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Risk Management PDF Print E-mail
Article Index
Risk Management
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Risk Management for Organizations: Keeping the Ship Afloat

The concept of risk management is one that has to encompass the whole of your program, from the first day of planning a new activity through the last piece of gear that is put away when the trip is over.

An introduction and discussion on Risk Management together with recommendations for its implementation. Prepared by Chester Simmons.

CONTENTS

* 1. Introduction
* 1.1 Risk Definition
* 1.2 Risk Management Definition
* 2. Background
* 2.1 Policy
* 2.2 Practices
* 3. Risk Concepts
* 3.1 First Principles
* 3.2 Ownership
* 3.3 Types of Risks
* 3.4 Development Risks
* 4. Risk Management Structure
* 4.1 Functions, Phases and Timing
* 5. Risk Management Tools
* 5.1 WBS
* 5.2 SOW
* 5.3 Proposal
* 5.4 Make-or-Buy
* 5.5 Risk Ranking
* 5.6 Software Tools (some recommendations)
* 5.7 Development Test (how to design)
* 5.8 Engineering Analysis (how to integrate with test)
* 6. The Human Element
* 7. References & Background Documents
* Appendices

1. Introduction

The management of risks is a central issue in the planning and management of any venture, but it is also something of an orphan within the acquisition establishment (at least in the U.S.). Risk management has not historically been a "branch activity" as noted in a bygone version of the Defense Systems Management College's System Engineering Handbook. (Reference 1 is the latest version of the guide.) "Branch" in this context refers, of course, to an organizational element within the engineering-development organizations common two or three decades or so ago that was probably derived from "branch of service" designations. The connotation being that there were not proponents per se for risk management as there were for reliability, safety, systems, electrical, PP&C, propulsion, human factors, guidance, C3I, etc. The situation is still somewhat loosely defined.

The purpose here is to provide information for use in risk management by any and all stakeholders. The objective is not to foster risk management as an identifiable and separate specialty.

The prescriptive portions of the discussions are cast from the perspective of a contractor performing an effort for some customer, typically an agency of government. The emphasis is on cross-specialty, cross-discipline, cross-functional and cross-technology development programs since such programs maximize risk opportunities and occurrences. In terms of program phases, the discussions are intended for a program in the pre-proposal, proposal or start-up phases. The reason for this timing is that risk management should be proactive, and activities later than these phases is hardly proactive in terms of avoiding risks.

The underlying themes for what follows are:

* management must know its job
* risks are dominantly engendered by organizations attempting ventures with elements that push the envelopes of their experience (and capabilities)
* risks are usually well known within an organization
* ownership of risks is a central issue in risk management
* the traditional steps in risk management are actually useful (planning, identification, analysis, management and tracking)
* the system engineering effort is the key program ingredient for a risk management program to work.

The discussions in this note are based on the assumption that the programs under consideration involve significant development activities. That is, the software, hardware, operational concepts, etc. or combinations of these aspects do not exist at the start of the program, and the development of these aspects is accomplished to some specification in some allocated set of time and monetary constraints.



 
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