Page 197 - DCAP304_DCAP515_SOFTWARE_PROJECT_MANAGEMENT
P. 197

Unit 10: Risk Management




              Risk Monitoring and Control                                                      Notes
              Risk Mitigation

          10.5.1 Risk Identification

          In this stage, we identify and name the risks. The best approach is a workshop with business and
          IT people to carry out the identification. Use a combination of brainstorming and reviewing of
          standard risk lists.
          There are different sorts of risks and we need to decide on a project by project basis what to do
          about each type.
          Business risks are ongoing risks that are best handled by the business. An example is that if the
          project cannot meet end of financial year deadline, the business area may need to retain their
          existing accounting system for another year. The response is likely to be a contingency plan
          developed by the business, to use the existing system for another year.

          Generic risks are risks to all projects. For example the  risk that  business user might not be
          available and  requirements may be incomplete. Each organization  will develop  standard
          responses to generic risks.
          Risks should be defined in two parts. The first is the cause of the situation (Vendor not meeting
          deadline, Business users not available, etc.).  The second  part is  the impact  (Budget will  be
          exceeded, Milestones not achieved, etc.).




             Notes  Hence a risk might be defined as “The vendor not meeting deadline will mean that
             budget will be exceeded”. If this format is used, it is  easy to  remove duplicates, and
             understand the risk.

          10.5.2 Risk Quantification

          Risk need to be quantified in two dimensions. The impact of the risk needs to be assessed. The
          probability of the risk occurring needs to be assessed. For simplicity, rate each on a 1 to 4 scale. The
          larger the number, the larger the impact or probability. By using a matrix, a priority can be established.


                                           Figure  10.6


























                                           LOVELY PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY                                   191
   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202