1 / 43

Practical project risk assessment

Practical project risk assessment . Simon White – Client Services Manager, Pertmaster Ltd. Why do projects fail * ?. Plan too optimistic Shoehorning, cramming, scale-to-fit Under-bid Spin … Things go wrong Scope creep Lack of resources Unanticipated work / events …

bebe
Download Presentation

Practical project risk assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Practical project risk assessment Simon White – Client Services Manager, Pertmaster Ltd

  2. Why do projects fail* ? • Plan too optimistic • Shoehorning, cramming, scale-to-fit • Under-bid • Spin • … • Things go wrong • Scope creep • Lack of resources • Unanticipated work / events • … * Fail = over-run, over-spend or under-perform

  3. Plan too optimistic • Optimistic estimates • Natural “optimism bias” • Lack of scope / understanding • by the project team • by the project planners • by the contract negotiator • Other reasons? • fear of failure • reverse engineering • “most likely case” planning

  4. 4:30pm 6:30pm 4:30pm 5:00pm 6:30pm “I’ll be home by …” • Experience • range: • range and shape:

  5. A simple example • Deterministic schedule finishes on December 10 • relies on combinations of durations that equal 70 days • Likelihood of the 10th December?

  6. A simple example

  7. More realistic schedules

  8. More realistic schedules No longer a single date

  9. Plan too optimistic • Optimistic estimates • Natural “optimism bias” • Lack of scope / understanding • Most likely case • Best / likely / worst case analysis • Likely case is not the most likely! • Parallelism • Risk is compounded • “Merge bias”, “Nodal bias” • Needs to be taken into account

  10. Parallelism • This project also completes on 10 December • Each single path has 18% chance • Is it more or less risky than single path? • Likelihood of 10 December finish?

  11. More risky…

  12. More realistic schedules

  13. More realistic schedules

  14. Why? • At project level

  15. Set contingency • Efficient contingency • Confidence levels, achievable targets • Management reserve • Contingency at project level, not task level

  16. Optimise mitigation • Transfer, Eliminate, Reduce, Accept, … • Reduce probability • Reduce impact • Understand benefit • Is it worth mitigating?

  17. Post-mitigation assessments Where we are now Where we can be Cost of getting there

  18. Understand response benefit

  19. Understand response benefit

  20. Team • Forum for expressing opinions / concerns • Opportunity to agree / challenge assumptions • Awareness - overall view of project • Understanding - project team can discuss and collaborate on where project is • Openness / honesty • Schedule review, task definition clarifications • Cost and schedule together

  21. Compelling reasons • Understand risk • Understand bid viability • Plan according to reality • Bid at right price • Negotiate • Understand sensitivity • Plan risk response – cost/benefit analysis • Risk management – ownership, planning

  22. Why? • At project level • At portfolio level

  23. At portfolio level • Multiple projects • Project interdependency • Shared resources • Shared goals • Can share risk across projects

  24. Portfolio view of risk

  25. At portfolio level • Portfolio view of risk - balance • Compare risk across projects • Project selection / focus

  26. Set contingency • Portfolio contingency • Confidence levels, achievable targets • Management reserve • Contingency at portfolio level, not project level • Draw-down for specific risks • Balance across portfolio

  27. Why? • At project level • At portfolio level • At business level

  28. At business level • Increase profitability • Bid / no bid • Understand cost commitments

  29. At business level • Bid / no bid • Increase profitability • Understand cost commitments

  30. At business level • Risk to revenue • Understand revenue pipeline • Investment decisions

  31. At business level • Risk to revenue • Understand revenue pipeline • Investment decisions

  32. At business level • Understand sensitivity

  33. At business level • Understand sensitivity • Better business decisions • Bid, negotiate and win at the right price

  34. Why not? • “What do you want the estimate to be?” • “Are you saying my plan is wrong?” • “You want 3 estimates?” • “Just get out there and do it” • “Analysis paralysis” • “GIGO” • “Unknown unknowns”

  35. Summary • Plan with uncertainty • … to plan with certainty! • Plan better • Make the best of the project team • Business benefits: • Project and portfolio bid viability • Realistic assignment and forecasting of project funds • Modelling & reporting “real-world” events • Intelligent risk mitigation scenarios • Portfolio analysis & intelligence

  36. Thank you • Questions? • White papers and more information at: www.pertmaster.com

More Related