Learn Risk Management: Risk Planning in Agile and Scrum

Complete Risk Management and Risk Planning Training: Identify Project Risks, Create Risk Plan and Monitor Risks in Scrum

What you’ll learn

  • Define Risk Management in Scrum
  • Identify the types of Project Risks
  • Explain Risk Assessment
  • Explain impact versus likelihood matrix
  • Understand the concept of placing risks on a matrix
  • Define and understand Risk Strategies, Contingency, Mitigation
  • Identify Group Anti-Patterns
  • Identify Individual Anti-Patterns
  • Explain Contingency Plan vs Fallback Plan
  • Understand how The Risk Assessment Meeting is held
  • Understand how to create a Risk Plan
  • Important factors of Risk monitoring
  • FAQ for Risk management

Requirements

  • No Scrum and Agile prerequisites are needed
  • Basic knowledge of Scrum Framework is recommended
  • Basic knowledge of Project Management is recommended

Description

Projects can fail not only from issues that present themselves as patterns but also from project risks.

This Course focuses on Risks Management and Risk Planning. Risks can make even a well-planned Agile and Scrum project go off track, so it is important to plan for and mitigate risks as much as possible. Upon completion of this course, you should be able to:

  • Define the term risk.
  • Define the terms impact, likelihood, and value.
  • Know how to create and use an impact vs. likelihood matrix and
  • Know how you can use a risk-value matrix to prioritize risks and features.
  • Know how to address different rankings of problems along with the impact vs. likelihood matrix and risk-value matrix.
  • Define the terms risk management plan, indicator, action.
  • Understand the difference between group anti-patterns and individual anti-patterns.
  • Identify, describe, and suggest means of addressing common management anti-patterns, including analysis paralysis, cart before the horse, Groupthink, silos, vendor lock-in, overengineering, gold-plating, viewgraph engineering, fire drill and heroics, death march, micromanagement, seagull management, email as the primary means of communication, loose cannon, and intellectual violence.
  • Identify and define types of risks including scope risk, technology risk, customer and stakeholder risks, and personnel risks.
  • Create a risk management plan.
  • And important factors related to risk monitoring…

Even though using Agile methodology reduces risk in the early phases of software development, we should also consider the idea that there is a demand to start thinking about making more room to risk management in a more formalized way.

If you’re ready to start planning risks for your next project, let’s start right now!

Who this course is for:

  • Product Owners
  • Scrum Masters
  • Developers in Scrum
  • Project Managers
  • Release Engineers
  • Anyone who want to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of Agile to lead high performing teams
  • People who got their first Scrum job and don’t know where to start tracking their work
  • People who want to learn Scrum, Agile, and Agile Software development
  • Senior executives who wish to actively promote agile concepts across business teams and to link those concepts directly to business-related outcomes
  • Product Stakeholders who want to understand how to manage risks indicators at any point in the development cycle
  • Agile team members who manage risks
  • Programmers, Testers, analysts, product managers…

Tutorial Bar
Logo