Pulling it all together: A special report on GRC

22.08.2012
I like the concept of governance, risk and compliance (GRC) for two reasons. One reason is completely tactical, the other completely conceptual. First, the tactical: compliance complexity reduction. This garbled regulatory compliance landscape is madness. Madness! Every year for six years running, more than half of our survey respondents have said they will spend an increasing amount of time on regulatory compliance work.

Yes, it's possible to try to map your own controls to the peculiar set of regulatory regimes you must observe, but surely that time can be better spent elsewhere? Better to have an out-of-the-box approach. That's something GRC tools promise to help with.

Second, the conceptual: Security calls for ambition. Big ideas. GRC--not just the software but the process--is a big idea. The C (compliance) aspect is more mature than the G and the R, but the attempt to measure and mitigate Risk through better Governance is where the greater value of these efforts ultimately will lie. GRC can inform and work hand-in-glove with the broad of which I am an unabashed fan and cheerleader.

GRC has been aptly described as "a process backstopped by technology." In this special report (originally published as CSO's Digital Spotlight on GRC), we look at both elements.

Bob Violino digs into the software offerings in , and two veteran security leaders offer their perspective on the directions in which GRC software can grow to fulfill its promise in . Also read implementation tips from members of the gated CISO community Wisegate in and the case study ?.

A common theme in all these stories is this: Don't forget process. Process is primary. GRC implementations work when they are built on a solid foundation of intelligent organization.