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How to Make a Risk Management Plan (Template Included)

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You identify them, record them, monitor them and plan for them: risks are an inherent part of every project. Some project risks are bound to become problem areas—like executing a project over the holidays and having to plan the project timeline around them. But there are many risks within any given project that, without risk assessment and risk mitigation strategies, can come as unwelcome surprises to you and your project management team.

That’s where a risk management plan comes in—to help mitigate risks before they become problems. But first, what is project risk management ?

What Is Risk Management?

Risk management is an arm of project management that deals with managing potential project risks. Managing your risks is arguably one of the most important aspects of project management.

The risk management process has these main steps:

  • Risk Identification: The first step to manage project risks is to identify them. You’ll need to use data sources such as information from past projects or subject matter experts’ opinions to estimate all the potential risks that can impact your project.
  • Risk Assessment: Once you have identified your project risks, you’ll need to prioritize them by looking at their likelihood and level of impact.
  • Risk Mitigation: Now it’s time to create a contingency plan with risk mitigation actions to manage your project risks. You also need to define which team members will be risk owners, responsible for monitoring and controlling risks.
  • Risk Monitoring: Risks must be monitored throughout the project life cycle so that they can be controlled.

If one risk that’s passed your threshold has its conditions met, it can put your entire project plan in jeopardy. There isn’t usually just one risk per project, either; there are many risk categories that require assessment and discussion with your stakeholders.

That’s why risk management needs to be both a proactive and reactive process that is constant throughout the project life cycle. Now let’s define what a risk management plan is.

What Is a Risk Management Plan?

A risk management plan defines how your project’s risk management process will be executed. That includes the budget , tools and approaches that will be used to perform risk identification, assessment, mitigation and monitoring activities.

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Risk Management Plan Template

Use this free Risk Management Plan Template for Word to manage your projects better.

A risk management plan usually includes:

  • Methodology: Define the tools and approaches that will be used to perform risk management activities such as risk assessment, risk analysis and risk mitigation strategies.
  • Risk Register: A risk register is a chart where you can document all the risk identification information of your project.
  • Risk Breakdown Structure: It’s a chart that allows you to identify risk categories and the hierarchical structure of project risks.
  • Risk Assessment Matrix: A risk assessment matrix allows you to analyze the likelihood and the impact of project risks so you can prioritize them.
  • Risk Response Plan: A risk response plan is a project management document that explains the risk mitigation strategies that will be employed to manage your project risks.
  • Roles and responsibilities: The risk management team members have responsibilities as risk owners. They need to monitor project risks and supervise their risk response actions.
  • Budget: Have a section where you identify the funds required to perform your risk management activities.
  • Timing: Include a section to define the schedule for the risk management activities.

How to Make a Risk Management Plan

For every web design and development project, construction project or product design, there will be risks. That’s truly just the nature of project management. But that’s also why it’s always best to get ahead of them as much as possible by developing a risk management plan. The steps to make a risk management plan are outlined below.

1. Risk Identification

Risk identification occurs at the beginning of the project planning phase, as well as throughout the project life cycle. While many risks are considered “known risks,” others might require additional research to discover.

You can create a risk breakdown structure to identify all your project risks and classify them into risk categories. You can do this by interviewing all project stakeholders and industry experts. Many project risks can be divided up into risk categories, like technical or organizational, and listed out by specific sub-categories like technology, interfaces, performance, logistics, budget, etc. Additionally, create a risk register that you can share with everyone you interviewed for a centralized location of all known risks revealed during the identification phase.

You can conveniently create a risk register for your project using online project management software. For example, use the list view on ProjectManager to capture all project risks, add what level of priority they are and assign a team member to own identify and resolve them. Better than to-do list apps, you can attach files, tags and monitor progress. Track the percentage complete and even view your risks from the project menu. Keep risks from derailing your project by signing up for a free trial of ProjectManager.

Risk management feature in ProjectManager

2. Risk Assessment

In this next phase, you’ll review the qualitative and quantitative impact of the risk—like the likelihood of the risk occurring versus the impact it would have on your project—and map that out into a risk assessment matrix

First, you’ll do this by assigning the risk likelihood a score from low probability to high probability. Then, you’ll map out your risk impact from low to medium to high and assign each a score. This will give you an idea of how likely the risk is to impact the success of the project, as well as how urgent the response will need to be.

