Chapter 7-Building RMS &lesson Learned
Chapter 7-Building RMS &lesson Learned
The team identifies where such lessons can be applied in the risk management
process, and identifies possible institutional or organizational problems associated
with the lessons learned.
A project audit will then be conducted based on potential audit issues identified
during lesson learned that top management would like to earmark for policy,
system, or organizational change
Transition from Lessons Learned to Audit
.
Project audit, unlike the lessons-learned session, focus on an independent gathering
of information and documents from the project, and reviewing them against the goals
and objectives of the project and best practice criteria.
The project performance audit involves the question, ‘did the project produce what it
intended to produce, and how effectively and efficiently?’
Questions focus on key aspects of the project that include business planning, follow up
response, Organization-wide culture and more (Page 184)
The question of efficiency is reviewed through earned value and cost variance
calculations. The issues would be:
Did the project stay consistent with the schedule and budget?
Did the project manager make adequate adjustments based on variations from
risk events'?
Did the project make its quality, schedule, and budget goals?
ORGANIZATIONAL MATURITY IN RISK MANAGEMENT
Risk management maturity (RMM) measures how effectively an organization can identify and
tackle the risks it faces. System-building activity for risk is likely to correlate strongly with
organization’s level of risk management maturity.
Organizations must be able to benchmark their present maturity and capability in managing
risk using a risk maturity model framework. The models are based on a series of attributes
that describe the organization’s risk management capabilities.
Hilson (1997), identifies four levels of maturity: naive, novice, normalized, and natural. It
attempts defining a limited number of 'maturity levels', ranging from organizations with no
formal risk management process to those with highly developed and fully integrated
processes.
According to Hilson each RMM level is characterized in terms of four attributes namely
culture, process, experience and application.
Risk Management Maturity Model (Hilson, 1997, 2002) – Four levels of risk
management maturity.
Level 1 –: Naive The organization is unaware of the need for risk management and has no
structured approach to dealing with uncertainty, resulting in a series of crises for each
project or operation.
Level 3 – Normalized : The organization has implemented risk management into their
routine business processes and implements risk management in most, if not all, projects.
Level 4 – Natural: The organization has a fully project -based culture, with a proactive approach
to the management of risk in all aspects of the organization, It has established a risk-aware (not
risk-averse) culture.
Attribute Level 1 Level2 Level 3 Level 4
NAIVE NOVICE NORMALISED NATURAL
.
Culture No risk awareness Risk management Accepted policy for Top-down
used only on selected risk management. commitment to risk
projects management, with
leadership by
example
Experience No understanding of Limited to individuals In-house core of All staff risk aware
risk principles or who may have had expertise. and capable of using
language. little or no formal basic risk skills.
training.
Application No structured Inconsistent Routine and Risk ideas applied to
application application of consistent application all activities
resources. to all projects
.
Decay is unlikely to occur in an organization at level 1 risk management maturity, but a level 2
organization is likely to experience decay in its risk management activity for several reasons:
Several projects have been completed without any clearly obvious benefit.
The champion senior management for the RMS loses enthusiasm or leaves the organization.
Staff responsible for the RMS are swamped by other duties.
The advice of outside consultants proves impractical.
The post-project debriefings appear to yield little information of value.
The risk knowledge database, proves too cumbersome or costly to operate and maintain
In a level 3 and level 4 organizations, decay in risk management maturity will be due to lack of
continuing commitment from senior management, or loss of key staff. However, in level 4
organizations it is only temporary due to the organization's risk management maturity and
engagement with performance benchmarking.
ORGANIZATIONAL RMS POLICY AND
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
An important part of initiating a RMS in a project stakeholder organization is the formulation of an
organizational policy towards risk management and a strategy for implementing.
Organizational scan ( page 156) can provide a richer picture of the state of risk management
practice and can guides the directions in which it can be formalized and improved.
1. What (project) activities clearly require formal risk management?
2. How are decisions made about them?
3. What risk attitudes are evident?
4. What formal risk management is already in place?
5. How effective is it?
6. Is any informal risk management evident?
7. Where are the gaps in current risk management practice?
8. How could the gaps be filled?
9. Who should be involved in that?
The project stakeholder should be in a position to formulate (and document) a coherent
risk management policy based on the result of the organizational scan.
Clear objectives including procurement objectives ( budgeted cost, intended operational date
and quality), functional objectives (what the project is required to do) , and strategic objectives
( what the outcomes of the RMS is expected to achieve).
Scheduling tasks largely depends upon the three ways on how the system is intended to operate
a RMS
1. Single : centrally based system to deal with all the activities of the organization.
2. Dual: centrally based systems: one to deal with project activities; the other to deal
with internal organization maintenance activities.( Usually found in level 3 RMM organization).
3. Multiple: separate systems for each project; plus a single system for internal
organization maintenance. ( Most likely implemented with level 2 risk maturity organization)
Effective communication is critical to know and understood the risk management process. The
RMS building process should ensure that sufficient precision and reliability are incorporated
into all of the media-related aspects of the RMS.
An organization lacking any formal system of risk management need to use different
techniques for trialing risk management techniques. The process of trialing risk management
techniques should be carefully planned and properly resourced when building a RMS.