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Master of Business Administration- MBA
Semester 4
PM0016-Project Risk Management
(Book ID: B2012)
Assignment
(60 Marks)
Note: Answer all questions must be
written within 300 to 400 words each. Each Question carries 10 marks 6 X 10=60.
Q1. What is Project Risk? Explain different
sources of project risk with examples.
Answer. Risk is one of the major factors to be considered
during the management of a project. Risk can be defined as, “A probability or
threat of damage, injury, liability, loss or any other negative occurrence that
is caused by external or internal vulnerabilities and may be avoided through
pre-emptive action”. In other words, risk refers to an uncertain circumstance
that can affect at least one project objective.
A project manager should assess risk
throughout the lifecycle of a project and manage the project’s exposure to risk
(that is, the probability of specific risks occurring and their potential
impact if they occur).
Q2. What is Risk Opportunity and Management
System (ROMS)? What are its benefits?
Answer. ROMS,
why was it designed, how can it be used:
ROMS is a risk and opportunity
management system that can be applied throughout an organisation. This system
helps in establishing a practical, integrated, systematic, rigorous and
collective approach for managing the risks and opportunities over a business’s
or project’s lifecycle. It can also be used for formulating standard operating
procedures and understanding the business risks and opportunities across the
entire project portfolios. At a project level, it can be used for assessing the
feasibility, analysing the
Q3. 1. Using Internet, identify a project and
list down all the activities and milestones of a project and the activity risks
associated with these milestones.
2. Using Internet, identify a project and the
activity risks associated with it.
Categorise the risks into three groups:
controllable known, uncontrollable known and unknown. Find out the percentage
of “unknowns” in total risks at the beginning and towards the end of the
project.
Answer. 1.
Milestones are significant events within a project schedule. They are not work
activities. They can be considered as “activities with zero duration”.
Milestones are often used to indicate a phase end, completion of a deliverable,
or a checkpoint in the project execution. A milestone is a logical point in a
project but at this point, no work is actually done. So do milestones have
activity risks? The answer is yes.
Q4. What are the sources of resource risks?
A. Explain the sources of
People risks (4 marks)
Outsourcing risks (3 marks)
Money risks (3 marks)
Answer.
People risks:
Risks related to people represent the
maximum risks (by count) in the PERIL database, accounting for more than
two-thirds of the total risk incidents. The sources of people risks can be
divided into two main categories, which are as follows:
1. Availability
Q5. What are different types of scope risks?
Answer.
The different types of scope risks are discussed as follows:
Ø Scope creep
Ø Scope gap
Ø Scope dependency
Ø Defect
3 scope risks:
Scope creep
Scope creep is the most common scope
risk. It stems from gaps in the understanding or documentation of requirements.
It is a dispute between the customer and project team over the scope boundary.
In most scenarios, the requirements evolve and mutate as the project
progresses. It happens when the customer pushes for including something that
was not included in the original scope or the project team defines the scope
boundary vaguely (what is “in scope” and what is “out of scope”). Implicit
requirement is a major factor that leads to scope creep. What customer feels
“obvious” and hence, bound to be included in the scope is at times missed
because “it was not stated by the customer”. Hence, it is imperative to log in
all the requirements instead of assuming implicit requirements to avoid Creep.
Q6. Explain the three point estimates used in
quantitative risk analysis.
A. Explain the term “three point
estimates” (2 marks)
Why are they used in quantitative risk
analysis (4 marks)
How is it different from PERT
distributions (4 marks)
Answer.
“Three point estimates”:
Three-point estimates describe three
scenarios (pessimistic, base case and optimistic) and thus, help in considering
different outcomes and their impacts. Three-point estimates provide a simple
means of representing the magnitude and range of a risk impact or effect. These
are most often used for estimating the cost or schedule effects of a project
risk. They can also be used in connection with other important variables of a
project. For example, one of the key factors in an aircraft design is weight
and a rigorous
Spring-2016
Get solved
assignments at nominal price of Rs.125 each.
Mail us at: subjects4u@gmail.com or contact at
09882243490
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