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Projects are risky undertakings, and modern approaches to managing
projects recognise the central need to manage the risk as an
integral part of the project management discipline. Managing Risk
in Projects places risk management in its proper context in the
world of project management and beyond, and emphasises the central
concepts that are essential in order to understand why and how risk
management should be implemented on all projects of all types and
sizes, in all industries and in all countries. The generic approach
detailed by David Hillson is consistent with current international
best practice and guidelines (including 'A Guide to the Project
Management Body of Knowledge' (PMBoK) and the 'Project Risk
Management Practice Standard' from PMI, the 'APM Body of Knowledge'
and 'Project Risk Analysis & Management (PRAM) Guide' from APM,
'Management of Risk: Guidance for Practitioners' from OGC, and the
forthcoming risk standard from ISO) but David also introduces key
developments in the risk management field, ensuring readers are
aware of recent thinking, focusing on their relevance to practical
application. Throughout, the goal is to offer a concise description
of current best practice in project risk management whilst
introducing the latest relevant developments, to enable project
managers, project sponsors and others responsible for managing risk
in projects to do just that - effectively.
The Risk Management Handbook offers readers knowledge of current
best practice and cutting-edge insights into new developments
within risk management. Risk management is dynamic, with new risks
continually being identified and risk techniques being adapted to
new challenges. Drawing together leading voices from the major risk
management application areas, such as political, supply chain,
cybersecurity, ESG and climate change risk, this edited collection
showcases best practice in each discipline and provides a
comprehensive survey of the field as a whole. This second edition
has been updated throughout to reflect the latest developments in
the industry. It incorporates content on updated and new standards
such as ISO 31000, MOR and ISO 14000. It also offers brand new
chapters on ESG risk management, legal risk management, cyber risk
management, climate change risk management and financial risk
management. Whether you are a risk professional wanting to stay
abreast of your field, a student seeking a broad and up-to-date
introduction to risk, or a business leader wanting to get to grips
with the risks that face your business, this book will provide
expert guidance.
This book offers a practical insight to leaders who need to make
good decisions in risky and important situations. The authors
describe a process for making risk-intelligent decisions,
explaining complex ideas simply, and mapping a route through the
myriad interrelated influences when groups make decisions that
matter. The approach puts the decision maker-you-at the center and
explains how you can think and act differently to make better
decisions more of the time. The book shows how to Determine the
appropriate level of risk Make decisions in uncertain and turbulent
conditions Understand how risks are perceived to identify them
accurately Develop new behaviors to improve decision-making Making
Risky and Important Decisions: A Leader's Guide builds on earlier
ground-breaking publications from these two recognized thought
leaders. Their first book together, Understanding and Managing Risk
Attitude, brought together the language of risk and risk-taking
with the language of emotional intelligence and emotional literacy.
Managing Group Risk Attitude followed, and focused on
decision-making groups, creating new insights and frameworks. Both
books are positioned as specialist textbooks, despite their
relevance to real-world situations. A Short Guide to Risk Appetite
brought together the concepts of risk appetite and risk attitude
into one place for the first time, cutting through confusing
terminology and confused thinking to create a practical way of
understanding "how much risk is too much risk." This latest
installment from Ruth Murray-Webster and David Hillson takes the
breadth of their previous work, adds new insights and thinking, and
distills it into a highly usable guide for hard-pressed leaders.
With more than three decades of experience as a thought-leader and
expert practitioner, PMI Fellow Dr. David Hillson shares practical
insight into how upside risks can be identified, assessed, and
managed as opportunities. After reviewing the benefits of
identifying opportunities, the book steps through the opportunity
identification and management process in detail, describing proven
tools and techniques as well as specific tips to make them work in
practice. The book places opportunity management in the context of
traditional risk management, providing a familiar pathway that
leads project managers to discover new benefits and successes.