To make it efficient for all risk management team members and project stakeholders to understand the risk assessment matrix, assign an overall risk score by multiplying your impact level score with your risk probability score.

3. Create a Risk Response Plan

A risk response is the action plan that is taken to mitigate project risks when they occur. The risk response plan includes the risk mitigation strategies that you’ll execute to mitigate the impact of risks in your project. Doing this usually comes with a price—at the expense of your time, or your budget. So you’ll want to allocate resources, time and money for your risk management needs prior to creating your risk management plan.

4. Assign Risk Owners

Additionally, you’ll also want to assign a risk owner to each project risk. Those risk owners become accountable for monitoring the risks that are assigned to them and supervising the execution of the risk response if needed.

Related: Risk Tracking Template

When you create your risk register and risk assessment matrix, list out the risk owners, that way no one is confused as to who will need to implement the risk response strategies once the project risks occur, and each risk owner can take immediate action.

Be sure to record what the exact risk response is for each project risk with a risk register and have your risk response plan it approved by all stakeholders before implementation. That way you can have a record of the issue and the resolution to review once the entire project is finalized.

5. Understand Your Triggers

This can happen with or without a risk already having impacted your project—especially during project milestones as a means of reviewing project progress. If they have, consider reclassifying those existing risks.

Even if those triggers haven’t been met, it’s best to come up with a backup plan as the project progresses—maybe the conditions for a certain risk won’t exist after a certain point has been reached in the project.

6. Make a Backup Plan

Consider your risk register and risk assessment matrix a living document. Your project risks can change in classification at any point during your project, and because of that, it’s important you come up with a contingency plan as part of your process.

Contingency planning includes discovering new risks during project milestones and reevaluating existing risks to see if any conditions for those risks have been met. Any reclassification of a risk means adjusting your contingency plan just a little bit.

7. Measure Your Risk Threshold

Measuring your risk threshold is all about discovering which risk is too high and consulting with your project stakeholders to consider whether or not it’s worth it to continue the project—worth it whether in time, money or scope .

Here’s how the risk threshold is typically determined: consider your risks that have a score of “very high”, or more than a few “high” scores, and consult with your leadership team and project stakeholders to determine if the project itself may be at risk of failure. Project risks that require additional consultation are risks that have passed the risk threshold.

To keep a close eye on risk as they raise issues in your project, use project management software. ProjectManager has real-time dashboards that are embedded in our tool, unlike other software where you have to build them yourself. We automatically calculate the health of your project, checking if you’re on time or running behind. Get a high-level view of how much you’re spending, progress and more. The quicker you identify risk, the faster you can resolve it.

Free Risk Management Plan Template

This free risk management plan template will help you prepare your team for any risks inherent in your project. This Word document includes sections for your risk management methodology, risk register, risk breakdown structure and more. It’s so thorough, you’re sure to be ready for whatever comes your way. Download your template today.

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Best Practices for Maintaining Your Risk Management Plan

Risk management plans only fail in a few ways: incrementally because of insufficient budget, via modeling errors or by ignoring your risks outright.

Your risk management plan is one that is constantly evolving throughout the course of the project life cycle, from beginning to end. So the best practices are to focus on the monitoring phase of the risk management plan. Continue to evaluate and reevaluate your risks and their scores, and address risks at every project milestone.

Project dashboards and other risk tracking features can be a lifesaver when it comes to maintaining your risk management plan. Watch the video below to see just how important project management dashboards, live data and project reports can be when it comes to keeping your projects on track and on budget.

In addition to your routine risk monitoring, at each milestone, conduct another round of interviews with the same checklist you used at the beginning of the project, and re-interview project stakeholders, risk management team members, customers (if applicable) and industry experts.

Record their answers, adjust your risk register and risk assessment matrix if necessary, and report all relevant updates of your risk management plan to key project stakeholders. This process and level of transparency will help you to identify any new risks to be assessed and will let you know if any previous risks have expired.

