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Becoming a PMP® Certified Professional

You're reading from   Becoming a PMP® Certified Professional A study guide to mastering project management for the PMP® exam

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838989309
Length 826 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ashley Hunt Ashley Hunt
Author Profile Icon Ashley Hunt
Ashley Hunt
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction to Project Management and People
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to the PMP® Exam FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2 :Introduction to Project Management 4. Chapter 3: Pre-Project Initiation 5. Chapter 4: Charters and Stakeholders 6. Chapter 5: Introduction to Agile Considerations 7. Chapter 6: Creating and Leading a Team 8. Section 2: Project Management Processes
9. Chapter 7: Scope Management 10. Chapter 8: Schedule and Cost Management 11. Chapter 9: Quality Management 12. Chapter 10: Resources and Communication Management 13. Chapter 11: Risk Management 14. Chapter 12: Procurement Management 15. Chapter 13: Stakeholder Engagement 16. Chapter 14: Integration Management 17. Section 3: Revision
18. Chapter 15: Next Steps and Study Tips 19. Chapter 16: Final Exam 20. Assessment 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Performing qualitative risk analysis

Qualitative risk analysis is about qualifying the information you have collected about risk and getting it organized by category. Then, you will determine probability and impact based on the set process you created with your stakeholders for a scalable system. High, medium, low. Red, yellow, green. 1 through 5.

Once the risks are analyzed for probability and impact, you can begin to sort them by priority. I like to use a spreadsheet program such as Excel for my risk register because I can sort, filter, color code, create tables, and have a lot of columns or tabs available for text and documentation. Most project management information systems (PMIS) don't do risk very well because they don't have separate sections specific to risk management. It's mostly to do with scope, schedule, and budgets.

The probability and impact matrix defines identified risks events, the category, and a scoring model. The assumption is that once you...

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