Three-day summit featuring customer-led sessions and product demos, connecting ProcessUnity customers, partners, and industry experts Fort Lauderdale, FL — June 3, 2026 — ProcessUnity, The Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM) company, hosts UNITE 2026: Fort Lauderdale, the U.S. edition of the UNITE 2026 Customer Summit series. The three-day event, happening from June 3-5, brings together ProcessUnity […]
Every year, Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM) teams are asked to do more. Vendor ecosystems are expanding even as cyber threats evolve faster and regulations get stricter. At the same time, risk teams face internal pressure from business stakeholders to onboard new vendors faster, provide timely reporting, and prove measurable returns on TPRM investments. Many programs […]
Your Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM) program can probably send a questionnaire automatically, score a vendor automatically, and flag a finding automatically. Then a human looks at the output, decides what to do with it, copies the output into another system, emails someone in procurement, and waits. That last part is the orchestration problem: the gap […]
For years, third parties had little control over how their cybersecurity posture was represented. External security ratings scan from the outside, often missing critical context and responses. Questionnaires are repetitive, time-consuming, and quickly outdated. In many cases, your customers make risk decisions about your business based on incomplete or misinterpreted data, without giving your team […]
As third-party risk management (TPRM) programs continue to evolve, organizations are under increasing pressure to assess vendors faster. To provide customers with a more scalable and transparent way to evaluate its security and compliance posture, Google Cloud released its latest annual update to its Global Risk Exchange assessment. More than a routine update, this refreshed […]
Organizations experience an average of 12 third party-related security incidents per year—not because they lack data, but because the data they have doesn’t connect. Point-in-time assessments, lack of shared context, and misaligned timelines create a dangerous illusion: that third-party risk is understood, when in reality it’s only partially visible.