How ProjectManager Can Help With Your Risk Management Plan

A risk management plan is only as good as the risk management features you have to implement and track them. ProjectManager is online project management software that lets you view risks directly in the project menu. You can tag risks as open or closed and even make a risk matrix directly in the software. You get visibility into risks and can track them in real time, sharing and viewing the risk history.

Risk management popup in ProjectManager

Tracking & Monitor Risks in Real Time

Managing risk is only the start. You must also monitor risk and track it from the point that you first identified it. Real-time dashboards give you a high-level view of slippage, workload, cost and more. Customizable reports can be shared with stakeholders and filtered to show only what they need to see. Risk tracking has never been easier.

Screenshot of the project status report in ProjectManager, ideal for risk management

Risks are bound to happen no matter the project. But if you have the right tools to better navigate the risk management planning process, you can better mitigate errors. ProjectManager is online project management software that updates in real time, giving you all the latest information on your risks, issues and changes. Start a free 30-day trial and start managing your risks better.

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7 Steps to Write a Risk Management Plan For Your Next Project (With Free Template!)

🎁 Bonus Material: Free Risk Management Template

How to write a Risk Management Plan

4. Come up with preventative strategies for each risk

The point of a risk management plan is to give you a clear path towards solving any potential issues that come up. For each of the identified risks, the project manager and the assigned teammate should brainstorm a proper response.

In most cases, you’ll handle a risk that has become an issue in one of four ways:

  • Avoid: Change your plan to bypass the issue. In other words, remove the cause of the threat altogether.
  • Transfer: Outsource the risk (or a portion of it) to a different team or agency. Think of this as a typical “insurance” policy.
  • Mitigate: Take immediate steps to reduce the impact of the risk. This could mean reviewing your requirements, going through additional testing, or looking for different options.
  • Accept: Assume the chance of a negative impact or eventually budget in the cost of dealing with it.

When writing out your risk response plan your depth of details should match the significance of the risk. There’s no point in creating an in-depth response to a low impact, low probability risk.

Lastly, you can also escalate a risk if the response feels like it’s beyond the scope of your project. This takes us to our next step...

5. Create a contingency plan in case things go really wrong

In the case that you’re accepting the potential fallout of a risk, you should know what to do if it becomes realized. This is called a contingency plan. In other words, you’re answering the question: “What do we do now?”

Contingency plans should be saved for risks that are high priority and high impact but without an obvious solution for what to do if they happen. In this case, you’ll want to have a workflow mapped out that follows a few steps:

  • Find and document resources that can be used in an emergency. This could mean moving team members off a different task, diverting budget, or increasing the scope.
  • Know who will need to be notified in the case of this issue. You can use your communication plan to help find these people.
  • Create a plan of action for dealing with this issue. Are there alternatives you can propose or flexibility you can add to your current project plan? Do you know who to bring in and where to ask for help? A checklist can help keep you focused when you’re in crisis mode.
  • Keep an eye on the risk triggers for these issues (especially deadlines).

Of course, the balance of contingency planning is that these are usually issues with a small probability of actually happening. It’s easy to get sucked into imagining every terrible situation that might creep up. However, if the potential downfall of one of these risks could threaten your project, it’s worth thinking it through early on.

6. Measure your risk threshold and work with project stakeholders

While every project comes with some level of risk, there are ones where the potential negative outcomes are just too much to gamble on. This is what’s known as your risk threshold —the amount of risk your company or stakeholders are willing to take on.

Measure your Risk Threshold

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How to Create a Project Risk Management Plan

By Kate Eby | February 27, 2023

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Teams can use a project risk management plan to identify and assess the potential risks to a project. We’ve gathered expert tips on creating an effective risk management plan, as well as step-by-step instructions for creating an example plan.

On this page, you’ll find information on what to include in a project risk management plan and how to create a plan , as well as step-by-step instructions for completing an example project risk management plan .

What Is a Project Risk Management Plan?

Project teams create a project risk management plan , a document that helps identify and assess potential risks to a project. The plan outlines how your team will analyze and mitigate the potential risks to ensure project success.

The project risk management plan is one of the most important documents in project risk management . You can learn more about project risks in general — as well as specific types of project risks — in our comprehensive guides

What Does a Risk Management Plan Cover?

