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Jump Start PMP Exam Preparation : 360 Degree Overview of PMBOK Guide

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This PMP® Refresher Course is designed to help participants who are intending to appear for PMP® exam soon or who wants to know what they need to learn to be a PMP®. It will help them refresh all their learning in just 1 day. This one day class will focus on 360 degree review of The PMBOK® Guide - 5th Edition and clear any knowledge bottlenecks that could stand in the way of passing the exam.

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  • The program designed by Jeevan summarise what you need to know for your exam by focusing on the key concepts. The resources are well written and take the complexity out of the topics covered. The shortcuts and tips are especially useful and I'm already reaping the benefits; I can answer exam questions far quicker than I previously did. I achieved a 'C' grade in the foundation-tier paper this summer (2015). However, I am not satisfied with just a 'C' grade so I've entered the higher-tier paper in November 2015, where I am aiming to get an 'A' grade overall. Before I came across Jeevan's program, I would have been really happy with just a 'C' grade at GCSE. I now want to aim for the best grade possible because I know I can do it. Thanks Jeevan for giving me the belief that I can do well in in this subject. I'm even considering A-Level Maths! That's quite phenomenal for someone who failed their GCSE maths before!◆◆◆ http://t.cn/AirrSv7D
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  • I am very grateful for Jeevan's program because it taught me many techniques on how to overcome common mistakes made in maths. Also, his revision strategy is unique because the same principles can be used in other subjects too and not only maths. Thank you Jeevan, your techniques are very useful!▲▲▲ http://t.cn/AirrSv7D
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Jump Start PMP Exam Preparation : 360 Degree Overview of PMBOK Guide

  1. 1. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. Edureka is a Global Registered Education Provider (R.E.P ID : 4021) of Project Management Institute (PMI)®. ID: 4021 PMP Refresher course
  2. 2. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 2 Know Your Instructor Nishant Shukla, PMP, ITIL  23+ Years of industry experience across various industries like IT – Application Development, Telecommunication, Back Office , BPO/KPO, Banking (Credit/Debit Card domain)  11+ Years on Project/Program Management positions  7000+ Managers trained across industries  Over 11,000 hrs. of classroom training experience  600+ Management workshops conducted  Training conducted for clients like GMR, ABB, Wipro, Oracle, HP, Mphasis, SAP, IBM, Cisco Systems, Unisys Global, Cinepolis, Satyam, Accenture, ITC InfoTech, NIIT Technologies, Honda Motors, Logica to name few from list of hundreds
  3. 3. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 3 Agenda  Introduction - PMI® & PMP®  Myths about PMP®  Introduction to Project and Project Management  Factors influencing Projects  Process and Project Management framework  3600 Overview of The PMBOK® Guide – 5th Edition  Understanding Critical Path  Introduction to Earned Value Management  Risk Management & Qualitative Risk Analysis  Q & A
  4. 4. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 4  Project Management Institute (PMI®) is a not-for-profit association  Established in 1969  Global organization Headquartered in Pennsylvania USA  Over 450,000 members worldwide (over 171 countries)  PMI® is actively engaged in advocacy for the profession, setting professional standards, conducting research and providing access to a wealth of information and resources  PMI® also promotes career and professional development and offers certification, networking and community involvement opportunities About PMI®
  5. 5. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 5  PMI® offers the following credentials for Project Managers: » Project Management Professional (PMP)® » Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM)® » Program Management Professional (PgMP)® » Portfolio Management Professional (PfMP)® » PMI® Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP)® » PMI® Scheduling Professional (PMI-SP)® » PMI® Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP)®  Eligibility criteria for each of these credentials are different Certifications/Credentials from PMI® PMP, CAPM, PgMP, PfMP, ACP, SP, RMP are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc.
