisition, or in selected transition and product support processes. Such techniques can help to provide discipline in working with risk parameters.
Example Work Products
1. Risk evaluation, categorization, and prioritization criteria
2. Risk management requirements (e.g., control and approval levels, reassessment intervals)
X-Ref
The risk taxonomies developed at the SEI and mentioned in Barry Boehm and Vic Basili’s “Top 10 Software Risks” (www.cebase.org/www/AboutCebase/News/top-10-defects.html) remain useful even more than a decade after their creation.
Subpractices
1. Define consistent criteria for evaluating and quantifying risk likelihood and severity levels.
Consistently used criteria (e.g., bounds on likelihood, severity levels) allow impacts of different risks to be commonly understood, to receive the appropriate level of scrutiny, and to obtain the management attention warranted. In managing dissimilar risks (e.g., staff safety versus environmental pollution), it is important to ensure consistency in the end result. (For example, a high-impact risk of environmental pollution is as important as a high-impact risk to staff safety.) One way of providing a common basis for comparing dissimilar risks is assigning dollar values to risks (e.g., through a process of risk monetization).
Tip
To be effective, risk management must be objective and quantitative. Therefore, you must treat risks consistently with respect to the key parameters. Defining criteria for evaluating risks helps to ensure consistency.
2. Define thresholds for each risk category.
For each risk category, thresholds can be established to determine acceptability or unacceptability of risks, prioritization of risks, or triggers for management action.
Tip
When you are in the middle of a project, it is easy to lose perspective on the risks involved. Defining thresholds in advance enables a more objective treatment of risks.
Tip
These thresholds may need to be refined later as part of risk mitigation planning.
Tip
Bounds are intended to scope the risk management effort in sensible ways that help the organization conserve project resources.
3. Define bounds on the extent to which thresholds are applied against or within a category.
There are few limits to which risks can be assessed in either a quantitative or qualitative fashion. Definition of bounds (or boundary conditions) can be used to help define the extent of the risk management effort and avoid excessive resource expenditures. Bounds can include the exclusion of a risk source from a category. These bounds can also exclude conditions that occur below a given frequency.
Establish and maintain the strategy to be used for risk management.
A comprehensive risk management strategy addresses items such as the following:
• The scope of the risk management effort
• Methods and tools to be used for risk identification, risk analysis, risk mitigation, risk monitoring, and communication
• Project specific sources of risks
• How risks are to be organized, categorized, compared, and consolidated
• Parameters used for taking action on identified risks, including likelihood, consequence, and thresholds
• Risk mitigation techniques to be used, such as prototyping, piloting, simulation, alternative designs, or evolutionary development
• The definition of risk measures used to monitor the status of risks
• Time intervals for risk monitoring or reassessment
Tip
The risk management strategy documents the results of the first two specific practices.
Tip
Some large acquisition organizations develop a standard risk management strategy template that is then tailored to meet the needs of individual projects.
The risk management strategy should be guided by a common vision of success that describes desired future project outcomes in terms of the product delivered, its cost, and its fitness for the task. The risk management strategy is often documented in a risk management plan for the organization or project. This strategy is reviewed with relevant stakeholders to promote commitment and understanding.
A risk management strategy should be developed early in the project, so that relevant risks are identified and managed proactively. Early identification and assessment of critical risks allows the project to formulate risk handling approaches and adjust project definition and allocation of resources based on critical risks.
Tip
The risk management strategy is often documented as part of a risk management plan, or as a section in the project plan.
Example Work Products
1. Project risk management strategy
Tip
All relevant stakeholders must understand fully the risk management strategy.
Risks are identified and analyzed to determine their relative importance.
The degree of risk affects the resources assigned to handle the risk and the timing of when appropriate management attention is required.
Tip
Risk identification and analysis is an activity that continues for the duration of the project.
Risk analysis entails identifying risks from identified internal and external sources and evaluating each identified risk to determine its likelihood and consequences. Risk categorization, based on an evaluation against established risk categories and criteria developed for the risk management strategy, provides information needed for risk handling. Related risks can be grouped to enable efficient handling and effective use of risk management resources.
Tip
“Can a project have no risks?” “Can multiple projects have the same risk lists?” If these questions are asked, someone does not understand risks. Some risks may be product specific, contract specific, or supplier specific.
