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Project risk management strategies | #45 Getting started with project management

Risk management is a key element of any project’s success. With knowledge and understanding of risk management strategies, you can avoid unforeseen problems and increase the chance of overall project completion.

Project risk management strategies – table of contents:

  1. Introduction
  2. Risk management strategies
  3. Proactive approach
  4. Reactive approach
  5. Disaster. What is it and how to deal with it?
  6. Summary

Introduction

Risk management is an integral part of any project and one of the key tasks of a Project Manager. According to the Project Management Institute, good risk management helps to increase the accuracy of forecasts and improve the quality of decisions made during a project. To achieve success in their projects, Project Managers should understand and implement effective risk management strategies.

Risk management strategies

Project managers embarking on a new project should prepare to take risks and realize they’re inherent in any project. Let’s look at two approaches to dealing with risk, proactive and reactive.

Proactive approach

A proactive approach means that the Project Manager proactively identifies and analyzes potential risks to take appropriate countermeasures. It involves early identification and understanding of pitfalls to control or avoid them. To respond effectively, the Project Manager should also regularly assess the situation and update the action plan if necessary.

Reactive approach

A reactive approach means that the Project Manager reacts to risks once they arise. This is the simplest stance, acting on the principle that “maybe it will work this time.” Unfortunately, it is not the best. By relying on intuition and luck, the Project Manager loses the ability to control risks. This can lead to serious repercussions, such as wasting time or other resources that could have been allocated otherwise to prevent the situation from happening in the first place.

Disaster. What is it and how to deal with it?

Even a proactive approach fails when a project encounters a disaster. A catastrophe is a sudden and unexpected, almost impossible-to-predict occurrence of risk that can seriously affect a project, even cause its termination.

To minimize the risk of disaster, Project Managers should pay special attention to meticulous preparation of:

  • Risk analyses – conduct thorough and detailed risk analyses before the project begins to identify possible hazards.
  • Risk factor register – together with the team, think about and put down possible threats and their consequences,
  • Create a contingency plan – provide a blueprint with countermeasures for a quick response to tackle the emerging obstacles.
  • Regularly monitor the project to detect and manage risks as early as possible.

When a disaster strikes a project, you and the team have to react immediately. That’s why you must identify those team members who are responsible for responding to specific types of hazards and have contingency plans ready.

Once the immediate danger gets averted, it is up to the Project Manager to implement appropriate countermeasures, such as changing the action plan or allocating additional resources to minimize the impact the disaster may have on the project.

Summary

All in all, a proactive approach to risk and acknowledgment of its occurrence in the early stages of planning can significantly increase the chances of project success. Nonetheless, Project Managers should harness their prioritization skills and focus on the most significant risks that directly affect the achievement of project goals and objectives. Additionally, they ought to balance out the project goal realization and the associated levels of risks, as well as the value and accompanying hazards. Finally, in the long run, what also matters is the risk management culture that comes out as the result of the risk management strategy adopted by Project Managers and the team.

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Author: Caroline Becker

As a Project Manager, Caroline is an expert in finding new methods to design the best workflows and optimize processes. Her organizational skills and ability to work under time pressure make her the best person to turn complicated projects into reality.

Caroline Becker

As a Project Manager, Caroline is an expert in finding new methods to design the best workflows and optimize processes. Her organizational skills and ability to work under time pressure make her the best person to turn complicated projects into reality.

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