David Hillson is one of the foremost authorities on risk
management. With his latest book he presents a strong case for
managing opportunities. As with all of David's books, the style of
writing is engaging and easy to understand. There are many nuggets
of wisdom in this book, as well as a hands-on approach to
leveraging opportunity management as a way of improving project
performance. - Cyndi Snyder Dionisio, PMI Fellow, Coronado CA, USA.
(Chair of the PMBOK (R) Guide, Sixth Edition) I enjoyed reading
this book, which is precise, clear, logical, and persuasive. The
clarity of thought and expression explains why David is such a
sought-after speaker. This book is a must-read for project risk
practitioners, as well as for project professionals who are serious
about addressing all the risks on their project, including the good
ones. - Dr Dale Cooper, Cammeray NSW, Australia. (Director,
Broadleaf Capital International) At last, a clear and valuable book
linking both sides of the coin in risk management: threats and
opportunities. David Hillson truly engages the reader on how to
deal with these two types of risk in projects, sharing his wisdom
and extensive experience in creating value from risk management.
Anyone who has to manage risk in real-world projects should read
this book to enhance their opportunity management skills. -
Professor Salim Al-Harthi, Muscat, Oman. (Director of Risk
Management Office, Sultan Qaboos University) It is vital for value
creation in business and in life that we consider uncertainties
that would have upside impacts on our objectives (opportunities),
as well as downside impacts (threats). Business gets confused
between opportunities where there is a binary choice to take or
not, and true uncertain opportunities that can be seized, or left
to chance. David has persevered in helping us understand this and
this important book is a must-read for all leaders who want to
create value through the proactive management of risk. - Dr Ruth
Murray-Webster, Wakefield, UK. (Partner, Beyond the Deal LLP and
Editor, APM Body of Knowledge, 7th Edition) As project managers, we
always seem to focus on threats, negative risks. David Hillson, one
of the foremost thought-leaders on risk management, explains
approaches to identify and manage opportunities, positive risks and
how this will help achieve project success. As with his previous
books, David provides a structured approach with examples, tools,
and techniques. An excellent resource for all project managers in
today's world. - Peter Monkhouse, Toronto ON, Canada. (Past Chair
PMI Board of Directors)
The Risk Management Handbook offers readers knowledge of current
best practice and cutting-edge insights into new developments
within risk management. Risk management is dynamic, with new risks
continually being identified and risk techniques being adapted to
new challenges. Drawing together leading voices from the major risk
management application areas, such as political, supply chain,
cybersecurity, ESG and climate change risk, this edited collection
showcases best practice in each discipline and provides a
comprehensive survey of the field as a whole. This second edition
has been updated throughout to reflect the latest developments in
the industry. It incorporates content on updated and new standards
such as ISO 31000, MOR and ISO 14000. It also offers brand new
chapters on ESG risk management, legal risk management, cyber risk
management, climate change risk management and financial risk
management. Whether you are a risk professional wanting to stay
abreast of your field, a student seeking a broad and up-to-date
introduction to risk, or a business leader wanting to get to grips
with the risks that face your business, this book will provide
expert guidance.
Whatever the future holds, one thing is sure: nothing is certain
except uncertainty. Prediction is always hard, especially about the
future, but the biggest risk is not taking any risk at all. All
businesses face significant levels of uncertainty these days. To
succeed you need to exploit future uncertainty, turning it to your
advantage by managing risk effectively. This book shows you how. In
his role as The Risk Doctor, international risk consultant Dr David
Hillson has advised many major organisations across the globe,
showing them how to create value from risk. Now you can benefit
from his unique approach and insights. Exploiting Future
Uncertainty contains more than sixty focused briefings, each
addressing a key part of the risk challenge. Using five themes,
David covers the links between better business and risk-taking,
basic risk concepts, making risk management work in practice,
people aspects, and managing risk in the wider world. Each section
is packed with clear practical advice with specific how-to tips and
guidance. David Hillson is one of the most influential writers and
consultants on risk and in Exploiting Future Uncertainty he offers
his prescription for effective risk management in 21st Century
businesses.