Identify and document risks.
Identifying potential issues, hazards, threats, and vulnerabilities that could negatively affect work efforts or plans is the basis for sound and successful risk management. Risks should be identified and described understandably before they can be analyzed and managed properly. Risks are documented in a concise statement that includes the context, conditions, and consequences of risk occurrence.
Tip
The context, conditions, and consequences of a risk statement provide much of the information that is needed later to understand and evaluate the risk.
Risk identification should be an organized, thorough approach to seek out probable or realistic risks in achieving objectives. To be effective, risk identification should not attempt to address every possible event. Using categories and parameters developed in the risk management strategy and identified sources of risk can provide the discipline and streamlining appropriate for risk identification. Identified risks form a baseline for initiating risk management activities. Risks should be reviewed periodically to reexamine possible sources of risk and changing conditions to uncover sources and risks previously overlooked or nonexistent when the risk management strategy was last updated.
Hint
Establish a work environment in which risks can be disclosed and discussed openly, without fear of repercussions. (Don’t shoot the messenger!)
Risk identification focuses on the identification of risks, not the placement of blame. The results of risk identification activities should never be used by management to evaluate the performance of individuals.
Tip
Many of the methods used for identifying risks rely on organizational process assets such as a risk taxonomy, risk repository, and lessons learned from past projects. Subject-matter experts may also be utilized for this purpose. Other methods involve reviewing project artifacts such as the project’s shared vision, project interfaces, and contractual requirements.
Some risks are identified by examining the supplier’s WBS, product, and processes using the categories and parameters developed in the risk management strategy. Risks can be identified in many areas (e.g., requirements, technology, design, testing, vulnerability to threats, lifecycle costs). An examination of the project in these areas can help to develop or refine the acquisition strategy and the risk sharing structure between the acquirer and supplier.
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For more information, see Software Risk Management: Principles and Practices by Barry Boehm (IEEE Software, 1990); A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK Guide), third edition (Project Management Institute, 2004; Chapter 11 deals with risk management); and www.sei.cmu.edu/risk/index.cfm.
The acquirer considers risks associated with a supplier’s capability (e.g., meeting schedule, cost requirements for the project), including potential risks to the acquirer’s intellectual capital or security vulnerabilities introduced by using a supplier.
Example Work Products
1. List of identified risks, including the context, conditions, and consequences of risk occurrence
Example Supplier Deliverables
1. List of identified risks, including the context, conditions, and consequences of risk occurrence
Tip
One approach to identifying risks is to consider the cost, schedule, and performance issues associated with each lifecycle phase. Because each phase typically has a clear set of objectives and a completion milestone, a phase is a suitable context for identifying the risks associated with that phase.
Subpractices
1. Identify the risks associated with cost, schedule, and performance.
Risks associated with cost, schedule, performance, and other business objectives should be examined to understand their effect on project objectives. Risk candidates can be discovered that are outside the scope of project objectives but vital to customer interests. For example, risks in development costs, product acquisition costs, cost of spare (or replacement) products, and product disposition (or disposal) costs have design implications.
The customer may not have considered the full cost of supporting a fielded product or using a delivered service. The customer should be informed of such risks, but actively managing those risks may not be necessary. Mechanisms for making such decisions should be examined at project and organization levels and put in place if deemed appropriate, especially for risks that affect the project’s ability to verify and validate the product.
Hint
When necessary, explain to customers the implications of their requirements, as they may not be aware of the acquisition risks associated with certain requirements. Clarifying or changing requirements may significantly mitigate risks in a complex acquisition.
In addition to the cost risks identified above, other cost risks can include the ones associated with funding levels, funding estimates, and distributed budgets.
Tip
Performance risks may be associated with lifecycle phases, new technology, or desired attributes of the product.
Schedule risks can include risks associated with planned activities, key events, and milestones.
Performance maintenance attributes are those characteristics that enable an in-use product or service to provide required performance, such as maintaining safety and security performance.
There are risks that do not fall into cost, schedule, or performance categories, but can be associated with other aspects of the organization’s operation.
2. Review environmental elements that can affect the project.
Risks to a project that frequently are missed include risks supposedly outside the scope of the project (i.e., the project does not control whether they occur but can mitigate their impact). These risks can include weather or natural disasters, political changes, and telecommunications failures.
