PMI Risk Management Professional 온라인 연습
최종 업데이트 시간: 2026년03월30일
당신은 온라인 연습 문제를 통해 PMI PMI-RMP 시험지식에 대해 자신이 어떻게 알고 있는지 파악한 후 시험 참가 신청 여부를 결정할 수 있다.
시험을 100% 합격하고 시험 준비 시간을 35% 절약하기를 바라며 PMI-RMP 덤프 (최신 실제 시험 문제)를 사용 선택하여 현재 최신 115개의 시험 문제와 답을 포함하십시오.
정답:
Explanation:
Reviewing published operational experience reports from similar projects or industries can help the risk manager objectively identify risks for the chemical laboratory project. These reports provide valuable insights into potential risks and lessons learned from other projects.
According to the PMBOK Guide, one of the tools and techniques for the identify risks process is data gathering. Data gathering is the process of collecting information from various sources to identify potential risks that may affect the project objectives. One of the data gathering techniques is document analysis, which involves reviewing and analyzing available project documents and other information sources to identify potential risks. Some of the documents that can be analyzed are project charter, project management plan, stakeholder register, assumptions log, agreements, and lessons learned1.
One of the information sources that can be useful for identifying risks in a project constructing a chemical laboratory is published operational experience reports. These are reports that document the experiences, lessons learned, best practices, and recommendations from other organizations or projects that have constructed or operated chemical laboratories. These reports can provide valuable insights into the common risks, challenges, and opportunities that are associated with chemical laboratory projects, such as safety hazards, environmental regulations, equipment failures, design specifications, quality standards, and stakeholder expectations. By reviewing published operational experience reports, the risk manager can objectively identify risks that are relevant and applicable to their project, as well as learn from the successes and failures of others23.
Some of the other options are not relevant or appropriate for the question scenario:
Importing a risk register from other industry chemical laboratories is not a valid option, as it would not allow the risk manager to objectively identify risks that are specific and unique to their project. A risk register is a document that records the identified risks, their causes, impacts, responses, owners, and other information related to the risk management process. A risk register is a project-specific document that reflects the characteristics, objectives, and context of a particular project. Importing a risk register from other industry chemical laboratories would not ensure that the risks are relevant, accurate, or comprehensive for the risk manager’s project. Moreover, it would violate the intellectual property rights and confidentiality agreements of the other projects1.
Defining chemical laboratory safety risk thresholds is not a tool or technique for identifying risks, but rather for performing qualitative risk analysis. Risk thresholds are the measures of the level of uncertainty or the level of impact at which a stakeholder may have a specific interest. Risk thresholds are used to determine the significance of each risk and to prioritize them for further analysis or action. Defining chemical laboratory safety risk thresholds would not help the risk manager to objectively identify risks, but rather to evaluate them1.
Drafting threat and opportunity risks that come to mind is not an objective or systematic way of identifying risks, but rather a subjective and intuitive one. This option would rely on the risk manager’s personal judgment, experience, or creativity, which may not be sufficient or reliable for identifying risks in a project constructing a chemical laboratory. This option would also not ensure that the risks are based on factual and verifiable information sources, such as project documents or published reports. Drafting threat and opportunity risks that come to mind would not help the risk manager to objectively identify risks, but rather to generate them1.
: PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, pages 397-399, 414-415, 431-432, 441-4421; Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP)® Cert Guide, pages 63-642; Risk Management Professional Exam Outline, page 73.
정답:
Explanation:
Quantitative risk analysis helps determine the minimum acceptable level of exposure and impact for each risk. It also helps to understand if the maximum level of exposure has been reached before escalating the risk. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 423)
The team should perform quantitative risk analysis, which is the process of numerically analyzing the effect of identified risks on overall project objectives. Quantitative risk analysis can help the team to establish the minimum acceptable level of exposure and impact for each risk, as well as the maximum level of exposure before escalation. Quantitative risk analysis can also provide probabilistic estimates of project outcomes, such as cost and schedule, and support risk prioritization and decision making.
Reference: PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Sixth Edition, 2017, p. 399; PMI, The Standard for Risk Management in Portfolios, Programs, and Projects, 2019, p. 69.
