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Who Should be Involved in Defining Mitigations

Where risks are internal to the project, they generally can be discussed and ratified by the team. Where risks are external to the project, or require a financial outlay, it will be necessary to involve subject matter experts such as the design team and the finance department, even to CFO level if necessary. It is also beneficial to involve stakeholders in the mitigation sessions, as they are then both committed to the mitigation responses and kept informed as to what the plan of action will be. While the plan would be communicated to them according to the risk management process, engaging them in the mitigation activity makes them part of the solution.

Drawing up the Mitigation Plan

Once mitigations for all the identified risks have been discussed and agreed, they must be documented and a mitigation plan must be drawn up. Ownership of the risk and activities and process that will be invoked in the case of a risk occurring are included in the plan.

Monitoring the Risk Status

Risk management is not static: a risk can become more severe or reduce during the project, and this is monitored throughout the project. A periodic risk meeting should be held to reassess at least the more critical risks and update their scores as the project progresses. The natural time to do this is during the Sprint Review meetings and/or the Retrospectives, but a separate meeting can also be held where required. The beauty of Agile and Scrum, is that the approach is risk-based, which both reduces the overall project risk and makes risk management simpler.

How Scrum Facilitates Mitigation

Agile development is rapid and short-term, thus minimising the chances of a risk occurring. Scrum reinforces this by tackling the highest priority tasks in the Product Backlog first. High priority items in the Product Backlog are prioritised by the Product Owner because they are the highest risk components, either because there is uncertainty about the requirement or they are pivotal to the successful product design. Completing high-risk work early on in the project improves the chances of project success.

The fact that the project is completed as soon as possible means that risks that are either low in impact or low in probability can be accepted, rather than avoided or limited, because the chances are good that the project will complete before those risks occur. Scrum risk management is therefore simpler and less onerous than traditional project management, although it uses the same techniques.

Recommended Further Reading

The following materials may assist you in order to get the most out of this course:

Section 2: Using the Agile Manifesto to Deliver Change

Section 3: The 12 Agile Principles

Section 4: The Agile Fundamentals

Section 5: The Declaration of Interdependence

Section 6: Agile Development Frameworks

Section 7: Introduction to Scrum

Section 8: Scrum Projects

Section 9: Scrum Project Roles

Section 10: Meet the Scrum Team

Section 11: Building the Scrum Team

Section 12: Scrum in Projects, Programs & Portfolios

Section 13: How to Manage an Agile Project

Section 14: Leadership Styles

Section 15: The Agile Project Life-cycle

Section 16: Business Justification with Agile

Section 17: Calculating the Benefits With Agile

Section 18: Quality in Agile

Section 19: Acceptance Criteria and the Prioritised Product Backlog

Section 20: Quality Management in Scrum

Section 21: Change in Scrum

Section 22: Integrating Change in Scrum

Section 23: Managing Change in Scrum

Section 24: Risk in Scrum

Section 25: Risk Assessment Techniques

Section 26: Initiating an Agile Project

Section 27: Forming the Scrum Team

Section 28: Epics and Personas

Section 29: Creating the Prioritised Product Backlog

Section 30: Conduct Release Planning

Section 31: The Project Business Case

Section 32: Planning in Scrum

Section 33: Scrum Boards

Section 34: Sprint Planning

Section 35: User Stories

Section 36: User Stories and Tasks

Section 37: The Sprint Backlog

Section 38: Implementation of Scrum

Section 39: The Daily Scrum

Section 40: The Product Backlog

Section 41: Scrum Charts

Section 42: Review and Retrospective

Section 43: Scrum of Scrums

Section 44: Validating a Sprint

Section 45: Retrospective Sprint

Section 46: Releasing the Product

Section 47: Project Retrospective

Section 48: The Communication Plan

Section 49: Formal Business Sign-off

Section 50: Scaling Scrum

Section 51: Stakeholders

Section 52: Programs and Portfolios

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