How much risk should we take? A Short Guide to Risk Appetite sets
out to help all those who need to decide how much risk can be taken
in a particular risky and important situation. David Hillson and
Ruth Murray-Webster introduce the RARA Model to explain the
complementary and central roles of Risk Appetite and Risk Attitude,
and along the way they show how other risk-related concepts fit in.
Risk thresholds are the external expression of inherent risk
appetite, and the challenge is how to set the right thresholds. By
progressively deconstructing the RARA Model, the authors show that
the essential control step is our ability to choose an appropriate
risk attitude. The book contains practical guidance to setting risk
thresholds that take proper account of the influences of
organisational risk culture and the individual risk preferences of
key stakeholders. Alongside this, individuals and organisations
need to choose the risk attitude that will optimise their chances
of achieving the desired objectives.
This book builds on the authors' previous title Understanding and
Managing Risk Attitude but this time looks exclusively at the
challenges of understanding and managing those attitudes adopted by
groups of people when faced with making decisions that they
perceive as risky and important. The book makes the link between
risk management and decision-making explicit, building on existing
work from the economic and risk psychology schools but taking a
pragmatic, practitioner-focused approach that is relevant to all
decision-making groups in any situation. The insights in Managing
Group Risk Attitude are derived from the authors' own applied
research. Details of the research methods and findings are included
in the book in support of a practical model and steps to manage
risk attitude using applied emotional literacy. Ruth Murray-Webster
and David Hillson have written a practical book for all
decision-makers, supported by actual research by practitioners and
underpinned by the seminal research of leading academics.
This book offers a practical insight to leaders who need to make
good decisions in risky and important situations. The authors
describe a process for making risk-intelligent decisions,
explaining complex ideas simply, and mapping a route through the
myriad interrelated influences when groups make decisions that
matter. The approach puts the decision maker-you-at the center and
explains how you can think and act differently to make better
decisions more of the time. The book shows how to Determine the
appropriate level of risk Make decisions in uncertain and turbulent
conditions Understand how risks are perceived to identify them
accurately Develop new behaviors to improve decision-making Making
Risky and Important Decisions: A Leader's Guide builds on earlier
ground-breaking publications from these two recognized thought
leaders. Their first book together, Understanding and Managing Risk
Attitude, brought together the language of risk and risk-taking
with the language of emotional intelligence and emotional literacy.
Managing Group Risk Attitude followed, and focused on
decision-making groups, creating new insights and frameworks. Both
books are positioned as specialist textbooks, despite their
relevance to real-world situations. A Short Guide to Risk Appetite
brought together the concepts of risk appetite and risk attitude
into one place for the first time, cutting through confusing
terminology and confused thinking to create a practical way of
understanding "how much risk is too much risk." This latest
installment from Ruth Murray-Webster and David Hillson takes the
breadth of their previous work, adds new insights and thinking, and
distills it into a highly usable guide for hard-pressed leaders.
How much risk should we take? A Short Guide to Risk Appetite sets
out to help all those who need to decide how much risk can be taken
in a particular risky and important situation. David Hillson and
Ruth Murray-Webster introduce the RARA Model to explain the
complementary and central roles of Risk Appetite and Risk Attitude,
and along the way they show how other risk-related concepts fit in.
Risk thresholds are the external expression of inherent risk
appetite, and the challenge is how to set the right thresholds. By
progressively deconstructing the RARA Model, the authors show that
the essential control step is our ability to choose an appropriate
risk attitude. The book contains practical guidance to setting risk
thresholds that take proper account of the influences of
organisational risk culture and the individual risk preferences of
key stakeholders. Alongside this, individuals and organisations
need to choose the risk attitude that will optimise their chances
of achieving the desired objectives.