  6. 6. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 6  Computer based exam conducted in Prometric centers  200 multiple-choice questions – mixed randomly across process groups to be answered in 4 Hrs.  Out of 200 questions, 175 are for final marking and remaining 25 are “pre-test” questions  There is no negative marking in the exam  The examination is developed by groups of individuals from around the globe who hold the PMP® credential  After clearing the exam, you will receive the PMP® certificate by mail within 2 months. Examination scores are confidential PMP® Examination Pattern PMP® Examination Pattern
  7. 7. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 7 Myths about PMP® Exam  Aspirants need 35 PDUs to apply for the PMP® exam » Contact hours are required to apply for the PMP® exam and PDUs are required to maintain the PMP® credential once you clear the PMP® exam » The minimum score needed to pass is determined by the overall difficultly of your individual exam  Passing score for PMP® exam is 61% » There is no documented set marks or percentages to pass the PMP® exam » From November 2005 onwards, PMI® stopped publishing the passing percentage and adopted psychometric analysis to calculate the passing score hence this assumption is not valid anymore  You must memorize the Inputs, Tools & Techniques, and Outputs (ITTOs) » There are more than 500 ITTOs in The PMBOK® Guide and to the key is to fully understand the concepts of each process not the memorization of the ITTOs » Most of the questions relate to how or why a specific ITTO is used in a process and memorization will be of no use to you when answering those types of questions
  8. 8. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 8 Submit Application Schedule Exam Application Formalities 1-3 Weeks Attend the PMP Exam Prep Training Application Approval Continue Study 2-3 Weeks Continue Study / Mock Test 2-3 Weeks T – 1 Day Relax!!! Take the Exam & Clear it!!Ideal Time Gap Between Training and Exam 6 – 8 Weeks PMP Certification Renewal Renewal Cycle Every 3 Years 24 x 7 Assistance from edureka! Online Virtual Training by edureka! Application and audit assistance from edureka! Personalized guidance by SME from edureka! More than 1000 mock questions by edureka! Assistance in earning PDUs by edureka! Ideal Preparation Time
  9. 9. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 9 Introduction to Project and Project Management
  10. 10. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 10 “A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique product service or result.”   Temporary Endeavor:  With a beginning and an end  Not an on-going effort  Unique Output  Progressive Elaboration The incremental design and refinement of the initial concept toward the project plan  Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK ® Guide) - Fifth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2013, Page 3 Project
  11. 11. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 11 Project Management also needs generic management skills and professional ethics “Project Management is the application of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to meet the project requirements.” Project requirements Project Management
  12. 12. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 12  Project Manager has to balance the competing factors (included but not limited to) like Scope Schedule and Cost along with Quality.  It is the project manager‘s duty to balance and achieve key-competing factors.  Competing factors » Scope » Schedule (Time) » Budget (Cost) » Quality » Resources » Risk Project Constraints Scope Cost Quality Risk Resource Time
  13. 13. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 13  A product life cycle is the parent of projects  Product life cycle may start much before the project Project vs. Product Life Cycle Project development Initiate >> plan >> execute >> close Monitor and Control Operations End of life
  14. 14. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 14 Project Life Cycle The Project Life Cycle:  Every project has a life-cycle and a life-cycle is comprised of project phases.  The phases are well defined and the transition from one phase to another typically involves the transfer of some sort of deliverable Feasibility Analysis Design Implementation Project Lifecycle
  15. 15. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 15 PMP®– Project Management Context Project Lifecycle There are various project lifecycle phase for different kinds of business. For example: IT Software Development  Feasibility  Planning and Design  Production  Turnover and Startup  Discovery and screening  Preclinical development  Registration Workup  Post submission activities  Requirements Gathering  Analysis  Design  Development  Testing  Implementation PharmaceuticalsConstruction
  16. 16. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 16 Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK ® Guide) Fifth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2013, Page 41 There are 3 basic types of phase – to – phase relationships : Project Phases phase – to – phase relationships Sequential relationship: A phase can only start once the previous phase is complete. An Overlapping relationship: A phase starts prior to completion of the previous phase (Fast-tracking). Overlapping phase may increase risk and can result in rework. An Iterative relationship: Only one phase is planned at any given time and the planning for the next is carried out as work progresses on the current phase and deliverables.
