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Positive Risk Response

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About this lesson

Positive Risk Response is determining what actions the project will take to address risk opportunities.

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Quick reference

Positive Risk Response

Positive Risk Response is determining what actions the project will take to address risk opportunities.

When to use

Once the risk analysis is complete (both qualitative and quantitative) risk response is prepared for appropriate risks.  Early in the project, there are often risk opportunities available to the project team.  As the project progresses, many times the negative cost and schedule impact of making the change is greater than the positive benefit.  Therefore positive risk opportunities must be sought early in the project. 

Whenever a risk changes priority, the risk response should be reassessed.

If a risk response has been implemented in the project plan, but it is later determined to be insufficient to accommodate the risk, additional risk response should be created.

Instructions

Definition

Opportunity: “A risk that would have a positive effect on or more project objectives.” PMBOK® Guide

There are five approaches to Positive Risk Response.  The characteristics of the organization and unique features of the project will determine which approach to use.

Exploit

Change the project plan so that the risk will happen.  In this case the focus is on the likelihood aspect of the opportunity.  By changing the project plan the opportunity is no longer uncertain but becomes certain.  Some opportunities will always remain uncertain, but many can be built into the project. 

Enhance

This approach to an opportunity is to increase the likelihood, the impact, or both.  This is often done by changing the resources or timing of an activity.

Share

This is often structured as a joint venture or some other type of risk sharing partnership.   The organization that you are “sharing” with will enhance or enable the opportunity.  Although they will also expect a portion of the benefit.

Escalate

In this response, the project team refers the risk to the project stakeholders in order to get adjustment to project boundaries or to get their assistance with taking advantage of the risk factor.  This approach should not be used until the first three have been considered and either implemented or rejected.

Accept

If you do not select one of the other approaches, you are selecting accept.  This approach is appropriate for very small or unlikely risks.

This definition is taken from the Glossary of the Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, (PMBOK® Guide) – Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017.

