Chapter 10 - Risks and quality Flashcards

1
Q

Define a risk

A

A risk is a binary, uncertain event with an uncertain consequence, the outcome is hard to predict exactly.

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2
Q

Define an uncertainty

A

Uncertainties relate to known events that have different outcomes depending on internal and external circumstances. Usually evaluated with PERT

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3
Q

How much time should be set aside for risk management?

A

15-20% of the project time.

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4
Q

What is risk management?

A

A proactive work method for identifying and managing internal and external threats to the success of the project.

It consists of risk identification, qualitative and quantitative risk analysis, risk response planning and risk mitigation (done in conjunction with execution).

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5
Q

what are the three C’s of risk management?

A

Condition - What?
Cause -Why?
Consequence - How?

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6
Q

Explain the process of risk identification

A

Brainstorming is a good method for identifying risks. It’s an iterative process, begins at idea stage. usually performed by the project group with the pm.

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7
Q

Name some examples of risk categories

A
  • Risks related to technology, quality and execution
  • Risks related to project management
  • Organizational risks
  • External risks
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8
Q

Explain the mini risk method

A

Both probabilities and consequences are evaluated and rated on a scale from one to five. The risk value is calculated by multiplying “likelihood” by “consequence”

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9
Q

Explain the maxi risk method

A

Expands the mini risk method to evaluate the consequences in three dimensions - time, quality, resources. This gives three different risk values for each event. Gives good overview for which governing parameter has the highest level of risk.

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10
Q

Explain the opportunity and risk matrix

A

An opportunity is a “positive risk”. in the opportunity and risk matrix an opportunity is something positive that might occur as a consequence of some action.

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11
Q

Give four examples of strategies for risk action

A

Avoid risks - change the project plan to eliminate the risk or protect the project from the effect of the risk.

Transfer risks - shift the risk to a third part such as an insurance company

Reduce risks - ameliorate the effect of an identified risk by implementing actions that decrease the likelihood and/or consequences of the risk.

Accept risks - no changes are made to the project plan following risk identification

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12
Q

What is a contingency reserve?

A

A way to minimize the consequences of cost and/or scheduling risks.

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13
Q

What is the knee?

A

The knee describe the limit where the positive benefits of investing in quality starts to pan out, i.e it doesn’t pay off to invest more.

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14
Q

What is the cost of poor quality?

A

Visible cost for correcting problem + Cost for impaired reputation.

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15
Q

What is continuous improvement?

A

Act -> Plan -> Do -> Check, a cycle. (s 241)

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16
Q

Explain lean

A

It’s a philosophy on how you streamline production flows and build only what is necessary. Everything that doesn’t create benefits is eliminated and everyone os responsible for halting production if something goes wrong.

17
Q

What is quality management?

A

Quality planning, quality assurance and quality audit. It’s usually cheaper to avoid mistakes than to correct errors, so it pays of to invest in preventative quality work.

18
Q

Explain FMEA

A

Failure Mode Effect Analysis - A method for locating and eliminating errors before they can occur. The purpose is to answer a number of questions in a general questionnaire about the risks that might occur and their effects. (s. 244-245)

19
Q

Explain quality planning

A

The quality level should be determined with the project goal and time and resources available taken into account. Higher quality requirements demand more time and resources. One step in quality planning is determining the quality standard the project should follow.

20
Q

What is the delphi method?

A

A way to achieve agreement on a solution to a problem. It involves a group of specialists taking part in a meeting anonymously. A meeting coordinator uses a questionnaire to gather thoughts on the question to be analysed. The answers are compiled and circulated among the experts for further comments. Agreement can be reached after a few cycles.

21
Q

what is the 80/20 rule?

A

About 20 percent of all events that occur contribute to about 80 percent of the outcome.

22
Q

What is the six sigma method for?

A

It’s a method for quality improvement in projects and processes focused on decreasing variations and error sources. Name from standard deviations, only 3.4 errors in a million outcomes fall outside the tolerance area of +-6 standard deviations, given a normal distribution.

23
Q

What is important when i comes to change management?

A
  • to decide upon routines and document in the project management plan how changes will be handled
  • traceability
24
Q

Which changes should the pm have mandate to decide on?

A

Changes that doesn’t affect the goal, delivery time or budget.

25
Q

What is a change review board?

A

An independent forum for assessment and decision-making regarding changes in the project. Supports the pm and steering committee when their competence is insufficient or when changes can affect other projects.

26
Q

Explain the difference between mandatory or voluntary change

A

A change can be mandatory because of external events or errors in what has been executed within the project.

Changes can also be voluntary - you want to improve the design, facilitate manufacturing or achieve better ergonomics

27
Q

What are the conditions for signing a contract?

A
  • Something of value must be transferred between the parties
  • the parties have the ability and capacity yo sign a contract
  • What is stipulated in the contract is legal
  • The terms must be communicated
  • Both parties must have accepted the terms
28
Q

What is the purpose of a project review?

A

It is to identify areas of risks and flaws, in order to decrease or eliminate them before execution, if possible.

29
Q

What is project management maturity?

A

This is crucial to the success of a project. There are five levels of project management maturity:

  1. Conscious - No established project process, unclear division of responsibility, events and individual choices determine the work and everything depends on the key personnel
  2. Repeated - Several different project processes, projects begin through formal orders, unclear division of responsibility and unclear communications.
  3. Defined - A common project process, committed managers, a project management office, status reports including risk, change management and quality governance
  4. Controlled - The project process is integrated with other organisational systems, all projects use the processes, projects are governed by key figures and there is project portfolio management.
  5. Optimized - A learning organization that continually improves its processes, with high flexibility and where management serves as a model.