  17. 17. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 17 Factors Influencing Projects
  18. 18. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 18  Projects are typically part of an organization that is larger than the project.  The maturity of the organization with respect to following elements can influence the project significantly. Organizations may have a robust project based system that derive revenue primarily from performing projects for others e.g. engineering firms, consultants and construction contractors. Work ethics and work hours Shared values, norms, beliefs, and expectations Organizational Cultures and Styles Policies and procedures View of authority relationships Organizational Structure Organizational Systems: Organizational Influences
  19. 19. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 19  Organizational Structure: » The organizational structure sets the level of authority, roles and responsibilities and the reporting structure within the project » Organizations are structured into one of six models, the organizational structure of which will affect the project in some aspect » Project Manager’s authority varies based on the type of organization structure » Apart from five models in the adjacent diagram, sixth one is Composite Organizational Structure  Organizational Communications: » Important factor in project success in the face of globalization » E-mail, texting, instant messaging, social media, video and web conference etc. Organizational structure Projectized Strong matrix Balanced matrix Weak matrix Functional ProjectManager FunctionalManager Authority Authority Organizational Influences (Contd.)
  20. 20. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 20 Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK ® Guide) Fifth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2013, Page 22 Organization Structure Project Characteristic Functional Matrix Projectized Weak Matrix Balanced Matrix Strong Matrix Project Manager’s Authority Little or None Limited Low to Moderate Moderate to High High to Almost Total Resource Availability Little or None Limited Low to Moderate Moderate to High High to Almost Total Who controls the project budget Functional Manager Functional Manager Mixed Project Manager Project Manager Project Manager’s Role Part – time Part – time Full – time Full – time Full – time Project Management Administrative Staff Part – time Part – time Part– time Full– time Full– time Organizational Influences (Contd.)
  21. 21. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 21  Organizational Process Assets are all the organization specific to and used by the performing organization such as formal or informal plans, processes, policies, procedures, and knowledge bases  They may also include artifacts, practices, or knowledge from any or all of the organizations involved in the project, which can be used to influence the success of the project  The organization process assets may be knowledge bases such as lessons learned and historical information, or it may include completed schedules, risk data or Earned Value data  Organizational process assets (OPA) are input to most planning processes  OPA Categories » Processes and Procedures » Corporate Knowledge Base Organizational Process Assets (OPA)
  22. 22. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 22 OPA Corporate Knowledge Base Project files from previous projects Configuration management knowledge bases Financial databases Historical information and lessons learned knowledge bases Issues and defect management databases Process measurement databases OPA Corporate Knowledge Base
  23. 23. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 23 Enterprise Environment Factors (EEF)  These are conditions, not under the control of the project team that influence, constrain, or direct the project.  They are inputs to most planning processes and may have positive or negative influence on the project outcome.  They may include: » Organization culture, structure, and governance; » Geographic distribution of facilities and resources; » Government or industry standards; » Infrastructure; » Existing human resources & personnel administration; » Company work authorization; » Market conditions; » Stakeholder risk tolerance;  Political climate;  Organization’s established communications channels;  Commercial databases; and  Project management information systems.
  24. 24. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 24 Project Stakeholders Project Stakeholders Project Stakeholders are individuals and organizations who are actively involved in the project, or whose interests may be positively or negatively affected as a result of project execution or successful project completion.