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  • 00:05 Hi, I'm Ray Sheen.
  • 00:06 Let's talk about how to respond to a risk opportunity, what we call a Positive Risk.
  • 00:13 The Project Management Body of Knowledge, the PMBOK Guide defines a risk opportunity
  • 00:17 as a risk that would have a positive effect on one or more project objectives.
  • 00:22 There are five strategies that we can use to address risk opportunities, escalate,
  • 00:27 exploit, enhance, share, or accept.
  • 00:30 Which approach you take will depend upon many factors associated with the project
  • 00:33 and your business.
  • 00:35 Things like the project type, the project phase, resources, the project size and
  • 00:40 complexity, and management commitment.
  • 00:42 Let's have a look at each of the five strategies that you can use to respond
  • 00:46 to an opportunity risk.
  • 00:48 The first response strategy is escalate.
  • 00:50 That doesn't mean that that should be your first response.
  • 00:54 Actually this is the last response if you aren't able to
  • 00:56 take advantage using one of the other strategies.
  • 00:59 This strategy leads to a change in the project goals or boundaries.
  • 01:03 The magnitude of this opportunity is one that is beyond the authority of
  • 01:06 the project team to address.
  • 01:08 So they bring it to the stakeholders with the request to change the goal or
  • 01:12 boundary.
  • 01:13 One thing the stakeholder may choose to do is to add or subtract scope.
  • 01:17 Another thing is to change the project schedule boundary,
  • 01:20 like moving the project to a different fiscal year.
  • 01:23 Or the stakeholders may change the project budget.
  • 01:25 Adding, or moving money between capital funds and expense funds.
  • 01:30 Keep in mind the stakeholders may also choose to add some different
  • 01:33 people to the team.
  • 01:34 The remaining four strategies are all strategies that the team can apply without
  • 01:38 asking permission from the other stakeholders.
  • 01:41 Because the rest of the techniques do not change the project boundaries.
  • 01:46 Next is exploit.
  • 01:47 Exploit refocuses the project onto the risk opportunity.
  • 01:51 Elements of the project are changed so
  • 01:53 as to ensure that the project is able to take advantage of the opportunity.
  • 01:57 It's no longer an uncertain opportunity.
  • 01:59 It's now built into the project plan.
  • 02:02 You'll need to change something in the project for this to occur.
  • 02:05 Typically, it is a task or activities,
  • 02:07 not the deliverables that change to take advantage of the opportunity.
  • 02:11 It may also be changes in some of the requirements that you are writing.
  • 02:14 Part of them being under changed control, of course.
  • 02:17 You may change the schedule moving task with different time period in order to
  • 02:21 take advantage of the opportunity, or
  • 02:23 you may change the resources assigned to the tasks as you find that resources
  • 02:27 are available at different times than what was originally assumed.
  • 02:31 The next strategy is to enhance the probability of the opportunity or
  • 02:35 to enhance the impact that that opportunity would have on the project.
  • 02:39 Unlike the exploit strategy there is still uncertainty.
  • 02:42 But the changes that you make to the project plan in this case
  • 02:45 are to better align the project with the nature of the opportunity so
  • 02:49 that the project is positioned to take advantage if the opportunity occurs.
  • 02:53 It might be to change the plan so as to stimulate the characteristics of this
  • 02:57 opportunity which would increase its probability.
  • 03:00 A great way to enhance a project for
  • 03:02 its opportunity is to set up early warning signals that the opportunity is likely.
  • 03:06 One of the problems with opportunity risks is that if they are recognized too late in
  • 03:11 the project, the cost of the change can overwhelm the benefit of the opportunity.
  • 03:15 But if that same risk were recognized earlier in the project,
  • 03:19 a minor change could have been implemented that leveraged the opportunity.
  • 03:23 Sharing is the next opportunity risk response strategy.
  • 03:26 In this case another organization is brought in to assist on the project.
  • 03:30 There assistance benefits one or more of the project objectives.
  • 03:33 An outside partner may have resources or
  • 03:35 capabilities to change a possible benefit into a guaranteed benefit.
  • 03:40 Their participation on the project opens doors that were previously closed.
  • 03:45 This partner's not free, they don't need to share the benefits for the project.
  • 03:49 But often, the increased benefits can be divided between the two of you and
  • 03:53 you are still better off than doing it alone.
  • 03:56 This type of partnership will sometimes take the form of a joint venture on
  • 03:59 the project.
  • 04:00 Although this adds to project benefits, it can change how you have to plan and
  • 04:04 manage the project.
  • 04:05 And in fact, you may need to escalate to get approval to do this.
  • 04:09 Another approach is a risk sharing partnership.
  • 04:11 If you're considering going down these paths, bringing your corporate
  • 04:14 lawyers to be certain that all the parties understand the obligations and benefits.
  • 04:19 The final approach to positive risk response is just like the final approach
  • 04:22 to negative risk response, it's the acceptance strategy.
  • 04:26 If you've not done one of the other four strategies, you are using acceptance.
  • 04:30 Again, the project remains unchanged with this strategy.
  • 04:34 This strategy is often selected because the opportunity is so small but
  • 04:38 the impact would be negligible.
  • 04:40 Or the nature of the opportunity is so
  • 04:42 uncertain, that you can't begin to anticipate it.
  • 04:45 And as I mentioned with the acceptance strategy for
  • 04:48 negative risk response, you should consider using a trigger for this that may
  • 04:52 possibly have a significant impact if their likelihood is improved or assured.
  • 04:59 Whichever approach you choose, positive risks are very real on most projects.
  • 05:04 Seek them out early in your project planning and early project phases.
  • 05:07 Taking advantage of positive risk improves the project's impact on both goals and
  • 05:12 objectives.

Lesson notes are only available for subscribers.

Negative Risk Response
05m:59s
Contingencies and Triggers
04m:37s

PMI, PMP, CAPM and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc.

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