정답:
Explanation:
An Ishikawa diagram (also known as a fishbone or cause-and-effect diagram) is a tool used to identify and analyze the root causes and sources of a risk. It helps the risk manager gain a deeper understanding of the risk source and likelihood. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 139)
An Ishikawa diagram, also known as a fishbone diagram or a cause-and-effect diagram, is a tool that can help the risk manager to analyze the root causes of a risk and to identify the factors that influence its occurrence and impact. An Ishikawa diagram can also help to visualize the relationships among different causes and to prioritize the most significant ones. By developing and employing an Ishikawa diagram, the risk manager can gain a deeper understanding of the source and likelihood of the risk and plan appropriate responses accordingly.
Reference: The Standard for Risk Management in Portfolios, Programs, and Projects, page 72; PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, page 398.
정답:
Explanation:
Quantitative risk analysis helps to numerically analyze the probability and impact of risks on project objectives. By performing quantitative risk analysis, the risk manager can present the risks with the
most impact on achieving the project objectives to the project sponsor. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 423)
According to the PMI Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP) Reference Materials, sensitivity analysis is a type of probabilistic analysis that determines how sensitive the results of the analysis are to uncertainties in input variables. Sensitivity analysis determines which uncertainty has the greatest potential for an impact on the project objectives, such as cost, schedule, scope, or quality1.
In this case, the risk manager should use sensitivity analysis to facilitate the sponsor’s ask, as it will help to identify and present the risks that have the most impact on achieving the project objectives. Sensitivity analysis can also show how the project objectives will vary with the changes in the input variables, such as the probability and impact of risks2. Sensitivity analysis can be performed using various tools and techniques, such as tornado diagrams, spider charts, or influence diagrams3.
Reference: 1: PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Sixth Edition, 2017, p. 403 2: PMI, Practice Standard for Project Risk Management, 2009, p. 95 3: Quantitative Risk Analysis in Project Management - PM-Training
정답:
Explanation:
According to the PMBOK Guide, one of the tools and techniques for the plan risk management process is ground rules. Ground rules are the rules of conduct or behavior that are established by the project team and other stakeholders to ensure a productive and respectful environment for risk management activities. Ground rules can cover various aspects of risk management, such as roles and responsibilities, communication protocols, decision-making processes, meeting agendas, and conflict resolution methods1. By referring to the team’s ground rules on how to resolve conflicts, the risk manager can handle the situation where two key external stakeholders are overemphasizing the impact of a few project risks. This can help the risk manager to maintain a constructive and collaborative atmosphere in the risk reassessment workshop, as well as to ensure that the risk analysis and prioritization are based on objective and consistent criteria.
Some of the other options are not relevant or appropriate for the question scenario: Requesting for a skilled facilitator to help resolve conflicts that have arisen is not a feasible or effective option, as it would interrupt the flow of the risk reassessment workshop and delay the risk management process. The risk manager should be able to facilitate the workshop and handle conflicts by themselves, using the tools and techniques that they have planned and agreed upon with the project team and stakeholders.
Running a sensitivity analysis to check which risks have the most impact is a technique for the perform quantitative risk analysis process, which is not applicable in the context of a risk reassessment workshop. A sensitivity analysis is a quantitative method that examines the effect of varying one risk parameter at a time on the project objectives, such as cost or schedule. It is not a tool for resolving conflicts or validating the impact of risks, as it does not consider the interrelationships and dependencies among risks or the probability of risk occurrence1.
Using the assumption analysis technique to validate the assumptions is a technique for the identify risks process, which is not suitable for the situation where conflicts have already arisen in the risk reassessment workshop. An assumption analysis is a technique that explores the validity of the assumptions that are made during the project planning and risk management processes. It is not a tool for resolving conflicts or verifying the impact of risks, as it does not address the root causes or the consequences of the disagreements among the stakeholders1.
: PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, pages 407-408, 431-432, 437-438, 441-4421; PMI-RMP Exam Content Outline, 2015, pages 7-8.