  25. 25. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 25 Project Stakeholders Key stakeholders in every project include: PMO Customer / User Rotate Log Files Program Managers Sellers and business partners Performing Organization / Project Team Operations Management Functional Management Portfolio Managers Project Manager Sponsor
  26. 26. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 26 Processes and Project Management Framework
  27. 27. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 27 PMBOK® Guide is a “distilled version” of Project Management Body of knowledge and it coexists with the corresponding application area knowledge ,general management skills and interpersonal skills. PMBOK ® Guide is published by PMI and inputs from practitioners and academics have been included The Project Management Framework  Introduction  Organizational Influence and Project Life Cycle The Project Management Knowledge Areas  10 Distinctive Knowledge Area The standard for Project Management of a Project  PM Process Groups (5 process Groups)  Project Management processes for a project (47 processes) The PMBOK® Guide – 5th Edition PMBOK ® Guide is organized into 3 sections:
  28. 28. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 28 PMI® PMP – Project Management Processes Process – It is a set of actions and activities to achieve a product, result or service. Project Management is an interactive endeavor – an action or failure to take action, in one area will usually affect other areas  Project Management Processes are concerned with describing and organizing the work of the project  Product oriented Processes are concerned with specifying and creating the project product. Both processes overlap and interact throughout the project. Project Management process generally falls under 2 groups
  29. 29. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 29  There are 47 project management processes in the PMBOK® Guide 5th edition  These 47 processes are grouped under 5 processes groups i.e., Initiating, Planning, Executing, Monitoring, Controlling and Closing  Each process receives Inputs and generates Outputs INPUTS Tools and Techniques OUTPUTS Process Introduction – Process
  30. 30. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 30 Process Group Interaction Enter Phase / Start Project Exit Phase / End Project Initiating Processes Closing Processes Planning Processes Executive Processes Monitoring and Controlling Processes
  31. 31. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 31 Domain Current Distribution of Questions Revised Distribution of Questions Initiation 13% 13% Planning 24% 24% Execution 30% 31% Monitoring & Controlling 25% 25% Closing 8% 7% PMP® Examination Blueprint
  32. 32. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 32  The project manager and project team can modify the processes to suit the specific project needs. For example: » Validate Scope and Quality Control can be merged » Create WBS and Define Activities can be merged » Qualitative and Quantitative Risk Analysis can be merged Process Tailoring
  33. 33. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 33  There are 10 Knowledge Areas covered in PMBOK® Guide 5th edition. These 10 Knowledge Areas are: 1. Integration project management 2. Project Scope Management 3. Project Time Management 4. Project Cost Management 5. Project Quality Management 6. Project Human Resource Management 7. Project Communications Management 8. Project Risk Management 9. Project Procurement Management 10. Project Stakeholders Management Project Management Knowledge Areas
  34. 34. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 34 Overview of The PMBOK® Guide – 5th Edition
  35. 35. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 35 Plan Do Check ActChange Close Deming Cycle and PM Processes
  36. 36. Slide 36 http://www.edureka.co/pmp Direct & Manage Project Work Control Scope Control Schedule Control Cost Control Quality Control Communications Control Risk Control Procurements Control Stakeholders Deliverable Monitor & Control Project Work WPI (Work Performance Information) WP Reports/ Project Dashboards The Logical Sequence: High level Develop Project Charter Develop PM Plan Project Charter Project Plan WPD (Work Performance Data) Close Project 7 Days 200$ - 2 Days - 25$ Develop Subsidiary Project Management Plans Change Management Plan Requirement Management Plan Configuration Management Plan Scope Management Plan Cost Management Plan Human Resource Plan Communication Management Plan Risk Management Plan Procurement Management Plan Process Improvement Plan Quality Management Plan Scope Baseline Schedule Baseline Cost Baseline Integrated Change Control Process Change Request Approved Change Request Project Progress Update
  37. 37. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 37 Direct & Manage project Work WPD Deliverable Control Quality Control Scope Validate Scope Close Project Monitor &Control P W Verified or Validated Deliverable Accepted Deliverable WPI Control Processes – Scope & Quality Integrated Change Control Updates to PM Plan