A risk management plan should cover a number of areas detailing potential project risks and how your team will deal with them. It will include a description of the project, along with how your team will identify and assess risk.

At a minimum, your project risk management plan should include the following details:

  • Project description, including its purpose
  • The team plan for identifying, logging, and assessing potential risks
  • How the team will identify broad categories of risk
  • How the team will evaluate the severity of each potential risk
  • How your team will continue to monitor risks throughout the project
  • How team members will be assigned as owners of various risks
  • Your organization’s tolerance for certain risks, along with criteria for a risk being too large to accept

“A risk management plan defines how the risks for a project will be handled to ensure that the project can be completed within the set timeframe,” says Veniamin Simonov, Director of Product Management at NAKIVO , a backup and ransomware recovery software vendor. “The plan should cover methodology, risk categorization and prioritization, a response plan, staff roles, and responsibility areas and budgets.”

“The risk management plan will address ‘What are we going to do? How are we going to do it? What are the processes we're going to follow?’” says Alan Zucker, Founding Principal of Project Management Essentials . “It may include things such as what are the major categories you're going to use to define your risks. It might also include some guidelines for assessing risks.”

Components in a Project Risk Management Plan 

A project risk management plan will include certain components and describe how your project team will use certain tools to understand and manage potential risks. Some components include a risk register, a risk breakdown structure, and a risk response plan.

Here are components or tools that a project risk management plan often includes or describes:

  • Risk Register: A risk register is the document your project team will use to identify, log, and monitor potential project risks.
  • Risk Breakdown Structure: A risk breakdown structure is a chart that allows your team to identify broad risk categories and specific risks that fit within each category. Your team can decide on the broad categories, depending on your project.
  • Risk Assessment Matrix: A risk assessment matrix is a chart matrix that allows teams to score the severity of potential risks based on both the likelihood of each risk happening and the impact to the project if a risk happens.
  • Risk Response Plan: A risk response plan is a document that details how your team plans to respond to each potential risk to try to either prevent it from happening or lessen the impact if it does happen. You can learn more about project risk mitigation . 
  • Roles and Responsibilities: The risk management plan can provide details on the project risk management team, including the lead member for risk management. It also likely details the roles and responsibilities each team member will have in addressing and dealing with specific risks.
  • Risk Reporting Formats: The risk management plan describes how the project team will document and report its work on monitoring and dealing with risks. It describes the risk register format that the team will use. It might also describe how risks will be added to or deleted from the register and how the project team will provide periodic summarized risk reports to top project and organization leaders.
  • Project Funding and Timing: The plan will likely have a section describing the overall funding and timing for the project. That section also likely details funding for all project risk management work.

To determine what you need to include in your risk management plan, see the following requirements based on project size:

An Organization’s Risk Management Plan Often Doesn’t Change with Projects  

Many risk management experts emphasize that an organization’s project risk management plans might not change much from project to project. That’s because the plan sets out particulars that will be followed for all projects.

“Remember, it's just an approach document that answers the question: How?” says Kris Reynolds, Founder and CEO of Arrowhead Consulting in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “The company or the department as a whole should have a single risk management plan that gets built as you're building your project management methodology. And it’s your Bible. It’s your guidebook. 

“But it isn't going to change across projects,” Reynolds continues. “What changes are the artifacts, including the risk register. But your approach of how you're going to address risk or analyze risk or plan for risk is in the project risk management plan document. As a company or organization, you create that document, and it exists for a year or two years without changing.”

To create a project risk management plan, your team should gather important documents and decide on an approach for assessing and responding to risks. This process involves gathering support documents, listing potential risk management tools, and more. 