Projects are risky undertakings, and modern approaches to managing
projects recognise the central need to manage the risk as an
integral part of the project management discipline. Managing Risk
in Projects places risk management in its proper context in the
world of project management and beyond, and emphasises the central
concepts that are essential in order to understand why and how risk
management should be implemented on all projects of all types and
sizes, in all industries and in all countries. The generic approach
detailed by David Hillson is consistent with current international
best practice and guidelines (including 'A Guide to the Project
Management Body of Knowledge' (PMBoK) and the 'Project Risk
Management Practice Standard' from PMI, the 'APM Body of Knowledge'
and 'Project Risk Analysis & Management (PRAM) Guide' from APM,
'Management of Risk: Guidance for Practitioners' from OGC, and the
forthcoming risk standard from ISO) but David also introduces key
developments in the risk management field, ensuring readers are
aware of recent thinking, focusing on their relevance to practical
application. Throughout, the goal is to offer a concise description
of current best practice in project risk management whilst
introducing the latest relevant developments, to enable project
managers, project sponsors and others responsible for managing risk
in projects to do just that - effectively.
Despite many years of development, risk management remains
problematic for the majority of organizations. One common challenge
is the human dimension, in other words, the way people perceive
risk and risk management. Risk management processes and techniques
are operated by people, each of whom is a complex individual,
influenced by many different factors. And the problem is compounded
by the fact that most risk management involves people working in
groups. This introduces further layers of complexity through
relationships and group dynamics. David Hillson's and Ruth
Murray-Webster's Understanding and Managing Risk Attitude will help
you understand the human aspects of risk management and to manage
proactively the influence of human behaviour on the risk process.
The authors introduce a range of models, perspectives and examples
to define and detail the range of possible risk attitudes; looking
both at individuals and groups. Using leading-edge thinking on
self-awareness and emotional literacy, they develop a powerful
approach to address the most common shortfall in current risk
management: the failure to manage the human aspects of the process.
All this is presented in a practical and applied framework, rather
than as a theoretical or academic treatise, based on the authors'
shared experiences and expertise, rather than empirical research.
Anyone involved in implementing risk management will benefit from
this book, including risk practitioners, senior managers and
directors responsible for corporate governance, project managers
and their teams. It is also essential reading for HR professionals
and others interested in organizational or behavioural psychology.
This second edition is updated to strengthen the understanding of
individual risk attitudes and reinforce what individuals can do to
manage those risk attitudes that are leading them away from their
objectives. For people who want to embrace this subject, the book
highlights ways forward that are proven and practical.
Whatever the future holds, one thing is sure: nothing is certain
except uncertainty. Prediction is always hard, especially about the
future, but the biggest risk is not taking any risk at all. All
businesses face significant levels of uncertainty these days. To
succeed you need to exploit future uncertainty, turning it to your
advantage by managing risk effectively. This book shows you how. In
his role as The Risk Doctor, international risk consultant Dr David
Hillson has advised many major organisations across the globe,
showing them how to create value from risk. Now you can benefit
from his unique approach and insights. Exploiting Future
Uncertainty contains more than sixty focused briefings, each
addressing a key part of the risk challenge. Using five themes,
David covers the links between better business and risk-taking,
basic risk concepts, making risk management work in practice,
people aspects, and managing risk in the wider world. Each section
is packed with clear practical advice with specific how-to tips and
guidance. David Hillson is one of the most influential writers and
consultants on risk and in Exploiting Future Uncertainty he offers
his prescription for effective risk management in 21st Century
businesses.
Do you want to gain business benefits, achieve project objectives,
and maximize opportunities? With step-by-step guidelines, this book
unveils a revolutionary approach to the management of project
opportunities by expanding the traditional risk management process
to address opportunities alongside threats-offering valuable tools
and techniques that expose and capture opportunities, minimize
threats, and deal effectively with all types of uncertainty in your
business and projects. Written by an experienced consultant and
risk management specialist, this forward-thinking guide emphasizes
that risk processes must cover both opportunities and threats if
they are to assist in accomplishing project objectives and
maximizing business benefits. For those who are intimidated by
project uncertainty, this critical coverage will answer your
questions and assist you in the development of a structured
framework for opportunity management...the identification,
exploration, and capture of opportunities...overcoming weaknesses
in the existing risk management process...and understanding key
issues in opportunity management.
