Risk Management

Höfundur Glen B. Alleman; Jon M. Quigley

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781032543215

Útgáfa 1

Útgáfuár 2024

8.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half-Title Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1 Introduction to Risk Management
  • 1.1 Why This Book?
  • 1.2 Risk and the Enterprise
  • 1.2.1 Risk and Obstacles
  • 1.2.2 Business Equations
  • 1.2.3 Return on Investment (ROI)
  • 1.2.4 Net Present Value
  • 1.2.5 Future Value of an Investment
  • 1.2.6 Payback Period
  • 1.3 Some Examples
  • 1.3.1 Product and Technology
  • 1.3.2 Available Talent
  • 1.3.3 Quality
  • 1.4 Risk Management Is How Adults Manage Projects – Tim Lister
  • 1.5 What Is a Risk?
  • 1.6 Origins of Risk
  • 1.7 Risk and Hazard
  • 1.8 Aleatory
  • 1.9 Epistemic
  • 1.9.1 Explicit Knowledge
  • 1.9.2 Tacit Knowledge
  • 1.9.3 Implicit Knowledge
  • 1.9.4 Institutional Knowledge
  • 1.9.5 Bloom’s Taxonomy
  • 1.10 Ontological
  • 1.10.1 Central Tendency, Dispersion, and Statistics
  • 1.10.2 What Is the Source of Variation?
  • 1.10.3 How Is Variation Connected to Risks?
  • 1.11 The Six Immutable Laws of Risk Management
  • 1.11.1 Uncertainty
  • 1.11.2 Level of Risk Aversion
  • 1.11.3 Decisions under Duress
  • 1.11.4 Risk and Metrics
  • 1.11.5 Risk Response
  • 1.11.6 Risks in an Organization May Be Thematic
  • 1.12 The 4P’s of Risk Management – People, Process, Principles, and Practices
  • 1.12.1 People
  • 1.12.2 Principles
  • 1.12.3 Process
  • 1.12.4 Practices
  • 1.13 Root Cause Analysis
  • References
  • Chapter 2 Risk Identification
  • 2.1 Thinking (Reasoning) Approaches
  • 2.2 Deduction
  • 2.3 Inductive
  • 2.4 Abductive
  • 2.5 Analogical
  • 2.6 Cause and Effect
  • 2.7 Critical Thinking
  • 2.8 Knowledge
  • 2.9 Explicit
  • 2.10 Team
  • 2.11 Organizational Culture
  • 2.12 Historical Record
  • 2.12.1 Control Charts
  • 2.12.2 Histograms
  • 2.12.3 Checklists
  • 2.13 Experience
  • 2.13.1 Brainstorming
  • 2.13.2 Mind Mapping
  • 2.13.3 Ishikawa Diagram
  • 2.13.4 Thought Experiments and Pre-mortems
  • 2.13.5 Interviews and Expert
  • 2.13.6 Expert Judgment – Unstructured
  • 2.13.7 Delphi Technique and Planning Poker
  • 2.13.8 Nominal Group Technique
  • 2.14 Root Cause Analysis
  • 2.15 Bow-Tie Analysis
  • 2.15.1 The Steps Involved In Bow-Tie Analysis
  • 2.15.2 Pros of Bow-Tie Analysis
  • 2.15.3 Cons of Bow-Tie Analysis
  • 2.16 Project Management Tools
  • 2.16.1 Risk Register
  • 2.16.2 Tracking Gantt Chart
  • 2.16.3 Simulation
  • 2.17 SWOT Analysis
  • References
  • Chapter 3 Risk Analysis
  • 3.1 The Story of Risk Analysis Can Be Told Using the SOARA Framework3
  • 3.1.1 What Is Risk Analysis?
  • 3.1.2 How Does Risk Analysis Provide Information to the Decision-Makers?
  • 3.1.3 Information Provided to Decision-Makers Needed to Increase the Probability of Project Success
  • 3.2 The Risk Analysis Process
  • 3.2.1 Uncertainty Is the Source of All Risks
  • 3.2.2 Why Is Risk Analysis Needed?
  • 3.2.3 Benefits of Risk Analysis with This Approach
  • 3.3 Analyzing Probabilistic and Statistical Uncertainty That Create Risk
  • 3.3.1 Eliciting Probabilistic and Statistical Properties of Project Risks
  • 3.4 Challenges for Risk Analysis
  • 3.5 Eliciting Probabilistic and Statistical Uncertainties
  • 3.5.1 Eliciting Uncertainties to Inform Risk Decisions
  • 3.5.2 Elicitation of Aleatory and Epistemic Uncertainty Needed to Model Risks