Consider some of these basic steps and factors as you begin creating the project risk management plan:

  • Gather Supporting Documents: Gather and read through supporting documents related to the overall project, including the project and project management plan. It’s important for your project risk team to have a full view of project goals and objectives.
  • Frame the Context: Make sure your team understands both the business value of the project and the impact on the organization if the project fails.
  • Decide on Risk Assessment Criteria: Decide how your team will identify and assess important risks. That will require your team to have an understanding of which types of risks your organization can tolerate and which risks could be ruinous to the project.
  • Inventory Possible Risk Management Tools: Make a list of risk management tools and documents that your team might use to help identify and manage project risk.
  • Known Risks: At the start of a project, team members will be able to identify a number of known risks , such as budget issues, shortages of material, and human and other resource constraints, which are measurable and based on specific events. 
  • Unknown Risks: At the start of a project, team members will not be able to identify a range of unknown risks that could impact your project. Those risks are not as easily or objectively measurable as known risks and can crop up at any point during a project. A main goal of project risk management is to help your team discover and address unknown risks before they happen.
  • Unknowable Risks: Your team will not be able to anticipate unknowable risks that could affect the project, such as catastrophic weather events, accidents, and major system failures.
  • Understand Human Bias: Studies have shown that people overestimate their ability to predict and influence the future. We often think we have more control than we do. Those biases can affect how we assess and manage risks in a project. We tend to give too much credence to what happened with past processes, fall into agreement with others in our group, and be more optimistic than we should be about how long a project will take or how much it will cost.  It’s important to account for all of those biases as your team identifies and assesses project risk.

Steps in Developing a Project Risk Management Plan

After your project team has gathered documents and done other preparation work, you will want to follow nine basic steps in creating a project risk management plan. Those start with identifying and assessing risks.

Here are details on the nine steps of project risk management to keep in mind while drafting your project risk management plan:

  • Identify Risks: Your team should gather information and request input from team and organization members to determine potential risks to the project. Some specific risks can threaten many projects. Other risks will vary, based on the type of project and the industry. “If you're talking about a software project, you could have risks associated with the technology, resources, and interdependencies with other systems,” says Zucker. “If you have vendors you're working with, there may be risks associated with the vendors. There may be risks that are software- or hardware-specific. If you're working on a construction project, those risks obviously would be very different. ”You can learn more about project risk analysis and how to identify potential risks to a project .
  • Assess Potential Impact of Each Risk: After your team identifies potential risks, it can assess the likelihood of each risk, along with the expected impact on the project if the risk happens. Your team can use a risk matrix to identify both the likelihood and impact of each risk. You can learn more about how to create a risk matrix and assess risks .
  • Determine Your Organization's Risk Threshold and Tolerance: Your team will want to understand your organization’s risk threshold , or tolerance for risk. Organization leaders might decide that some risks should be avoided at all costs, while others are acceptable. Take the time to understand those views as you prioritize project risks.
  • Prioritize Risks Based on Impact and Risk Tolerance: Once your team assesses the potential impact of a risk and your organization's risk tolerance for risks, it will prioritize risks accordingly. “Prioritize risks based on their disruptive potential for an organization,” says Simonov.
  • Create a Risk Response Plan: Your team should then create a response plan for each risk that the team considers a priority. That response plan will include measures that could prevent the risk from happening or lessen the risk’s impact if it does happen.
  • Select Project Risk Management Tools: Your team will need to decide on the best risk management tools to use for your project. That will likely include a risk register and a risk assessment matrix. It might include other tools, such as Monte Carlo simulations. Learn more about various tools and documents to use in risk management . 
  • Select an Owner for Each Risk: Each identified risk should have an assigned owner. In some cases, a department might be an owner of a risk, but most often, the team will assign individuals to monitor risks. In some cases, the owner will be responsible for dealing with the risk if it happens. Teams can list the owners of each risk on their project risk register. 
  • Determine Possible Triggers for Each Risk: As your team conducts a closer assessment of all risks, it should identify risk triggers where possible. Triggers are events that can cause a risk to happen. Your team won’t be able to identify triggers for all risks, but it will for some. For example, if you have a plant without sufficient backup power, a trigger could be warnings of a violent storm that could cause a power outage.
  • Determine How Your Team Will Monitor Risks: An important part of your plan includes recording concrete details about how your team will ensure that it can continually monitor risks throughout the life of a project.

Risk Management Plan Examples, Templates, and Components

Examples of project risk management plans can help your team understand what information to include in a plan. The risk management plan can also detail various components that will be part of your team’s risk management.

