What is third-party risk management (TPRM)?
TPRM is the discipline of identifying, assessing, treating, and monitoring risk from vendors and partners. Learn components, roles, and tooling.
What is third-party risk management (TPRM)?
TPRM is the discipline of identifying, assessing, treating, and monitoring risk from vendors and partners. Learn components, roles, and tooling.
What is vendor onboarding? Benefits and best practices
Vendor onboarding connects procurement, security, and IT provisioning. Learn benefits, steps, and how to avoid access sprawl.
When tokenmaxxing leads to riskmaxxing: Shadow AI and what security leaders should do
When tokenmaxxing leads to riskmaxxing: Shadow AI and what security leaders should do — When Tokenmaxxing Leads To Riskmaxxing Shadow AI. Vendor Risk, AI guidance…
Who is responsible for SOC 2? Roles, RACI, and how to avoid a one-person program
SOC 2 is a company-wide program—not only security. Learn who owns SOC 2, which teams contribute evidence, and how to assign accountability before audit fieldwork.
Who needs FedRAMP Moderate? Key requirements and how to prepare
FedRAMP Moderate: FedRAMP Moderate is the default for many multi-tenant cloud products handling federal information. Know the audience, co…
Who needs ISO 42001 certification? Industries, triggers, and when to start
ISO 42001 fits organizations that build, deploy, or rely on AI in regulated or high-trust markets. Learn who needs certification and when an AIMS pays off.
Who needs to comply with DORA? All your questions answered
Who needs to comply with DORA? See the 21 in-scope entity types, exemptions, the January 2025 deadline, penalties, ICT third-party rules, and four steps to get compliant.
Who needs to comply with FedRAMP?
FedRAMP applies when federal agencies use your cloud service—or when you sell through channels that require a FedRAMP authorization package.
Why cheaper code isn't always cheap: build vs buy for compliance platforms
AI makes writing code faster—but owning it still costs more. See why building a GRC platform in-house often costs 3–6× buying SecureSlate over five years.
Why is SOC 2 compliance important? (enterprise deals, trust, and risk reduction)
SOC 2 helps close enterprise deals, reduce security review friction, and improve internal discipline. Learn why SOC 2 compliance matters for SaaS and service orgs.

Hi! I'm Jamie. Curious about your current compliance challenges and how automation might help your team?