Written on August 28, 2025
BY WASHINGTON CHIMUZU
Projects, by their very nature, are fraught with uncertainty. Despite all the hype, value and benefits that they promise to deliver, nothing is ever truly guaranteed or goes like clockwork.
Even with meticulous planning, many projects falter not because of poor intent but because risks were underestimated, ignored, or mismanaged.
To improve viability and increase the chances of success, project professionals must embrace the discipline of de-risking projects. Simply put, this is a proactive strategy that identifies, evaluates, and mitigates threats before they jeopardize delivery.
The Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) defines risk management as the process of identifying, analyzing, and responding to project risks. De-risking goes a step further by embedding risk awareness holistically into decision-making, governance, and culture.
Risk management is not a once-off activity but rather a continuous practice throughout the project lifecycle. This mindset recognizes that risks cannot always be eliminated and therefore must be systematically anticipated, avoided, transferred, shared, or reduced or mitigated to tolerable levels.
Why is de-risking so critical? Evidence consistently shows that projects fail not just because of technical flaws but also because of human factors. One recurring challenge is optimism bias, the tendency for people to assume things will work out positively while underestimating the probability and impact of delays, cost overruns, or stakeholder resistance.
Project teams often commit to aggressive schedules and lean budgets under the belief that their project will be the exception. De-risking counterbalances this optimism bias by demanding realistic assessments, scenario planning, and contingency reserves. In short, it calls for a reality check.
Another dimension is cultural. Different organizations, sectors, professions, and societies have varying risk appetites. In some cultures, taking bold risks is celebrated; in others, caution and predictability dominate decision-making. These perspectives shape how project risks are perceived, tolerated, and managed.
For multinational or cross-cultural projects, ignoring this dimension can lead to misalignment and conflict. De-risking therefore requires a holistic approach that includes cultural sensitivity. A successful project manager appreciates that risk strategies must be tailored to the organizational context and the internal and external environments in which the project operates.
De-risking is not confined to one stage or phase. In project initiation, the danger lies in pursuing vague business cases, incomprehensive feasibility or launching without clear stakeholder alignment. Here, de-risking means validating assumptions, clarifying objectives and getting buy-in early.
During planning, the risks often relate to unrealistic budget and schedule estimates, inadequate resources, or weak governance. Mitigation involves building robust baselines, involving the right experts, and proven planning methodologies.
During execution, projects face scope creep, quality issues, and team breakdowns; de-risking here emphasizes disciplined change control processes, resource allocation, transparent communication, performance tracking and fostering team morale.
Finally, in closing, risks such as poor knowledge transfer or dissatisfied stakeholders can undermine long-term value, making it essential to document lessons learned and ensure benefits realization.
The foregoing illustrate that de-risking is not about pessimism or slowing momentum. To the contrary, it is about improving resilience, adaptability and predictability. By acknowledging uncertainty and preparing for it, projects become more viable and organizations can protect their investments.
In an era where projects are expected to deliver not only outputs but also measurable stakeholder value, de-risking is no longer optional, it is strategic. In the coming weeks, this column will explore how risk awareness can be practically embedded into each project phase, beginning with initiation.
By dissecting and interrogating the nuances of risk in context, project professionals can move beyond excitement, wishful thinking and cultural blind spots, to building projects that endure and succeed.