정답:
Explanation:
The project manager should add the assumptions and constraints to the assumption log to track and analyze their impact on the project. The assumption log is a project document that records all project assumptions and constraints throughout the project life cycle. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 89)
The project manager should add the assumptions and constraints to the assumption log, which is a project document that records the assumptions and constraints that affect the project scope, schedule, cost, and quality. The assumption log can help the project manager to identify and analyze the risks that may arise from the validity of the assumptions and the impact of the constraints. The assumption log can also be used as an input for the Identify Risks process, where the project manager can determine the risk impact of the assumptions and constraints and add them to the risk register accordingly.
Reference: PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Sixth Edition, 2017, p. 38, 397.
정답:
Explanation:
The project charter is the first resource the project manager should reference to determine the risk tolerance and risk attitudes of the project’s key stakeholders, as it contains information such as the project purpose, objectives, success criteria, high-level risks, and key stakeholder list. The project charter is an output of the Develop Project Charter process, which is part of the Initiating process group. The project charter provides the project manager with the authority to apply organizational resources to project activities and establishes a partnership between the performing organization and the requesting organization.
Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, page 81-82.
Enterprise environmental factors (EEFs) provide information about the organization's culture, risk tolerance, and risk attitudes, which can help the project manager determine the risk tolerance and risk attitudes of the project's key stakeholders. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 39)
정답:
Explanation:
Regression analysis is a data analysis tool that helps identify variables that impact the schedule and determine how these factors interact. It is used to forecast future performance based on historical data and the relationship between variables. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 248)
According to the PMI Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP) Reference Materials, regression analysis is a data analysis tool that examines the relationship between one or more independent variables and a dependent variable1. Regression analysis can be used to forecast future performance based on historical data and trends2. In this case, the risk manager wants to identify which variables will impact the schedule (the dependent variable) and determine how these factors interact (the independent variables). Therefore, the risk manager should use regression analysis to create a mathematical model that can predict the schedule performance based on the values of the variables. Regression analysis can also help the risk manager to assess the significance and strength of the relationship between the variables and the schedule3.
Reference: 1: PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Sixth Edition, 2017, p. 720 2: PMI, Practice Standard for Project Risk Management, 2009, p. 95 3: Tips and Tricks for Passing the Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP …
정답:
Explanation:
An affinity diagram is a tool used to visually organize and group risks or ideas based on their similarities and categories. It helps in structuring the risks for further analysis and discussion. (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 138)
According to the PMBOK Guide, an affinity diagram is a tool and technique for the identify risks process that allows large numbers of ideas to be sorted into groups for review and analysis. An affinity diagram can help the risk manager to visually organize the risks identified in the pre-workshop survey by grouping them into categories based on their similarities or common characteristics. This can help the risk manager to facilitate the risk analysis and prioritization in the workshop, as well as to stimulate new patterns of thinking and generate additional risks. Some of the other options are not relevant or appropriate for the question scenario:
The analytical hierarchy process is a technique for the plan risk management process that provides a method for comparing and ranking alternatives based on multiple criteria. It is not a tool for visually organizing risks.
A SWOT analysis is a technique for the identify risks process that examines the project from the perspective of its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. It is not a tool for visually organizing risks, but rather for generating them.
Assigning probability and impact is a technique for the perform qualitative risk analysis process that assesses the likelihood and the potential effect of each individual risk on the project objectives. It is not a tool for visually organizing risks, but rather for evaluating them.
: PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, pages 397-399, 414-415, 431-432, 441-442; PMI-RMP Exam Content Outline, 2015, page 7.
정답:
Explanation:
Risk impact assessment involves calculating the impact of identified risks. Risk analysis is the process of examining, estimating, and evaluating the impact of risks, which helps in calculating the impact (Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th Edition, p. 417)
Risk analysis is the process of assessing the likelihood and impact of the identified risks on the program objectives. It helps to calculate the impact of the risks by using qualitative or quantitative methods. Risk analysis can provide useful information for risk prioritization, risk response planning, and risk reporting.
Reference: PMI, The Standard for Risk Management in Portfolios, Programs, and Projects, 2019, p. 67; PMI, The Standard for Program Management, Fourth Edition, 2017, p. 113.
정답:
Explanation:
The team is documenting all the checkpoints along the way that might indicate delays on critical deliverables, which is an example of risk triggers. Risk triggers are events or conditions that indicate a risk may be about to occur or has already occurred, helping the project team to monitor and respond to risks effectively.