  38. 38. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 38 Understanding Critical Path
  39. 39. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 39 Critical Path Method  Defines sequence of activities that represents the longest path through a project, which determines the shortest possible project duration.  Provides amount of scheduling flexibility on the logical network paths within the schedule model.  A project can have more than one Critical Path but they will have the same duration.  The critical path method consists of three distinct operations: » Calculate Forward pass (ES, EF) » Calculate Backward pass (LF, LS) » Calculate Float
  40. 40. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 40 Calculating Critical Path – Forward & Backward Pass Start Finish Task A 6 Days ES EF LS LF Task D 7 days ES EF LS LF Task B 5 Days ES EF LS LF Task C 8 Days ES EF LS LF Task E 9 Days ES EF LS LF Task F 5 Days ES EF LS LF 61 72 2013 2114 2622 2622 128 128 71 71 2113 2113 1 1 0 0 0 0 Forward Pass Backward Pass EF = ES + Duration - 1 LS = LF - Duration + 1
  41. 41. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 41 Calculating Critical Path - Float  Float: Amount of time by which an activity can be delayed Types of Float » Total Float: Amount of time by which an activity can be delayed without affecting total project duration or project finish date. How to Calculate: LS – ES or LF - EF » Free Float: Amount of time by which an activity can be delayed without affecting the successor activity. How to Calculate: ES Successor – EF Predecessor - 1
  42. 42. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 42 Introduction to Earned Value Management
  43. 43. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 43 Earned Value Management (EVM)  EVM is the process measuring the performance of project work against what was planned to identify variances, opportunities to improve the project or just check the project’s health.  It is a system of mathematical formulas that compares work performed against work planned, and measures the actual cost of the work the project has performed.  EVM is an important part of cost control, since it allows a project manager to predict future variances from the expenses to date within the project Project’s health Mathematical formulas Predict future variances Expenses Earned Value Management (EVM)
  44. 44. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 44 Earned Value Management Acronym Term Definition PV Planned Value The approved Cost Baseline for the work package EV Earned Value The budgeted value of the completed work packages at the specified point. AC Actual Cost The actual cost incurred during the execution of work packages upto a specified point in time. Acronym Term Definition Budgeted Cost of Work Scheduled BCWS PV Budgeted Cost of Work Performed BCWP EV Actual Cost of Work Performed ACWP AC Measuring Earned Value Management involves measuring –primary measures
  45. 45. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 45 Earned Value Management Name Formula Interpretation Cost Variance (CV) EV – AC - is over budget and + is under budget Schedule Variance (SV) EV – PV - is behind schedule and + is ahead of schedule Cost Performance Index (CPI) EV / AC Indicates the efficiency of the project in utilizing the cost budget. If CPI > 1, productivity is higher than expected, favorable performance. If CPI < 1, productivity is less than expected, poor performance. Schedule Performance Index (SPI) EV / PV Indicates the efficiency of the project in using the scheduled resources. If SPI > 1, project is ahead of schedule, good performance. If SPI < 1, project is behind schedule, poor performance. Earned Value Management involves measuring the following derived measures
  46. 46. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 46 Earned Value Analysis Name Formula Interpretation Estimate To Complete (ETC) based on atypical variances BAC – EV Represents the cost of work required to complete remaining project tasks when the current variances are not expected to continue. Estimate To Complete (ETC) ETC = (BAC – EV) / CPI Represents the cost of work required to complete remaining project tasks when the current variances are expected to continue. Estimate at Completion (EAC) –Flawed AC + ETC Used when original estimates has been fundamentally flawed Estimate at Completion (EAC) – using remaining budget. Atypical AC + BAC - EV Represents the projected total final cost of work when completed - when the initial assumptions are no longer valid due to changed circumstances. Estimate at Completion (EAC) – using CPI - Typical BAC/CPI Represents the projected total final cost of work when completed when the current variances are considered typical variances. Estimate at Completion (EAC) – (Need to hit a firm completion date) AC+((BAC- EV)/(cumulativ e CPI * cumulative SPI)) When current variance are thought typical of the future, it assumes poor cost performance and a need to hit a firm completion date Variance At Completion (VAC) BAC - EAC Shows the positive or negative variance at the end of the project.
