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Unit 13: Risk Methods

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Title: Unit 13: Risk Methods


1
Unit 13 Risk Methods
  • CSEM04 Risk and Opportunities of Systems Change
    in Organisations
  • Dr Lynne Humphries
  • Prof. Helen M Edwards

2
Unit 13 Risk Methods
  • CSEM04 Risk and Opportunities of Systems Change
    in Organisations
  • Dr Lynne Humphries
  • Prof. Helen M Edwards

3
Overview
  • The Concepts of Risk Management Methods
  • Risk generic lifecycle
  • Risk Methods
  • Risk Techniques
  • Example methods
  • Riskit
  • SERUM
  • RAMESES

4
The Concepts of Risk Management Methods
  • Aimed at controlling risk during a specific
    project.
  • Project stakeholders should have input.
  • Often difficult to evaluate risks quantitatively
  • therefore need to cater for qualitative risk
    assessment.
  • Participant communication is essential.

5
Risk generic lifecycle
  • Risk methods have typical lifecycle
  • Assumption that cycle is iterative.
  • Throughout a project there may be many iterations
    of the lifecycle.

6
Risk generic lifecycle
  • In practice
  • BEFORE project starts
  • First cycle completes all but last step
  • From
  • goal definition
  • to
  • allocating budget levels

Allocating budget levels
7
Risk generic lifecycle
  • Once project underway
  • Start continual risk monitoring
  • In practice this means moving round the risk
    cycle iteratively.
  • How this is managed depends on
  • the risk management or
  • project management method
  • used.

8
Method versus Technique
  • Risk Methods provide frameworks and procedures
    (or process models) to follow to help manage the
    control of risks in a project.
  • Risk Techniques are small scale approaches that
    enable you to do some small scale task.
  • We have looked at some specific risk
    identification and analysis techniques within the
    module.
  • We will now have a brief overview of some
    specific risk methods.

9
The Riskit Method
10
The Riskit Method and its Life Cycle
The focus in typical risk methods
11
Where does it fit?
  • Focuses on risk management during systems
    development.
  • Why is it needed?
  • To manage risks explicitly.
  • To keep project focused on its goal.

12
Techniques in Riskit
13
Summary of Techniques
14
Goal and stakeholder driven identification
  • A simple technique to rank the identified goals
    within each stakeholder.
  • N.B. Comparison cannot be made across rows (or
    goals)
  • Different stakeholders may be of different
    priority/importance in the project .

15
Risk Analysis Graph(example from the Riskit
Manual)
16
Risk scenario rankingUsing Pareto-efficient sets
17
Risk element review
18
Riskit controlling action taxonomy.
19
The SERUM Method
20
SERUM Method
21
SERUM
  • Premise Change is inevitable for all commercial
    software systems
  • For any application, there will be many potential
    changes.
  • Approach tackle those changes that provide the
    best cost-benefit ratio.
  • But there is risk associated with any change. In
    particular technical risk and development risk,

22
SERUM Change Priority
  • Priority of change is expressed as a function of
    five variables.
  • risk exposure in the current system,
  • risk exposure in the proposed system,
  • risk exposure in the implementation of a change
  • cost of a defined change
  • benefit of a defined change

23
Method Composition
  • Soft Systems Methodology - Checkland
  • used in step 1 through to step 5

24
Method Composition
  • Evolutionary Development - Gilb
  • used in steps 6-9 and afterwards (outcomes from
    steps)

25
SSM in SERUM Business analysis of the system
  • provides a set of recommendations for change
    (organisational and/or technological).
  • the recommendations define the gap between the
    current and the ideal model.
  • may identify major changes to an existing way of
    working.
  • Risk is associated with the disruption to the
    organisation.

26
Evolutionary development plan the implementation
of changes
  • Parts of a system are implemented and delivered
    in phases.
  • Each part is evaluated by the client
  • The feedback is used in implementing subsequent
    phases.

27
SERUM and systems change
  • Users/decision makers involved in
  • SSM aspects
  • not in Evolutionary development aspect.
  • But
  • to control project when using evolutionary
    approach ask for measurable goals from
    developers (whether internal or external).
  • Should use a two way mechanism.

28
The RAMESES Method
29
Where does it fit?
  • Focuses on risk of systems change.
  • Why is it needed?
  • Do IT systems always to live up to expectation?
  • Do IT systems always fit how the business
    operates?
  • Systems Specification is hard.
  • Two aspects of change Business process and IT
    systems.
  • Expected RAMESES to be used
  • Before a project gets underway
  • After a project has happened as part of
    post-implementation review.

30
RAMESESFramework
31
Components of RAMESES
  • Data collection (auditing)
  • System specification
  • Analysis (comparisons, gaps)
  • Risk assessment (gauges)

32
Risk Gauges
  • RG1 Change Consensus
  • purpose to assess agreement among the Senior
    Management team (SMT).
  • RG2 Change Context
  • purpose to assess the SMTs perception of the
    context of the proposed changes.
  • purpose to assess the SMTs perception of past
    company experience.

33
RG1 Change Consensus
  • Identified change
  • Implementation of new ERP system to replace
    packages currently used with an integrated
    solution
  • Justification of need for change
  • Our system is out of date and difficult to
    maintain
  • and
  • We know we are not operating at best efficiency
    and wish to investigate further.
  • Consensus among SMT
  • Strongly Agree 2, Agree 1, No view 1,
    Disagree 0

34
RG2 Change Context
  • Considers
  • Project Timescale
  • Project Scope
  • Nature of Project
  • Cost of Project
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