A Framework for Categorizing Key Drivers of Risk

In today's business and operational environments, multiple organizations routinely work collaboratively in pursuit of a common mission, creating a degree of programmatic complexity that is difficult to manage effectively. Success in these distributed environments demands collaborative management that effectively coordinates task execution and risk management activities among all participating groups. Approaches for managing program risk have traditionally relied on tactical, bottom-up analysis, which does not readily scale to distributed environments. Systemic risk management is an alternative approach that is being developed by the Software Engineering Institute (SEI). A systemic approach for managing risk starts at the top-with the identification of a program's key objectives. Once the key objectives are known, the next step is to identify a set of critical factors, called drivers, that influence whether or not the key objectives will be achieved. The set of drivers also forms the basis for subsequent risk analysis. This technical report describes a driver-based approach for managing systemic risk in programs that acquire or develop software-intensive systems and systems of systems. It features a framework for categorizing drivers and also provides a starter set of drivers that can be tailored to the unique requirements of each program.

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Authors

Christopher J. Alberts

Audrey J. Dorofee

This report is related to the following area(s) of work:

Risk and Opportunity Management
Acquisition Support

Technical Report
CMU/SEI-2009-TR-007
April 2009

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