Business case uncertainty is what is not yet known well enough to estimate reliably—outcomes, drivers, and even plausible scenarios may be unclear (e.g., whether customers will adopt, whether policy will change, or what a vendor can truly deliver). Uncertainty is typically managed through assumptions, evidence gathering, pilots, and stage gates that convert “unknowns” into measurable inputs.
Business case risk is uncertainty that has been defined into a credible event or condition with an estimated likelihood and impact on value, timing, cost, benefits, or delivery (e.g., “implementation delays increase costs by 10–15%”). Risk is managed through formal treatments (avoid, mitigate, transfer, accept), ownership, controls, and contingency.
In short: uncertainty is ambiguity; risk is ambiguity translated into decision-grade scenarios you can assess and manage.
Yes—sometimes. But you shouldn’t approve it as a full, irreversible commitment. You approve it as a structured option, learning-and-decision pathway (i.e., staged investment) where uncertainty is explicitly managed and converted into evidence.
When it’s reasonable to approve
Approve if the case:
When you should not approve
Don’t approve if it:
The right approval statement
Approve Phase 1 to reduce uncertainty and validate the value proposition; proceed to full implementation only if gate criteria are met.