Tip
Environmental risks are often ignored, even though some cost-effective mitigation activities addressing such risks are possible. Failing to mitigate these risks can be a major hazard for system acquisition success.
3. Review all elements of the work breakdown structure as part of identifying risks to help ensure that all aspects of the work effort have been considered.
4. Review all elements of the project plan as part of identifying risks to help ensure that all aspects of the project have been considered.
Refer to the Project Planning process area for more information about identifying project risks.
5. Document the context, conditions, and potential consequences of each risk.
Risk statements are typically documented in a standard format that contains the risk context, conditions, and consequences of occurrence. The risk context provides additional information about the risk such as the relative time frame of the risk, the circumstances or conditions surrounding the risk that has brought about the concern, and any doubt or uncertainty.
Tip
A good risk statement is fact based, actionable, and brief.
Tip
A standard format for documenting risks makes it easier to train personnel on what is needed in risk statements.
6. Identify the relevant stakeholders associated with each risk.
Evaluate and categorize each identified risk using defined risk categories and parameters, and determine its relative priority.
The evaluation of risks is needed to assign a relative importance to each identified risk and is used in determining when appropriate management attention is required. Often it is useful to aggregate risks based on their interrelationships and develop options at an aggregate level. When an aggregate risk is formed by a roll up of lower level risks, care should be taken to ensure that important lower level risks are not ignored.
Hint
Risk management is simplified when you can treat a number of risks as one group from evaluation and mitigation perspectives.
Collectively, the activities of risk evaluation, categorization, and prioritization are sometimes called a “risk assessment” or “risk analysis.”
The acquirer should conduct a risk assessment before solicitation to evaluate if the project can achieve its technical, schedule, and budget constraints. Technical, schedule, and cost risks should be discussed with potential suppliers before the solicitation is released. Using this approach, critical risks inherent in the project can be identified and addressed in the solicitation.
Example Work Products
1. List of risks and their assigned priority
Example Supplier Deliverables
1. List of risks and their assigned priority
Subpractices
1. Evaluate identified risks using defined risk parameters.
Each risk is evaluated and assigned values according to defined risk parameters, which can include likelihood, consequence (i.e., severity, impact), and thresholds. The assigned risk parameter values can be integrated to produce additional measures, such as risk exposure (i.e., the combination of likelihood and consequence), which can be used to prioritize risks for handling.
Tip
Risk exposure is the result of the combination of the likelihood and the consequence of a risk (expressed quantitatively).
Often, a scale with three to five values is used to evaluate both likelihood and consequence.
Probability values are frequently used to quantify likelihood. Consequences are generally related to cost, schedule, environmental impact, or human measures (e.g., labor hours lost, severity of injury).
Risk evaluation is often a difficult and time consuming task. Specific expertise or group techniques may be needed to assess risks and gain confidence in the prioritization. In addition, priorities can require reevaluation as time progresses. To provide a basis for comparing the impact of the realization of identified risks, consequences of the risks can be monetized.
Tip
Determining values for risk likelihood and consequence is easier and more repeatable if objectives are stated clearly, criteria exist for assigning values, relevant stakeholders are represented appropriately, and personnel have been trained correctly.
2. Categorize and group risks according to defined risk categories.
Risks are categorized into defined risk categories, providing a means to review them according to their source, taxonomy, or project component. Related or equivalent risks can be grouped for efficient handling. The cause-and-effect relationships between related risks are documented.
3. Prioritize risks for mitigation.
A relative priority is determined for each risk based on assigned risk parameters. Clear criteria should be used to determine risk priority. Risk prioritization helps to determine the most effective areas to which resources for risks mitigation can be applied with the greatest positive impact on the project.
Tip
Priority assignment can likewise be a repeatable process.
Risks are handled and mitigated as appropriate to reduce adverse impacts on achieving objectives.
The steps in handling risks include developing risk handling options, monitoring risks, and performing risk handling activities when defined thresholds are exceeded. Risk mitigation plans are developed and implemented for selected risks to proactively reduce the potential impact of risk occurrence. Risk mitigation planning can also include contingency plans to deal with the impact of selected risks that can occur despite attempts to mitigate them. Risk parameters used to trigger risk handling activities are defined by the risk management strategy.
