As human beings, we all live lives beyond what we do at work. And even though we make commitments at work to perform certain tasks by certain dates, life events do sometimes intervene. Llife events are "important occasions throughout the lifespan." [APA 2023.1] A critical life event is "an event in life that requires major adjustment and adaptive behavior." Critical life events include "the death of a loved one, divorce, and unemployment." [APA 2023.2] And, certainly, much more. When critical life events occur, we might not be able to honor our commitments in the ways and by the dates we originally promised.
That's how and why critical life events of team members can affect plans for workplace projects and operations. Critical life events are thus a source of risks for workplace plans. And those risks are difficult to manage using conventional risk management tools.
Limitations of conventional risk management approaches
Conventional risk management approaches tend to focus on actions organizations can take to mitigate risks of activities they undertake and understand well. For example, Organization A, offering a new product, might develop a plan to manage the risk of a competitor fielding a similar product within a year of A's offering. The risk manager applies resources to control the expected value of the impact, where expected value is the product of two factors: the probability of a risk event and the cost of that event if it should occur.
Risk management thus emphasizes two activities: (a) monitoring risk event probabilities and suppressing them where possible; and (b) altering plans so as to limit the cost of risk events when/if they do occur.
Both of these Conventional approaches to risk management,
when applied to managing critical life event
risk, can require intrusive investigations
into employees' private livesapproaches to risk management, when applied to managing critical life event risk, can require intrusive investigations into employees' private lives. In some instances, the risk managing organization is legally barred from seeking the information that would be most pertinent to planning for managing the risks of critical life events associated with individual employees.
For example, to estimate the probability of the death of a spouse, knowledge of the medical history of that spouse would be most useful. But asking the employee for such information — or even seeking it by any other means — might be prohibited in the relevant jurisdiction. If so, that prohibition can limit the effectiveness of plans for managing the risk of death of a spouse.
An alternative approach to managing life event risk
An alternative approach for managing the risk of critical life events relies on diversifying the risk portfolio, which is a well-established risk management technique. Applied to the problem of managing critical life event risk, the strategy involves adopting an employee recruiting approach designed to achieve a demographically diverse workforce. For example, by arranging for a wide distribution of ages in the workforce, we can dilute the effects associated with parenting small children, which include distractions, loss of sleep, limited availability for travel, and so on. That same recruitment strategy dilutes the effects of unexpected demands associated with caregiving for aged parents.
This example illustrates the power of demographic diversity relative to age. But the same approach applies for any demographic factor associated with critical life events — marriage, divorce, remarriage, arrests, motor vehicle accidents, surgeries, restraining orders, retirement, deaths of pets, home-buying, relocation, promotions, and so on. Diversity of the employee population dilutes the effects of critical life events.
Last words
The approach based on demographic diversity can be difficult to accept at first. Conventional wisdom dictates that we always seek the best-qualified candidates for positions we fill. Normally, we ignore the effect of such hiring on demographic diversity. The result is that many organizations are carrying unmitigated critical life event risks. They might have highly qualified employees, but their overall performance might be compromised by critical life events. Top Next Issue
Are your projects always (or almost always) late and over budget? Are your project teams plagued by turnover, burnout, and high defect rates? Turn your culture around. Read 52 Tips for Leaders of Project-Oriented Organizations, filled with tips and techniques for organizational leaders. Order Now!
Footnotes
Your comments are welcome
Would you like to see your comments posted here? rbrenjTnUayrCbSnnEcYfner@ChacdcYpBKAaMJgMalFXoCanyon.comSend me your comments by email, or by Web form.About Point Lookout
Thank you for reading this article. I hope you enjoyed it and found it useful, and that you'll consider recommending it to a friend.
This article in its entirety was written by a human being. No machine intelligence was involved in any way.
Point Lookout is a free weekly email newsletter. Browse the archive of past issues. Subscribe for free.
Support Point Lookout by joining the Friends of Point Lookout, as an individual or as an organization.
Do you face a complex interpersonal situation? Send it in, anonymously if you like, and I'll give you my two cents.
Related articles
More articles on Project Management:
- Risk Management Risk: I
- Risk Management Risk is the risk that a particular risk management plan is deficient. It's often overlooked,
and therefore often unmitigated. We can reduce this risk by applying some simple procedures.
- Project Improvisation and Risk Management
- When reality trips up our project plans, we improvise or we replan. When we do, we create new risks
and render our old risk plans obsolete. Here are some suggestions for managing risks when we improvise.
- Why Scope Expands: I
- Scope creep is depressingly familiar. Its anti-partner, spontaneous and stealthy scope contraction,
has no accepted name, and is rarely seen. Why?
- How We Waste Time: II
- We're all pretty good at wasting time. We're also fairly certain we know when we're doing it. But we're
much better at it than we know. Here's Part II of a little catalog of time wasters, emphasizing those
that are outside — or mostly outside — our awareness.
- Joint Leadership Teams: OODA
- Some teams, business units, or enterprises are led not by individuals, but by joint leadership teams
of two or more. They face special risks that arise from the organizations that host them, from the team
they lead, or from within the joint leadership team itself.
See also Project Management and Project Management for more related articles.
Forthcoming issues of Point Lookout
- Coming January 22: Storming: Obstacle or Pathway?
- The Storming stage of Tuckman's model of small group development is widely misunderstood. Fighting the storms, denying they exist, or bypassing them doesn't work. Letting them blow themselves out in a somewhat-controlled manner is the path to Norming and Performing. Available here and by RSS on January 22.
- And on January 29: A Framework for Safe Storming
- The Storming stage of Tuckman's development sequence for small groups is when the group explores its frustrations and degrees of disagreement about both structure and task. Only by understanding these misalignments is reaching alignment possible. Here is a framework for this exploration. Available here and by RSS on January 29.
Coaching services
I offer email and telephone coaching at both corporate and individual rates. Contact Rick for details at rbrenjTnUayrCbSnnEcYfner@ChacdcYpBKAaMJgMalFXoCanyon.com or (650) 787-6475, or toll-free in the continental US at (866) 378-5470.
Get the ebook!
Past issues of Point Lookout are available in six ebooks:
- Get 2001-2 in Geese Don't Land on Twigs (PDF, )
- Get 2003-4 in Why Dogs Wag (PDF, )
- Get 2005-6 in Loopy Things We Do (PDF, )
- Get 2007-8 in Things We Believe That Maybe Aren't So True (PDF, )
- Get 2009-10 in The Questions Not Asked (PDF, )
- Get all of the first twelve years (2001-2012) in The Collected Issues of Point Lookout (PDF, )
Are you a writer, editor or publisher on deadline? Are you looking for an article that will get people talking and get compliments flying your way? You can have 500-1000 words in your inbox in one hour. License any article from this Web site. More info
Follow Rick
Recommend this issue to a friend
Send an email message to a friend
rbrenjTnUayrCbSnnEcYfner@ChacdcYpBKAaMJgMalFXoCanyon.comSend a message to Rick
A Tip A Day feed
Point Lookout weekly feed