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Managing Project Assumptions and Risks

The IIL Blog

By Alan Zucker We make hundreds of assumptions and take small risks daily. Recovering from these risks may be inconvenient but not horribly impactful. Project assumptions and risks are not as casual. Project assumptions and risks are not as casual. Our risks were identified, but a response strategy was never created.

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Do We Need Risk Management in Agile Projects?

MPUG

In this article, we’re addressing a common question in modern project management: Do we need risk management in agile projects? Do agile projects have risks associated with them? And do we want to let those risks run wild without any effort to contain them? So, yes, of course, we need risk management in agile projects.

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13 Reasons to Choose Agile Project Management Methods

LiquidPlanner

Predictive and iterative project management can work alongside each other and often do: PMI reports that 21% of teams use hybrid methods. You manage risk more effectively Another benefit of continuous testing is that you can spot risks earlier. Make the changes before you move on, and improve the flow of work through the team.

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Professional Development Day 2022 – IGNITE!

International Institute for Learning

PMI has become and continues to be the leading professional association in project management. Active or Retired Military please reach out to VPProfDevelopment@PMI-Metrolina.org for information on discounted prices. Risk and PMI’s Risk Management Professional (RMP) Certification. Earn up to 10 PDU’s.

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Disciplined Agile & SAFe

International Institute for Learning

To coordinate the teams, SAFe applies cadence and synchronization. Cadence means all teams are aligned to a standard, two-week delivery cycle. The entire ART operates on a common 2-week cadence and begins its 10-week Program Increment (PI) with a 2-day planning event. They are closed books, online, and self-proctored.

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Troubleshooting in Lean-Agile Development

MPUG

Many project managers utilize a Lean-Agile approach when there is high change or churn in project requirements, significant lack of clarity in scope, high complexity to their projects, and/or a larger number of risks associated with such. It’s usually based on a cadence. 2] Agile Practice Guide, by Project Management Institute (PMI).

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Transformation, Business Architecture, and Scaling

Leading Agile

What do you do with planning cadences? And so, I was working on this company called Check free in the PMO, doing PMI style project management and I was working with development teams and there was a guy who’s on my team now named Brian Sondergaard, who I worked for. How do you go up into Portfolio Management?

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