Article article
The problem
If you are looking for a RAID log vs risk register, you are probably trying to make a project artefact easier to review, approve or use. The team needs to decide whether a topic belongs in a RAID log, a risk register or both. The hard part is rarely knowing that the work matters; it is turning that need into clear wording, evidence and ownership that other people can understand quickly.
This usually happens during delivery control, when the project is moving quickly enough that a loose document can create real drag. Risks, issues, assumptions and dependencies often appear together in delivery conversations, especially when timelines are tight or decisions are moving quickly. If the control is unclear, teams can duplicate records or miss the difference between something that might happen and something already affecting delivery.
For a project manager, that pressure is practical rather than theoretical. You need enough structure to support governance, enough plain language for the team to use it, and enough consistency that sponsors can see what decision or action is being asked of them.
The solution
The RAID Log Template gives the work a repeatable structure so the team is not inventing the format while also trying to solve the delivery problem. Used with this article, it helps you move from compare RAID and risk records to link risks, issues and dependencies in a way that is easier to review and maintain.
The value is not in adding more paperwork. It is in giving project managers, PMO leads and sponsors a common language for the current stage of work: what is known, what still needs judgement, who owns the next step and what evidence should be kept for governance.
If you are working through delivery control, pair this resource with RAID Log Template or Risk Management Bundle. That combination gives you a practical reference point, an editable artefact and a clearer path from discussion to usable project documentation.
Why you need this
| Before | After |
|---|---|
| Starting from a blank page or an old project file that may not match the current decision. | Using RAID Log Template as a structured starting point for the current workflow. |
| Important owners, assumptions or approval evidence are added late or inconsistently. | Key governance information is captured while the document is being prepared. |
| Sponsors and delivery teams spend review time interpreting the format. | The document follows a consistent PMOEasy structure and can be paired with Risk Management Bundle. |
Before
Starting from a blank page or an old project file that may not match the current decision.
After
Using RAID Log Template as a structured starting point for the current workflow.
Before
Important owners, assumptions or approval evidence are added late or inconsistently.
After
Key governance information is captured while the document is being prepared.
Before
Sponsors and delivery teams spend review time interpreting the format.
After
The document follows a consistent PMOEasy structure and can be paired with Risk Management Bundle.
Get started today
Use this article to choose the right control for your situation, then move into RAID Log Template or Risk Management Bundle when you are ready to document it.
Frequently asked questions
Who should use raid log versus risk register?
It is written for project managers, PMO teams, sponsors, change managers and consultants who need practical project documentation without rebuilding the structure from scratch.
Can this be adapted to my organisation's governance process?
Yes. PMOEasy resources and templates are designed as editable starting points, so you can adapt wording, approval steps, roles and evidence to your local standards.