Project Risk Management Plan Template

Project Risk Management Plan Template

Download the Sample Project Risk Management Plan Template for Microsoft Word  

Download this sample project risk management plan, which includes primary components that might be described in a project risk management plan, such as details on risk identification, risk mitigation, and risk tracking and reporting.

Download the Blank Project Risk Management Plan for Microsoft Word

Use this blank template to create your own project risk management plan. The template includes sections to ensure that your team covers all areas of risk management, such as risk identification, risk assessment, and risk mitigation. Customize the template based on your needs.

Project Risk Register Template

Project Risk Register Template Example

Download the Sample Project Risk Register for Excel

This sample project risk register gives your team a better understanding of the information that a risk register should include to help the team understand and deal with risks. This sample includes potential risks that a project manager might track for a construction project.

Download the Blank Project Risk Register Template for Excel  

Use this project risk register template to help your team identify, track, and plan for project risks. The template includes columns for categorizing risks, providing risk descriptions, determining a risk severity score, and more.  

Quantitative Risk Register Template

Quantitative Risk Matrix Template Example

Download the Sample Quantitative Project Risk Impact Matrix for Excel

This sample quantitative project risk impact matrix template can help your team assess a project risk based on quantitative measures, such as potential monetary cost to the project. The template includes columns where your team can assess and track the probability and potential cost of each project risk. The template calculates a total monetary risk impact based on your estimates of probability and cost.

Risk Breakdown Structure Template

Risk Breakdown Structure Diagram Template

Download the Risk Breakdown Structure Template for Excel

Your team can use this template to create a risk breakdown structure diagram that shows different types of risks that could affect a project. The template helps your team organize risks into broad categories.

Step-By-Step Guide to Creating a Project Risk Management Plan

Below are step-by-step instructions on how to fill out a project risk management plan template. Follow these steps to help you and your team understand the information needed in an effective risk management plan.

This template is based on a project risk management plan template created by Arrowhead Consulting of Tulsa, Oklahoma, and was shared with us by Kris Reynolds.

  • Cover Section: Provide information for the cover section , also known as the summary section . This will include the name of the project, the project overview, the project goals, the expected length of the project, and the project manager.
  • Risk Management Approach: Write a short summary of your organization's overall approach to project risk management for all projects, not only the project at hand. The summary might describe overall goals, along with your organization’s view of the benefits of good project risk management.
  • Plan Purpose: Write a short summary explaining how the plan will help your team perform proper risk management for the project.
  • Risk Identification: Provide details on how your team plans to identify and define risks to the project. Those details should include who is assigned to specific responsibilities for risk identification and tracking, as well as what information and categories will be included in your team’s project risk register.
  • Risk Assessment: Provide details on how your team will assess the probability and potential impact of each risk it has identified. Your team should also include details on any risk matrices it plans to use and how the team will prioritize risks based on those matrices.
  • Risk Response: Provide details on the ways your team can choose to respond to various risks. In the case of high-priority risks, that will include prevention or mitigation plans for each risk. In the case of low-priority risks, or risks that might be prohibitively expensive to mitigate, it might include accepting the risk with limited mitigation measures.
  • Risk Mitigation: Provide more details on how your team plans to lessen the likelihood  or impact of each risk. Your team should also provide details on how it will monitor the effectiveness of prevention and mitigation strategies, and change them if needed.
  • Risk Tracking and Reporting: Provide details on how your team plans to track and report on risks and risk mitigation activities. These details will likely include information on the project risk register your team plans to use and information on how your team plans to periodically report risk and risk responses to organizational leadership.

Do Complex Projects Require More Complex Project Risk Management Plans? 

Experts say that complex projects shouldn’t require more complex project risk management plans. A project might have more complex tools, such as a more detailed risk register, but the risk management plan should cover the same basics for all projects.

“The problem is, most people get these management plans confused. They then start lumping in the artifacts [such as risk registers] — which can be more complex and have more detail — to the risk management plan itself,” says Reynolds. “You want it to be easily understood and easily followed.

“I don't think the complexity of the project changes the risk management plan,” Reynolds says. “You may have to circulate the plan to more people. You may have to meet more frequently. You may have to use quantitative risk analysis. That would be more complex with more complex projects. But the management plan itself —  no.”

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COMMENTS

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