X-Ref
RSKM heavily influences technical management (i.e., to adjust requirements, design, implementation, verification, and validation in light of risks and risk mitigation), project management (i.e., to plan for these activities and monitor thresholds that trigger the deployment of mitigation plans), and supplier agreement management (i.e., to understand how these activities are reflected in the supplier agreement).
Develop a risk mitigation plan in accordance with the risk management strategy.
A critical component of risk mitigation planning is developing alternative courses of action, workarounds, and fallback positions, and a recommended course of action for each critical risk. The risk mitigation plan for a given risk includes techniques and methods used to avoid, reduce, and control the probability of risk occurrence; the extent of damage incurred should the risk occur (sometimes called a “contingency plan”); or both. Risks are monitored and when they exceed established thresholds, risk mitigation plans are deployed to return the affected effort to an acceptable risk level. If the risk cannot be mitigated, a contingency plan can be invoked. Both risk mitigation and contingency plans often are generated only for selected risks for which consequences of the risks are high or unacceptable. Other risks may be accepted and simply monitored.
Tip
The risk management literature uses the term contingency plans in various ways. In CMMI, a risk contingency plan is the part of a risk mitigation plan that addresses which actions to take after a risk is realized.
Hint
Reward personnel who prevent crises—not those who allow a crisis to happen and then work heroically to resolve it.
Hint
One way to identify actions that will avoid, reduce, or control a risk is to perform a causal analysis on the sources of the risk. Actions that eliminate or reduce causes may be suitable candidates for inclusion in a risk mitigation plan.
Often, especially for high-impact risks, more than one approach to handling a risk should be generated.
Tip
When its associated threshold is exceeded, a risk mitigation plan should return the project to an acceptable risk level.
In many cases, risks are accepted or watched. Risk acceptance is usually done when the risk is judged too low for formal mitigation or when there appears to be no viable way to reduce the risk. If a risk is accepted, the rationale for this decision should be documented. Risks are watched when there is an objectively defined, verifiable, and documented threshold (e.g., for cost, schedule, performance, risk exposure) that will trigger risk mitigation planning or invoke a contingency plan.
Refer to the Decision Analysis and Resolution process area for more information about evaluating alternatives and selecting solutions.
Thresholds for supplier risks that affect the project (e.g., schedule, quality, risk exposure due to supplier risks) are specified in the supplier agreement along with escalation procedures if thresholds are exceeded.
Adequate consideration should be given early to technology demonstrations, models, simulations, pilots, and prototypes as part of risk mitigation planning.
Hint
You can establish thresholds for different attributes (e.g., cost, schedule, and performance) and trigger different activities (e.g., contingency plan deployment and risk mitigation planning).
Example Work Products
1. Documented handling options for each identified risk
2. Risk mitigation plans
3. Contingency plans
4. List of those who are responsible for tracking and addressing each risk
5. Disaster recovery or continuity plans
1. Documented handling options for each identified risk
2. Risk mitigation plans
3. Contingency plans
4. List of those who are responsible for tracking and addressing each risk
5. Disaster recovery or continuity plans
Subpractices
1. Determine the levels and thresholds that define when a risk becomes unacceptable and triggers the execution of a risk mitigation plan or contingency plan.
Risk level (derived using a risk model) is a measure combining the uncertainty of reaching an objective with the consequences of failing to reach the objective.
Risk levels and thresholds that bound planned or acceptable cost, schedule, or performance should be clearly understood and defined to provide a means with which risk can be understood. Proper categorization of risk is essential for ensuring an appropriate priority based on severity and the associated management response. There can be multiple thresholds employed to initiate varying levels of management response. Typically, thresholds for the execution of risk mitigation plans are set to engage before the execution of contingency plans.
Tip
Thresholds trigger actions that may affect the work of personnel and relevant stakeholders. The motivation for particular thresholds and the actions they invoke should be well understood by all who will be affected by those events.
Tip
Assigning responsibility for risk mitigation becomes easier when mitigation activities and responsibilities are documented in a plan, such as the project plan.