  • 3.6 Analyzing Sources of Risk Created by Uncertainty
  • 3.6.1 Categories of Project Risk
  • 3.6.2 Root Cause Analysis of Sources of Uncertainty That Create Risk
  • 3.6.3 Monte Carlo Analysis of Cost, Schedule, and Technical Risk
  • 3.7 Analyzing Impact of the Risk on Project Success
  • 3.7.1 Qualitative versus Quantitative Risk Analysis
  • 3.7.2 Qualitative Risk Analysis
  • 3.7.3 Quantitative Risk Analysis
  • 3.7.4 Cost Risk Analysis and Contingency Assessment
  • 3.7.5 Schedule Risk Analysis to Assess Needed Margin
  • 3.7.6 Analysis of Technology Readiness Levels
  • 3.8 Integrating Technical Performance, Cost, Schedule Risk Analysis
  • 3.8.1 Risk Analysis of Project Performance Measures
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 4 Risk-Handling Plan
  • 4.1 Reviewing the Risk-Handling Process ‒ An Overview
  • 4.1.1 Risk Identification
  • 4.1.2 Risk Analysis and Impact Modeling
  • 4.1.3 Risk-Handling Planning
  • 4.1.4 Risk Tracking and Control
  • 4.1.5 Avoiding Decision Traps While Managing Risk
  • 4.2 Planning for Handling Risk
  • 4.2.1 What Is a Risk-Handling Plan?
  • 4.2.2 Determining the Approach to Handling Risk
  • 4.2.3 Defining the Scope and Actions of Risk-Handling
  • 4.3 Implementing the Risk-Handling Plan (RHP)
  • 4.3.1 Execution of the Risk-Handling Plan
  • 4.4 Example Risk-Handling Plan
  • 4.4.1 Risk-Handling Plan Introduction
  • 4.4.2 Managing Project’s in the Presence of Uncertainty
  • 4.5 Risk Register
  • 4.5.1 Risk Capture and Reporting
  • 4.5.2 Schedule Margin Process
  • 4.5.3 Cost and Schedule Best Practices
  • 4.5.4 Schedule Ten Best Practices
  • 4.5.5 Characteristics of Credible Cost Estimates
  • 4.5.6 Steps for Developing a High-Quality Risk-Adjusted Cost Estimate
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 5 Risk Tracking
  • 5.1 Risk Tracking
  • 5.1.1 Triggers
  • 5.1.2 Contingency
  • 5.2 WBS, Schedule, and Cost
  • 5.2.1 WBS
  • 5.2.2 Baselines
  • 5.2.3 Earned Value Management
  • 5.2.4 Difficulties
  • 5.3 Metric Gathering
  • 5.3.1 Consequences of Poor or Lack of Measurements
  • 5.3.2 Identify What Matters
  • 5.4 Developing a Risk Tracking Plan – 413.3b-7
  • 5.4.1 Recurring Risk Tracking Meeting
  • 5.4.2 Setting Up a Risk Register
  • 5.4.3 Establishing Risk-Tracking Metrics
  • 5.4.4 Designing Risk-Tracking Reports
  • 5.4.5 Ensuring Risk-Tracking Stakeholders Are Engaged
  • 5.5 Implementing a Risk Tracking System
  • 5.5.1 Choosing the Right Risk-Tracking Tool
  • 5.5.2 Integrating Risk Tracking with Project Management Software
  • 5.5.3 Setting Up a Risk-Tracking Dashboard
  • 5.5.4 Implementing Risk-Tracking Workflows
  • 5.5.5 Documenting Risk-Tracking Procedures
  • 5.6 Monitoring and Adjusting Risk Tracking
  • 5.6.1 Regularly Reviewing Risk-Tracking Data
  • 5.6.2 Updating Risk-Tracking Metrics
  • 5.6.3 Refining Risk-Tracking Processes
  • 5.6.4 Communicating Risk-Tracking Information
  • 5.6.5 Adjusting Risk Mitigation Strategies
  • 5.7 Best Practices for Project Risk Tracking
  • 5.7.1 Building a Risk-Aware Culture
  • 5.7.2 Ensuring Risk Tracking Data Is Accurate
  • 5.7.3 Encouraging Stakeholder Participation
  • 5.7.4 Staying Current with Industry Trends and Developments
  • References
  • Chapter 6 Communication and Risk
  • 6.1 Role of Communication in Risk Management
  • 6.2 Organization and Structure
  • 6.2.1 Projectized
  • 6.2.2 Functional
  • 6.2.3 Matrix
  • 6.2.4 Self-Directed Work Teams (Scrum/Agile)
