risk management tools

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Risk management tools help address uncertainty by identifying risks, generating metrics, setting parameters, prioritizing issues, developing responses, and tracking risks.{{cite web | title=What are the Essential Techniques of Risk Management | website=Human Resources, Diversity and Inclusion | url=https://hr.fullerton.edu/risk-management/information-and-document-requests/information-management/essential-techniques-of-risk-management.php | access-date=1 November 2024}} Without the use of these tools, techniques, documentation, and information systems, it can be challenging to effectively monitor these activities.{{cite web | last=Tributor | first=Con | title=Risk management tools and techniques – Skillmaker | website=Skillmaker – Free online training courses | url=https://www.skillmaker.edu.au/risk-management-tools-and-techniques/ | access-date=1 November 2024}}{{cite book | last=Ostrom | first=L.T. | last2=Wilhelmsen | first2=C.A. | title=Risk Assessment: Tools, Techniques, and Their Applications | publisher=Wiley | year=2019 | isbn=978-1-119-48341-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ca-hDwAAQBAJ | access-date=1 November 2024 | page=}}

There are two distinct types of risk tools identified by their approach: market-level tools using the capital asset pricing model (CAP-M) and component-level tools with probabilistic risk assessment (PRA). Market-level tools use market forces to make risk decisions between securities. Component-level tools use the functions of probability and impact of individual risks to make decisions between resource allocations.{{cn|date=November 2024}}

ISO/IEC 31010 (Risk assessment techniques) has a detailed but non-exhaustive list of tools and techniques available for assessing risk.{{cn|date=November 2024}}

Market-level (CAP-M)

{{Main|Capital asset pricing model}}

CAP-M uses market or economic statistics and assumptions to determine the appropriate required rate of return of an asset, given that asset's non-diversifiable risk.

Component-level (PRA)

Probabilistic risk assessment is often used in project risk management. These tools are applications of PRA and allow planners to explicitly address uncertainty by identifying and generating metrics, parameterizing, prioritizing, and developing responses, and tracking risk from components, tasks or costs. PRA, also called Likelihood-Consequence or Probability-Impact, is based upon single-point estimates of probability of occurrence, initiating event frequency, and recovery success (e.g., human intervention) of a specific consequence (e.g., cost or schedule delay).

=Notable PRA tools and techniques=

See also

References