2. Identify the person or group responsible for addressing each risk.
3. Determine the costs and benefits of implementing the risk mitigation plan for each risk.
Risk mitigation activities should be examined for benefits they provide versus resources they will expend. Just like any other design activity, alternative plans may need to be developed and costs and benefits of each alternative assessed. The most appropriate plan is selected for implementation.
Tip
Alternative risk mitigation plans may be formally evaluated (using DAR) to choose the best one. Relevant stakeholders may play an important role in such an evaluation (particularly for risks that affect them).
4. Develop an overall risk mitigation plan for the project to orchestrate the implementation of individual risk mitigation and contingency plans.
The complete set of risk mitigation plans may not be affordable. A tradeoff analysis should be performed to prioritize risk mitigation plans for implementation.
Hint
If you integrate all risk mitigation plans and find that the result is not affordable, trim the list using the priorities assigned in SP 2.2 or reprioritize them using a group-consensus approach (e.g., multivoting within risk categories).
5. Develop contingency plans for selected critical risks in the event their impacts are realized.
Risk mitigation plans are developed and implemented as needed to proactively reduce risks before they become problems. Despite best efforts, some risks can be unavoidable and will become problems that affect the project. Contingency plans can be developed for critical risks to describe actions a project can take to deal with the occurrence of this impact. The intent is to define a proactive plan for handling the risk. Either the risk is reduced (mitigation) or addressed (contingency). In either event, the risk is managed.
Some risk management literature may consider contingency plans a synonym or subset of risk mitigation plans. These plans also can be addressed together as risk handling or risk action plans.
Monitor the status of each risk periodically and implement the risk mitigation plan as appropriate.
To effectively control and manage risks during the work effort, follow a proactive program to regularly monitor risks and the status and results of risk handling actions. The risk management strategy defines the intervals at which risk status should be revisited. This activity can result in the discovery of new risks or new risk handling options that can require replanning and reassessment. In either event, acceptability thresholds associated with the risk should be compared to the risk status to determine the need for implementing a risk mitigation plan.
Hint
Monitor both the mitigation activity and the risk itself. Don’t assume the risk is mitigated simply because the mitigation plan is executed: Unintended consequences or additional complexity may cause the risk exposure to increase when you expect it to decrease.
The acquirer shares selected risks with the supplier. Risks associated with the acquisition process are tracked and resolved or controlled until mitigated. This monitoring includes risks that can be escalated by the supplier.
Example Work Products
1. Updated lists of risk status
2. Updated assessments of risk likelihood, consequence, and thresholds
3. Updated list of risk handling options
4. Updated list of actions taken to handle risks
5. Risk mitigation plans of risk handling options
Tip
Weekly or monthly updates to risk status are typical.
Example Supplier Deliverables
1. Updated list of risk status
2. Updated assessments of risk likelihood, consequence, and thresholds
3. Updated list of risk handling options
4. Updated list of actions taken to handle risks
5. Risk mitigation plans
Tip
Incorporating risk mitigation plans into the project plan enables their status to be assessed periodically as part of the project’s regular progress reviews.
1. Monitor risk status.
After a risk mitigation plan is initiated, the risk is still monitored. Thresholds are assessed to check for the potential execution of a contingency plan.
A mechanism for monitoring should be employed.
2. Provide a method for tracking open risk handling action items to closure.
Refer to the Project Monitoring and Control process area for more information about managing corrective action to closure.
3. Invoke selected risk handling options when monitored risks exceed defined thresholds.
Often, risk handling is only performed for risks judged to be high and medium. The risk handling strategy for a given risk can include techniques and methods to avoid, reduce, and control the likelihood of the risk or the extent of damage incurred should the risk occur, or both. In this context, risk handling includes both risk mitigation plans and contingency plans.
Risk handling techniques are developed to avoid, reduce, and control adverse impact to project objectives and to bring about acceptable outcomes in light of probable impacts. Actions generated to handle a risk require proper resource loading and scheduling in plans and baseline schedules. This replanning should closely consider the effects on adjacent or dependent work initiatives or activities.
Tip
To ensure that risk mitigation activities are performed properly, they must be planned, scheduled, and resourced, just like any other project activity.
4. Establish a schedule or period of performance for each risk handling activity that includes a start date and anticipated completion date.
5. Provide a continued commitment of resources for each plan to allow the successful execution of risk handling activities.
6. Collect performance measures on risk handling activities.
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