Advisor

To Assess Risk, Be Wary of Personal Viewpoints

Posted August 4, 2009 | | Amplify

I recommend beginning a project with a risk assessment to identify potential problems. But such assessments are plagued with potential problems themselves. One is that expertise can act as a lens to magnify only a small part of the project. Fortunately, there are ways to work around these lenses.

Before a project starts, we assess the risks. The essence of this exercise is answering one question: "What could possibly go wrong?"

About The Author
Dwayne Phillips
Dwayne Phillips has been a computer and systems engineer with the US government since 1980. He coauthored It Sounded Good When We Started, Working with People on Projects with Roy O'Bryan and wrote The Software Project Manager's Handbook, Principles That Work at Work , now in its second edition. Dwayne Phillips can be reached at d.phillips at computer.org. His Web site ishttp://dwaynephillips.net.
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