With more than three decades of experience as a thought-leader and
expert practitioner, PMI Fellow Dr. David Hillson shares practical
insight into how upside risks can be identified, assessed, and
managed as opportunities. After reviewing the benefits of
identifying opportunities, the book steps through the opportunity
identification and management process in detail, describing proven
tools and techniques as well as specific tips to make them work in
practice. The book places opportunity management in the context of
traditional risk management, providing a familiar pathway that
leads project managers to discover new benefits and successes.
David Hillson is one of the foremost authorities on risk
management. With his latest book he presents a strong case for
managing opportunities. As with all of David's books, the style of
writing is engaging and easy to understand. There are many nuggets
of wisdom in this book, as well as a hands-on approach to
leveraging opportunity management as a way of improving project
performance. - Cyndi Snyder Dionisio, PMI Fellow, Coronado CA, USA.
(Chair of the PMBOK (R) Guide, Sixth Edition) I enjoyed reading
this book, which is precise, clear, logical, and persuasive. The
clarity of thought and expression explains why David is such a
sought-after speaker. This book is a must-read for project risk
practitioners, as well as for project professionals who are serious
about addressing all the risks on their project, including the good
ones. - Dr Dale Cooper, Cammeray NSW, Australia. (Director,
Broadleaf Capital International) At last, a clear and valuable book
linking both sides of the coin in risk management: threats and
opportunities. David Hillson truly engages the reader on how to
deal with these two types of risk in projects, sharing his wisdom
and extensive experience in creating value from risk management.
Anyone who has to manage risk in real-world projects should read
this book to enhance their opportunity management skills. -
Professor Salim Al-Harthi, Muscat, Oman. (Director of Risk
Management Office, Sultan Qaboos University) It is vital for value
creation in business and in life that we consider uncertainties
that would have upside impacts on our objectives (opportunities),
as well as downside impacts (threats). Business gets confused
between opportunities where there is a binary choice to take or
not, and true uncertain opportunities that can be seized, or left
to chance. David has persevered in helping us understand this and
this important book is a must-read for all leaders who want to
create value through the proactive management of risk. - Dr Ruth
Murray-Webster, Wakefield, UK. (Partner, Beyond the Deal LLP and
Editor, APM Body of Knowledge, 7th Edition) As project managers, we
always seem to focus on threats, negative risks. David Hillson, one
of the foremost thought-leaders on risk management, explains
approaches to identify and manage opportunities, positive risks and
how this will help achieve project success. As with his previous
books, David provides a structured approach with examples, tools,
and techniques. An excellent resource for all project managers in
today's world. - Peter Monkhouse, Toronto ON, Canada. (Past Chair
PMI Board of Directors)
Many of us are afraid of failure and spend our lives trying to
avoid it. But society's most high achieving figures would all
recognise that failure has been an integral part of their success.
The premise that failure should be considered a vital opportunity
for learning and innovation is the inspiration behind the RSA's
Glory of Failure project. As part of this project, leading thinkers
and practitioners from the fields of project and risk management,
reflective practice, business, education, government policy-making,
social history and psychology have come together to re-evaluate the
concept of failure. The writers of The Failure Files explore
different aspects of the 'F word' as they relate to their areas of
expertise. These include: turning 'learned helplessness' into
'learned optimism', considering how the public perception of
failure in the media can contribute to risk-averse and stagnated
public services, and learning lessons from successful
entrepreneurs, who - like explorers, inventors and artists - are
all able to make failure into a learning process. The Failure Files
is a call to bring discussion of failure into the public sphere,
and to open up debate about how to build dynamic responses to
failure into our society, businesses and personal lives.
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