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Risk management is the process of measuring, or assessing risk and then developing
strategies to manage the risk. In ideal risk management, a prioritization process is followed whereby the risks with the greatest
loss and the greatest probability of
occurring are handled first, and risks with lower probability of occurrence and lower loss are handled later.
In practice the process can be very difficult, and balancing between risks with a high probability of occurrence but lower
loss vs. a risk with high loss but lower probability of occurrence can often be mishandled.
Risk management also faces a difficulty in allocating resources properly. This is the idea of opportunity cost. Resources spent on risk management could be instead spent on more profitable
activities. Again, ideal risk management spends the least amount of resources in the process while reducing the effects of risks
as much as possible.
Steps in the Risk Management process
Identification and assessment
A first step in the process of managing risk is identify potential risks. The risks must then be assessed as to their
potential severity of loss and to the probability of occurrence.
Possible actions available
Once risks have been identified and assessed, all techniques to manage the risk fall into one or more of these four major
categories:
- Avoidance
- Reduction
- Retention
- Transfer
Ideal use of these strategies may not be possible. Some of them may involve trade offs that are not acceptable to the
organization or person making the risk management decisions.
Risk Avoidance
Includes not performing an activity that could carry risk. An example would be not buying a property or business in order to
not take on the liability that comes with it. Another would be not flying in order to not take the risk that the plane were to be
hijacked. Avoidance may seem the answer to all risks, but avoiding risks also means losing out on the potential gain that
accepting (retaining) the risk may have allowed. Not entering a business to avoid the risk of loss also avoids the possibility of
earning the profits.
Risk Reduction
Involves methods that reduce the severity of the loss. Examples include sprinklers designed to put out a fire to reduce the risk of loss by fire. This method may cause a greater loss by water damage and therefore may
not be suitable. Halon fire suppression systems may mitigate that risk, but the cost may be prohibitive as a strategy.
Risk Retention
Involves accepting the loss when it occurs. True self insurance
falls in this category. All risks that are not avoided or transferred are retained by default.
Risk Transfer
Means causing another party to accept the risk, typically by contract. Insurance is one type of risk transfer. Other times it may involve contract language that
transfers a risk to another party without the payment of an insurance premium. Liability among construction or other contractors is very often
transferred this way.
Some ways of managing risk fall into multiple categories. Risk retention pools are technically retaining the risk for the
group, but spreading it over the whole group, involves transfer among individual members of the group. This is different from
traditional insurance, in that no premium is exchanged between members of the group.
Create the plan
Decide on the combination of methods to be used for each risk
Implementation
Follow all of the planned methods for mitigating the effect of the risks. Purchase insurance policies for the risks that have
been decided to be transferred to an insurer, avoid all risks that can be without sacrificing the entity's goals, reduce others,
and retain the rest.
Review and evaluation of the plan
Initial risk management plans with never be perfect. practice, experience, and actual loss results, will necessitate changes
in the plan and contribute information to allow possible different decisions to be made in dealing with the risks being
faced.
Limitations
If risks are improperly assessed and prioritized, time can be wasted in dealing with risk of losses that are not likely to
occur. Spending too much time assessing and managing unlikely risks can divert resources that could be used more profitably.
Unlikely events do occur, but if the risk is unlikely enough to occur, it may be better to simply retain the risk, and deal with
the result if the loss does in fact occur.
Prioritizing too highly the Risk management processes itself could potentially keep an organization from ever
completing a project or even getting started. This is especially true if other work is suspended until the risk management
process is considered complete.
Areas of Risk Management
As applied to corporate finance, risk
management is a technique for measuring, monitoring and controlling the financial risk on a firm's balance sheet. See value at
risk.
Project Management
In project management, a risk is more narrowly defined as a possible event or circumstance that can have negative influences on a project. Its
influence can be on the schedule, the resources, the scope and/or the quality.
In project management parlance, when a risk escalates, it becomes a liability. A liability is a negative event or
circumstance that is hindering the project.
Some of the processes for assessing risk include the following (the parentheses contain some of the jargon used to refer to
them).
- Choosing unique identifiers for referring to the same risk in company or project documents (identification).
- Describing the risk and how it could become a liability (description).
- Assessing the consequences of that (effect).
- Considering what precautions could be taken to prevent it (precaution).
- Drawing up contingency plans or procedures for handling it (contingency).
- Categorising the risk as new, ongoing or closed (risk status)
- Estimating the probability of the risk becoming a liability (Risk
escalation probability, P)
- Estimating the consequences in terms of time for the project (Schedule impact, S)
In addition, every probable risk can have a pre-formulated plan to deal with it to deal with it's possible consequences (to
ensure contingency if the risk becomes a liability).
From the information above and the average cost per employee over time, or Cost Accrual Ratio, a project manager can estimate
- the cost associated with the risk if it arises, estimated by multiplying employee costs per unit time by the estimated time
lost (cost impact, C where C = CAR * S)
- the probable increase in time associated with a risk (schedule variance due to risk, Rs where Rs = P * S):
- Sorting on this value puts the highest risks to the schedule first. This is intended to cause the greatest risks to the
project to be attempted first so that risk is minimised as quickly as possible.
- This is slightly misleading as schedule variances with a large P and small S and visa-versa are not equivalent. (The
risk of the HMS Titanic sinking vs.
the passengers' meals being served at slightly the wrong time).
- the probable increase in cost associated with a risk (cost variance due to risk, Rc where Rc = P*C =
P*CAR*S = P*S*CAR)
- sorting on this value puts the highest risks to the budget first.
- see concerns about schedule variance as this is a function of it, as illustrated in the equation above.
Risk in a project or process can be
due either to special causes of deviation or common causes of
deviation and requires appropriate treatment. That is to re-iterate the concern about extremal cases not being equivalent in
the list immediately above.
Risk management activities as applied to project management
In project management, risk management includes the
following activities:
- Planning how risk management will be held in the particular project. Plan should include risk management tasks,
responsibilities, activities and budget.
- Assigning risk officer - a team member other than a project manager who is responsible for foreseeing potential project
problems. Typical characteristic of risk officer is a healthy skepticism.
- Maintaining live project risk database. Each risk should have the following attributes: opening date, title, short
description, probability and importance. Optionally risk can have assigned person responsible for its resolution and date till
then risk still can be resolved.
- Creating anonymous risk reporting channel. Each team member should have possibility to report risk that he foresees in the
project.
- Preparing mitigation plans for risks that are chosen to be mitigated. The purpose of the mitigation plan is to describe how
this particular risk will be handled – what, when, by who and how will be done to avoid it or minimize consequences if it
becomes a liability.
- Summarizing planned and faced risks, effectiveness of mitigation activities and effort spend for the risk management.
See also
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