  • 6.3 Management Philosophy, Culture, and Risk
  • 6.3.1 Command and Control, Communication, and Risk
  • 6.3.2 Egalitarian
  • 6.3.3 Culture
  • 6.4 Communication, Learning, and Risk
  • 6.5 Organization and Learning
  • 6.6 Failure Is Not Necessarily Terminal
  • 6.7 Experience
  • 6.8 Distribution of Learning
  • 6.8.1 Communities of Practice
  • 6.8.2 Centers of Excellence
  • 6.8.3 Training Internal and External
  • 6.8.4 Metatag Searchable Database
  • 6.8.5 Big Data and Risk Management
  • 6.9 What Are Heuristics
  • 6.10 Cognitive Bias
  • 6.10.1 Sunk Cost Bias
  • 6.10.2 Curse of Knowledge
  • 6.10.3 Optimism and Pessimism Bias
  • 6.10.4 Confirmation Bias
  • 6.10.5 Anchoring Bias
  • 6.10.6 Clustering Illusion
  • 6.10.7 Group Think
  • 6.10.8 Halo and Horns Effect
  • 6.10.9 Dunning–Kruger Effect
  • 6.10.10 Survivor Bias
  • 6.11 Not So Fast
  • References
  • Chapter 7 Advanced Topics in Risk Management
  • 7.1 Root Cause Analysis ‒ The Foundation of All Successful Risk Managements
  • 7.1.1 Origins of Root Cause Analysis
  • 7.1.2 Quantification of Uncertainties That Create Risk
  • 7.1.3 Monte Carlo Risk Analysis
  • 7.1.4 Reference Class Forecasting
  • 7.1.5 Dependencies, Structures, and Correlations of Risk
  • 7.1.6 Effectiveness of Risk Assessment
  • 7.1.7 Estimating Methods
  • 7.2 Risk Management Tools
  • 7.2.1 The Risk Register Is the Starting Point for All Risk Managements
  • 7.2.2 Sample of Risk Management Tools
  • Notes
  • References
  • Chapter 8 The Practices of Risk Management
  • 8.1 Department of Energy Risk Management
  • 8.2 Aerospace and Defense Risk Management
  • 8.2.1 References of A&D Risk Management
  • 8.3 Information Technology Risk Management
  • 8.3.1 Standards and Regulations for IT Risk Management
  • 8.3.2 Risk Management Process in IT Sector
  • 8.4 Process Industries1
  • 8.4.1 Process Safety Management
  • 8.4.2 How PSM Is Used to Contend with Risk
  • 8.4.3 Other Risk Disciplines within Process Safety
  • 8.4.4 Process Safety Risk Management Characteristics
  • 8.4.5 Risk Attitude
  • 8.4.6 Future of Risk Management
  • 8.4.7 References for Process Industry Risk Management
  • 8.5 Cyber Security (Critical Infrastructure)
  • 8.5.1 Cybersecurity Risk Management Characteristics
  • 8.5.2 References for Cyber Security (Critical Infrastructure)
  • 8.6 Automotive
  • 8.6.1 SAE International
  • 8.6.2 Automotive Industry Action Group
  • 8.6.3 Rules Related to Risk-Based Thinking[1]
  • 8.6.4 Advanced Product Quality Planning
  • 8.6.5 Generalized Approach
  • 8.6.6 APQP Phases
  • 8.6.7 Production Part Approval Process (PPAP)
  • 8.6.8 Design for Six Sigma
  • 8.6.9 Functional Safety
  • 8.6.10 SIL
  • 8.6.11 ISO 26262
  • 8.6.12 Vehicle Platform Management
  • 8.7 Construction2
  • 8.7.1 Steven G. Lauck Writes This Section
  • 8.7.2 Contractor/Subcontractors
  • 8.7.3 Contract/Procurement
  • 8.7.4 Contractor Performance
  • 8.7.5 Documents
  • 8.7.6 Environmental
  • 8.7.7 Existing Environment
  • 8.7.8 Construction Impact on the Environment
  • 8.7.9 Financial
  • 8.7.10 Force Majeure
  • 8.7.11 Acts of Terror
  • 8.7.12 Weather
  • 8.7.13 Government
  • Notes
  • References
  • Glossary of Terms
  • Index
Show More

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Rafbók til eignar

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Risk Management”

Netfang þitt verður ekki birt. Nauðsynlegir reitir eru merktir *

Aðrar vörur

0
    0
    Karfan þín
    Karfan þín er tómAftur í búð