Now, I'm no fan of boilerplate, that generic stuff that planning authors seem determined to impose on the reader (although most of us just skip by), so I propose that most plans can get away with four content categories:
- Policy--actionable direction. What is to be done; who (or what) is affected; why are they affected, and who has the responsibility and authority for policy implementation?
- Doctrine--the principles and beliefs that inform the policy and
- Protocols--the rules (and could also be the tools) for policy implementation
- Governance--authorization and escalation rules; decision rules
Let's try one on to see how it might work. How about "risk identification"; what's the plan for that one?
Risk Identification Policy:There now! That wasn't so bad. A Risk Identification plan in less than a page. What a concept!
It's the policy of Project X that every manager (project, cost account, and work package) will proactively seek risk identification on a continuous basis in order to forestall surprise and enable more predictable forecast of outcomes
Affected managers have a responsibility to ensure identified risks are submitted to the project's risk management process.
Risk Identification Doctrine:
- Anyone can identify a risk
- Everyone has a responsibility to seek risk identification
- Messengers are not at risk for bearing the message
- Every identified risk deserves consideration in the risk management process
Risk Identification Protocol:
Governance
- Continuously assess the circumstances of identified risks to ascertain if revisions, modifications, and additions are required
- Maintain a 360-surveillance of the external threat environment; bring new threats to the RM process
- Maintain a current forecast by analysis, simulation, or model to reveal new risks to project completion
- Elicit expert opinion to formulate risk descriptions
- Formulate a Risk Breakdown Structure to categorize risks as affecting the baseline, or not ('on or off' the baseline project plan). In other words, be a Bayseian.
- Relate identified risks to the Risk Breakdown Structure by affected WBS, schedule, budget, performance, quality, or other risk register attributes
- Impact decisions follow the project's funding and expenditure authority
- Timeliness is of the essence; urgent assessments will be handled within a business day
- Risk assignments in the Risk Breakdown Structure follow the projects WBS assignment protocols
Bookmark this on Delicious
Are you on LinkedIn? Share this article with your network by clicking on the link.