  47. 47. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 47 To Complete Performance Index TCPI is the CPI that needs to be achieved for the rest of the project value to be EARNED(Work Remaining) / Funds remaining: TCPI based on BAC BAC – EV / (BAC – AC) TCPI based on new EAC BAC– EV/ (EAC – AC) http://pmstudycircle.com/2012/05/schedule-performance-index-spi-and-cost-performance-index-cpi/
  48. 48. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 48 Overview of Project Risk Management
  49. 49. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 49 What is Risk? Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK ® Guide) - Fifth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2013, Page 309 “Project Risk Management includes the processes of conducting risk management planning, identification, analysis, response planning, and controlling risk on a project. The objectives of project risk management are to increase the likelihood and impact of positive events, and decrease the likelihood and impact of negative events in the project.” www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 6 http://blog.clearrisk.com/category/best-of-risk-management-twitter-feed/
  50. 50. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 50 Risk vs. Issue Risk Issue Risk is an uncertain event or event that might happen in future Issue is an event that has already occurred Once risk is identified, its impact should be analyzed and the response plan should be prepared Once the impact of Issue is analyzed, the same should be resolved or escalated www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 7
  51. 51. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 51 Qualitative Risk Analysis - Probability Qualitative risk analysis — Probability and impact matrix Probability 1-Low 2-Low/Medium 3-Medium 4-Medium/High 5-High Impact 5-High Low (5) Medium (10) High (15) High (20) High (25) 4-Medium/High Low (4) Medium (8) Medium (12) High (16) High (20) 3-Medium Low (3) Medium (6) Medium (9) Medium (12) High (15) 2-Low/Medium Low (2) Low (4) Medium (6) Medium (8) Medium (10) 1-Low Low (1) Low (2) Low (3) Low (4) Low (5) Score Severity 1-5 Low 6-12 Medium 13-25 High Organization determines which combinations are ‘Low’, ‘Moderate’ and ‘High’, defining them in the Risk Management Plan One overall severity rating for each risk: Risk score = Risk Probability x Risk Impact There are two main dimensions to risks: Probability — How likely they are to occur Impact — Their impact if realized
  52. 52. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 52 Qualitative Risk Analysis - Impact Defined Conditions for Impact Scales of Risk on Major Project Objectives (Examples are shown for negative impacts only) Project objective Very low/0.05 Low/0.10 Moderate/0.20 High/0.40 Very High/0.80 Cost Insignificant cost increase <10% cost increase 10-20% cost increase 20-40% cost increase >40% cost increase Time Insignificant time increase <5% time increase 5-10% time increase 10-20% time increase >20% time increase Scope Scope decrease barely noticeable Minor areas of scope affected Major areas of scope affected Scope reduction unacceptable to sponsor Project end item is effectively useless Quality Quality degradation barely noticeable Only very demanding applications are affected Quality reduction requires sponsor approval Quality reduction unacceptable to sponsor Project end item is effectively useless This table presents examples of risk impact definations for four different project objectives. They should be tailored in the Risk Management Planning Process to the individual project and to the organizational’s risk thresholds. Impact definitions can be developed for opportunities in a similar way.
  53. 53. PMI, PMP and PMBOK are registered trademarks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. www.edureka.in/pmpSlide 53 And That’s All 
  54. 54. Questions Slide 54 http://www.edureka.co/pmp
  55. 55. Slide 55 Course Url For Queries during the session and class recording: Post on Twitter @edurekaIN: #askEdureka Post on Facebook /edurekaIN For more details please contact us: US : 1800 275 9730 (toll free) INDIA : +91 88808 62004 Email us : sales@edureka.co

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