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Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology

You're reading from   Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology Take your data warehousing and business intelligence to the next level with this practical guide to Oracle Database 11g. Packed with illustrations, tips, and examples, it has over 80 advanced recipes to fine-tune your skills and knowledge.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849685481
Length 368 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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John Heaton John Heaton
Author Profile Icon John Heaton
John Heaton
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Business Intelligence Cookbook: A Project Lifecycle Approach Using Oracle Technology
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
1. Preface
1. Defining a Program FREE CHAPTER 2. Establishing the Project 3. Controlling the Project 4. Wrapping Up the Project 5. The Blueprint 6. Analyzing the Requirements 7. Architecture and Design 8. Analyzing the Sources 9. Analyzing the Data 10. Constructing the Data Model 11. Defining the ETL/ELT 12. Enhancing the Data 13. Optimizing the Access 14. Security

Creating an effective risk register


Project risks are a fact of life on any software development project. The key is to identify and quantify the risks in a way that is easy to understand and communicate. A method to achieve this is FMEA—Failure Mode and Effect Analysis. A derivative of this is RFMEA—Risk Failure Mode and Effect Analysis.

Getting ready

Before starting, it is important to have a list of all the potential risks related to your project. An easy way to do this is to solicit information from all the team members and stakeholders. Do not try and categorize or justify the risk; purely collect the information and record the risk.

How to do it...

The risk register is key to the project. It is important to keep this a living document.

  1. 1. Open your Project Control Register and create a new tab called RFMEA:

  2. 2. Create your basic headings for your RFMEA or Risk Log:

    • a. Risk ID is a unique number assigned to each risk.

    • b. Risk event is a description of the risk.

    • c. Likelihood is the probability...

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