Your Guide to Project Management Best Practices

Project Risk Planning Process: The Key Steps

risk planning process stepsAny project always generates a kind of challenge that makes the project manager find efficient ways to respond to various threats and uncertainties that may jeopardize the successful completion. Implementation of the risk planning process lets the manager to solve the challenge by planning for potential risks and developing solutions that reduce the likelihood of risk occurrence and mitigate the negative impact of the risks.

When you start implementing your project endeavour you need to plan and manage for potential risks; otherwise, you’re likely to fail with achieving the objectives and goals of the project. Designing and implementing a risk management plan template will help you handle the challenge.

Risk planning is one of the most important components of the Project Implementation Guide as it helps you to understand how to plan for potential risks affecting the implementation of your endeavour and minimize the likelihood or consequence of unpleasant and negative results that may jeopardize the achievement of project goals and objectives.

Planning for Project Risks

What should you know when starting planning for potential risks? First of all, the common reasons for risk occurrence. Such information will help you determine which direction to choose. Here are several reasons why risks may occur within a typical project:

The Key Steps

Before you can develop a risk management plan template you need to identify and evaluate potential risks and examine applicable options for risk elimination or at last mitigation. The following are the three high-level steps to planning for project risks. These steps are usually taken prior to the design and implementation of the risk management plan (the steps are explained and described in detail in the PM Guidelines).

Step #1: Identify Potential Loss Exposures.

Because every activity within your project may cause losses you need to control and monitor potential exposures to loss. But you can’t make effective decisions without having the risks identified.

The first step requires you to identify potential risks that may harm your project. In order to take the step, you’ll need to make a list of project goals and objectives and then associate every goal and objective with potential threats and uncertainties that may cause a loss. For example, your project’s primary goal is to develop a software product. Potential risks surrounding this goal are poor usability, product malfunction, improper functionality, user dissatisfaction, etc.

Step #2: Evaluate the Risks.

When you list all of your goals and associated risks your next step is to evaluate those risks. As a process the evaluation includes two components:

Exit mobile version