Book Image

Oracle Primavera P6 Version 8: Project and Portfolio Management

Book Image

Oracle Primavera P6 Version 8: Project and Portfolio Management

Overview of this book

In 2008 Oracle acquired Primavera Software, Inc., a leading provider of Project Portfolio Management (PPM) solutions for project-intensive industries.Primavera P6 Enterprise Project Portfolio Management is an integrated project portfolio management (PPM) solution comprising role-specific functionality to satisfy each team member's needs, responsibilities, and skills. It provides a single solution for managing projects of any size, adapts to various levels of complexities within a project, and intelligently scales to meet the needs of various roles, functions, or skill levels in your organization and on your project team.Oracle Primavera P6 Version 8: Project and Portfolio Management aims to show you all the features and functionality of the software thoroughly and clearly.With Oracle Primavera P6 Version 8: Project and Portfolio Management, readers will master the core concepts of Primavera P6 and the new features associated with version 8.This book is divided into two sections, in the first section we learn the fundamental concepts behind managing projects which include organizing projects, adding activities and relationships, assigning roles and resources, scheduling a project, and much more. In the second section we cover portfolio management and how to make the best use of the web client that includes working with portfolios, portfolio analysis, portfolio capacity planning, ROI, tracking performance, and lots more.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Oracle Primavera P6 Version 8: Project and Portfolio Management
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Chapter 8. Issues and Risks

What is life without risks and danger, the excitement of the unknown? Well, that may be fine for your leisure time, but when managing a project, risk is something you want to actively manage. If you cannot avoid it, at least you can measure and control it to some degree. The risks to projects are as diverse as projects themselves. In fact, some risks may be positive, such as when durations may have been over-estimated. Such risks are also called opportunities. Here are a few examples of project risks:

  • There may be a shortage of skilled labor, possibly requiring higher salaries and/or delays to the project schedule

  • A critical piece of equipment may have a known failure rate, and such failure could cost the project time and money

  • A permit may have a delay, setting back several activities

  • Material prices can fluctuate, affecting the cash flow of the job—even in a positive manner

P6 has a number of facilities for monitoring thresholds in your projects, tracking issues...