Title: Risk Management
1Risk Management
2Risks and Risk Management
- Risks are potential events that have negative
impacts on safety or project technical
performance, cost or schedule - Risks are an inevitable fact of life risks can
be reduced but never eliminated - Risk Management comprises purposeful thought to
the sources, magnitude, and mitigation of risk,
and actions directed toward its balanced
reduction - Beneficial Risk - The same tools and perspectives
that are used to discover, manage and reduce
risks can be used to discover, manage and
increase project opportunities (increased
performance).
3 4IF
- Predict IF Identify
- Evaluate IF Analyze
- Plan for IF Plan
- Tracking IF Track
- Budget for IF Control
5Risk Management
- Laws
- Terms
- Types of Risk
- Risk Management
6 Laws
- Murphys Law
- If something can go wrong it will go wrong
- Finagles Law of Dynamic Negatives (corollary to
Murphys Law - Things will go wrong at the worst possible time
7What is Risk Management?
Risk management is a continuous and iterative
decision making technique designed to improve the
probability of success. It is a proactive
approach that
- Seeks or identifies risks
- Assesses the likelihood and impact of these risks
- Develops mitigation options for all identified
risks - Identifies the most significant risks and chooses
which mitigation options to implement - Tracks progress to confirm that cumulative
project risk is indeed declining - Communicates and documents the project risk
status - Repeats this process throughout the project life
8Risk Matrix
Impact
Probability of Occurrence
9Risk Warning Signs
- TPMs
- Schedule Projections
- Cost Projections
- Supplier problems
- Late technology demonstrations
10Types of Risk
- Technical Risks
- Programmatic Risks
- Cost
- Schedule
- Supportability Risks
- Beneficial Risks
11Risk Analysis
- What Could Go Wrong
- What is the Probability
- What is the Magnitude of Impact
- Cost
- Schedule
- Performance
- Alternate Strategies (Off Ramps)
12Beneficial Risk
- High Risk High Payoff
- Mitigation Strategy
- Alternate Plans
- Criteria
- Schedule
- Budget
13Risk Handling
- Have a Plan
- Total Program
- Budget (Cost / Schedule) for Plan
- Get Buy-In
- Monitor Status
- Metrics
- Close out
-
14Risk In General
- Risk is Healthy
- Not Identifying Risk shows
- You dont understand the program
- AND/OR
- You are dishonest
- AND/OR
- You think the customer is stupid
- Identify all potential Risk
- Knock them down with Mitigation Plans
-
15Summary
- Its risky not to embrace risk.
16SE Technical Program Mgmt
- Key focus of systems engineering
- includes the direction of a totally integrated
effort of system design, test and evaluation,
production, and logistics support over the system
life cycle - The goal is timely deployment of an effective
system, sustaining it, and satisfying the users
need at an affordable cost. - Involves balancing a systems cost, schedule, and
performance while controlling risk.
17Technical Performance Measures
- TPMs are measures of the system technical
performance that have been chosen because they
are indicators of system success. They are based
on the driving requirements or technical
parameters of high risk or significance - e.g.,
mass, power or data rate. - TPMs are analogous to the programmatic measures
of expected total cost or estimated
time-to-completion (schedule).
18Technical Performance Measures
- Actual versus planned progress of TPMs are
tracked so the systems engineer or project
manager can assess progress and the risk
associated with each TPM. - The final, delivered system value can be
estimated by extending the TPM trend line and
using the recommended contingency values for each
project phase. - The project life trend-to-date, current value,
and forecast of all TPMs are reviewed
periodically (typically monthly) and at all major
milestone reviews.
19TPMs Are Tools
- Technique of predicting the future value of a key
technical performance parameter - Continuous verification confirms progress and
identifies variances - Assessed values falling outside established
tolerances indicate the need for management
attention
20Why TPMs
- A well thought out TPM program provides
- Early warning of technical problems
- Supports assessments of the extent to which
operational requirements will be met - Assesses the impacts of proposed changes made to
lower-level elements in the system hierarchy on
system performance.
21Balancing Cost, Sked, Performance
22Selecting TPMs
- Parameters to be tracked are typically based on
the combined needs of the customer and the
contractor - Contractor may track more items than are reported
to the customer, as the contractor needs
information at a more detailed level than does
the customer program office. - Customer requires visibility into the technical
performance of key elements of the work breakdown
structure - Especially those which are needed to meet system
key performance parameters (KPPs), are cost
drives, lie on critical path or high risk items
23Example TPM
Shipboard Fire Control System
Power Density Detection Range Slew Time Tx Ant
Side lobes CW Ant Side lobes Tx Track Acc AM
Noise FM Noise Pointing Acc Weight Radiated
Power MTBF MTTR Range Res Angle Res
CW Transmitter
Data Processor
Antenna
Slew Time MTTR Side Lobes Beam Width
AM/FM Noise Radiated Pwr MTBF
MTBF Memory Proc Speed MTTR
24TPM Selection
- The level of the system at which parameters are
selected is based on how readily the information
supports timely design decisions. - For example, the timely identification and
neutralization of targets and threats are
essential to both the operational effectiveness
and survivability of a ship. - If there is a risk associated with meeting the
detection range requirement allocated to the
ships fire control system, then the technical
manager will want to have data that supports
design decisions related to achieving both the
system and subsystem performance during the
design process, such as predicted (and actual)
radiated power and data processor speed.
25TPM Selection
- These are metrics that can be measured under
laboratory conditions before costly and
time-consuming fabrication, integration, and
conformance testing of higher assemblies and
continued monitoring assures that required values
are met under actual environmental conditions and
system loading. - Thoughtful selection of the parameters to measure
can minimize unpleasant surprises in formal
developmental and operational testing.
26Conceptual TPM Graphic
27Team Project
- Make sure you have at least 4-5 TPMs for your
project. They must be presented in graphical
form like previous slide