An important beginning step when vetting vendors is to rate the risk associated with them. The standard rating system seen is low, moderate and high. You may already be familiar with how to identify high-risk and critical vendors. A simple set of questions can be used to help you determine whether the sudden loss of the vendor would cause a significant disruption to your business operations or customers, which would make it critical, or whether they have access to any sensitive data, which is just one criteria example that would make it high risk.
Low-risk vendors are probably a little easier for you to identify. These vendors have no access to sensitive data and are easily replaceable when needed. A landscape company or janitorial service company would generally fall into this category.
So, that leaves us with the more ambiguous category of moderate-risk vendors. How exactly can we identify these vendors and why is it important to do so? Let’s review some simple guidelines that will help you categorize this more indeterminate level of risk.
Since there isn’t a clear set of guidelines for what is considered moderate risk, it may help to start at the top and work your way down. This will ensure that you appropriately identify your high-risk vendors first. Use your basic risk-driving questions to determine if the vendor’s inherent risk is high:
If the answers to one or both questions are yes, you’ll proceed with the pre-determined due diligence for high-risk or critical vendors.
If the answers to the above questions are no, the vendor will likely fall somewhere between low or moderate. The questions below will help you determine if there’s enough risk to categorize the vendor as moderate.
Answering no to all these questions probably means that you’re dealing with a low-risk vendor. However, your vendor is most likely moderate-risk if one or more of these questions is applicable.
This is a call only your organization can make. Perhaps you’re more okay with an attestation or whitepaper over an entire controls assessment. Maybe you’re willing to accept a SOC 1 or a simple review of their information security policies. Perhaps you’ll allow for some control weaknesses that you wouldn’t in cases that involve NPI or PII. The choice is yours, and it’s best to define a standard that can be spoken to and also justified by the resources available to you.
It’s ultimately the decision of your organization to determine what warrants a moderate-risk rating. You may decide that while there’s some level of risk associated with a vendor, it isn’t necessarily high and doesn’t need to be as heavily vetted and monitored as your high and critical vendors, but you know you need to do more that the bare minimum. That is your moderate-risk sweet-spot.
Remember: There’s no ONE right answer; don’t over complicate things and trust your gut.
Now that you understand what a moderate-risk vendor is, learn the other types of third-party vendor risk. Download the eBook.