The Sixth of Six Criteria That Each NASA Project Manager Must Know
| Place yourself back in front of the Standing Review Board – you MUST address the final of the six required judgement criteria for your project. There are, of course, many other items you’ll need to address, but this is the last of the minimal set.
THE GOAL OF RISK MANAGEMENT
ADEQUACY OF THE RISK MANAGEMENT APPROACHNASA takes risk management VERY seriously. In this blog, I’ve reduced the scope and detail of the complete NASA risk management approach to be applicable to a wide range of different industries and applications. NASA’s Risk Management program provides a unified structure that applies to all agency activities to ensure that risk management decisions are delegated and/or elevated to the appropriate level. The full Risk-Informed-Decision-Making handbook is 128 pages long, and that’s just one of the references I’m using. My goal is to give the reader a “taste” of what each PM must know about risk management – a lot! Risk Management includes opportunity management — recognizing that spaceflight is an inherently risky endeavor and that the proper attitude towards risk management is to reach an optimal balance between minimizing the potential for loss while maximizing the potential for gain (opportunity). All forms of Risk Management consist of two main and joined processes:
The Project Manager is required to be totally conversant on the adequacy of their project’s risk management approach including:
NASA’s Definition of RiskThe definition of risk used is very like what is described in the PMBOK® guide as an output of “Identify Risks” and placed in the risk register (PMBOK® 11.2.3.1). A risk is defined by: “EVENT may occur causing IMPACT, or If CAUSE exists, EVENT may occur leading to EFFECT.” NASA defines this as a “Triplet”
Also, in agreement with the PMBOK® guide, the purpose of this type of risk definition is to be able to “sift” the high-probability, low-consequence risks from the low-probability, high-consequence risks. THE NASA RISK MANAGEMENT PROCESSNASA Risk Management processes are based on both Continuous Risk Management (CRM), which stresses the management of risk during implementation - and - Risk-Informed Decision Making (RIDM) which is concerned with analysis of important or direction-setting decisions. Continuous Risk Management (CRM)
1 – Identify: Search for and locate risks before they become problems or opportunities. This is the process of transforming uncertainties and issues about a project into distinct (tangible) risks that can be described and measured. 2 – Analyze: Converts risk data into decision-making information. The process of examining the risks in detail to determine the extent of the risks, how they relate to each other, and which ones are the most important 3 – Plan: Translates risk information into decisions and mitigating (or enhancing) actions. This part of the process deals with deciding what, if anything, should be done about a risk or set of related risks 4 – Track: Answers the questions: Are the risk indicators and actions plan followed? This is the process in which risk status data are acquired, compiled, and reported 5 – Control: To make informed, timely, and effective decisions regarding risks and their mitigation or enhancement plans. During this process the project team examines the tracking status reports for identified project risks and decides what actions to take based on the reported data 6 - Communicate & Document: Provides information and feedback to the project on the risk activities, current risks, and emerging risks. It is this process in which risk information is conveyed between all project stakeholders. Risk Informed Decision Making (RIDM)RIDM helps ensure that decisions between alternatives are conducted with an awareness of the risks associated with each. This is done to help prevent late design changes which are often drivers of risk, cost overruns, schedule delays, and even cancellation. Also, it has been found that most project cost-saving opportunities occur in the definition, planning, and early design phases of a project. The RIDM process attempts to respond to some of the primary issues that have derailed programs in the past:
The RIDM process acknowledges the role that human judgment plays in decisions, and that technical information cannot be the sole basis for decision making. This is not only because of inevitable gaps in the technical information, but also because decision making is an inherently subjective, values-based enterprise. RIDM is typically appropriate for decisions that have one or more of the following characteristics:
Throughout the RIDM process, interactions take place between the stakeholders, the risk analyst, the subject matter experts (SMEs), the Technical Authorities, and the decision-maker to ensure that the knowledge is properly integrated and communicated into the deliberations that inform the decision. The RIDM ProcessYou can download a free copy of the RIDM process handbook at: http://ow.ly/TCWH306qAq9
Part 1: Identification of AlternativesObjectives are decomposed into an individual issue that is significant to some or all the stakeholders. In general, a performance measure has a “direction of goodness” that indicates the direction of increasingly beneficial performance measure values. Considered are:
Part 2: Risk Analysis of AlternativesIn Risk Analysis of Alternatives, the performance measures of each alternative are quantified. It is incumbent on risk analyst to model each significant possible outcome, accounting for its probability of occurrence, in terms of the scenarios that produce it. This produces a distribution of outcomes for each alternative, as characterized by probability density functions over the performance measures. The depth of analysis needs to agree with the stakes and complexity of the decision situations being addressed. Avoiding Decision Traps During Analysis
Part 3, Risk-Informed Alternative SelectionThere are several approaches to selecting an alternative. Deliberation takes place among the stakeholders and the decision-maker, and the decision-maker either culls the set of alternatives and asks for further scrutiny of the remaining alternatives OR selects an alternative for implementation OR asks for new alternatives. Deliberation and decision making might take place in several venues over time. The rationale for the
ReferencesThe following items are referenced in the text of this document:
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