Risk triggers are indicators or warning signs that a risk event is about to occur or has occurred. They help to monitor the status of risks and initiate risk responses when needed. Documenting risk triggers is part of the Plan Risk Responses process, which aims to develop options and actions to enhance opportunities and reduce threats to project objectives.
Reference: The Standard for Risk Management in Portfolios, Programs, and Projects, page 78; PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, page 402.
정답:
Explanation:
Project risks should be closed when the stakeholders agree a risk is no longer applicable. This ensures that risks are actively managed and only relevant risks are considered throughout the project lifecycle.
According to the PMI Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP) Reference Materials, project risks are uncertain events or conditions that may have a positive or negative effect on one or more project objectives1. Project risks can be closed when they are no longer applicable to the project or its activities. The process of closing project risks involves verifying that the risk responses have been completed, documenting the outcomes, and evaluating the effectiveness of the risk management process2. The decision to close a project risk should be made by the stakeholders who are responsible for or affected by the risk, as they are the ones who can determine whether the risk is still relevant or not. Therefore, the correct answer is B. When the stakeholders agree a risk is no longer applicable.
Reference: 1: PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Sixth
Edition, 2017, p. 397 2: PMI, Practice Standard for Project Risk Management, 2009, p. 111
정답:
Explanation:
According to the PMBOK Guide, one of the tools and techniques for the identify risks process is data gathering. Data gathering is the process of collecting information from various sources to identify potential risks that may affect the project objectives. Some of the data gathering techniques are brainstorming, interviews, checklists, assumption and constraint analysis, and document analysis1. To conduct a risk identification exercise using data gathering techniques, the risk manager should take the following actions:
Arrange a team meeting, review the project’s scope, and discuss dependency mapping. This action can help the risk manager to facilitate a brainstorming session with the project team and other subject matter experts, where they can generate a list of potential risks based on the project scope and the dependencies among the project activities. Dependency mapping is a technique that helps to identify the relationships and interdependencies among the project components, such as tasks, resources, deliverables, and stakeholders2. By reviewing the project scope and discussing the dependency mapping, the risk manager can ensure that the risk identification exercise covers all the relevant aspects of the project and does not miss any important risk sources.
Ensure that all the relevant stakeholders participate. This action can help the risk manager to obtain different perspectives and insights from the stakeholders who have different roles, interests, and expectations in the project. Stakeholders are individuals or groups who can affect or be affected by the project outcomes. They may have valuable information, experience, or expertise that can help to identify potential risks that may not be obvious to the project team. By ensuring that all the relevant stakeholders participate in the risk identification exercise, the risk manager can increase the comprehensiveness and accuracy of the risk identification process and foster stakeholder engagement and buy-in1.
Reference: PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, pages 397-399, 414-4151; Mastering the PMI Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP) Exam, page 70
정답:
Explanation:
The stakeholders should prepare a risk-adjusted backlog when making decisions on how to respond to known and new risks. A risk-adjusted backlog helps prioritize work items based on their risk level and potential impact on the project.
A risk-adjusted backlog is an artifact that reflects the prioritization of the product backlog items based on their risk exposure. It is used to plan for the execution phase of an agile project, where the stakeholders can decide how to respond to known and new risks by selecting the most valuable and least risky items to deliver. A risk-adjusted backlog can help the stakeholders to optimize the value delivery and reduce the uncertainty of the project outcomes.
Reference: PMI, The Standard for Risk Management in Portfolios, Programs, and Projects, 2019, p. 113; PMI, Agile Practice Guide, 2017, p. 54.
정답:
Explanation:
The risk manager should consult the risks that have materialized and the overall risk profile to analyze the performance of managing the risks, as well as the risks due to the number of claims submitted to the client. These options provide insights into how well risks are being managed and the potential impact on the project.
The risk manager should consult the risks that have materialized and the overall risk profile, as these are indicators of how well the risk management process is working and how the project is affected by the risks. The risk manager should also consult the risks due to the number of claims submitted to the client, as these are potential sources of conflict, litigation, and reputation damage that may impact the project objectives and stakeholder satisfaction.
Reference: The Standard for Risk Management in Portfolios, Programs, and Projects, page 83; PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, page 414.