Third Party Therapy - Oliver Jones - Should TPRM and Procurement work closer together - the evolution and technical solutions.
A conversation with Oliver Jones from H&Z Consulting on the evolution of TPRM from a sub-function of Procurement to a key function on its own with board level focus - how far from Procurement should it go and what are the technology solutions that can help bring them together?
--------
56:30
--------
56:30
Third Party Therapy - Nathan Hopkins - ESCROW - a valuable tool or a box ticking exercise.
Great conversation with Nathan Hopkins from The ESCROW Company discussing the evolution of ESCROW, how it brings resilience to SaaS solutions and what happens when you invoke it
--------
56:13
--------
56:13
Third Party Therapy - Will Cooke & Jack Birch - Why is there a shortage of TPRM people?
A great conversation with WIll Cooke and Jack Birch from Procurement Heads on the shortage of good TPRM talent, barriers to entry, how companies are recruiting and why there are no 12 year olds wanting to get into TPRM.
--------
50:59
--------
50:59
Third Party Therapy - Charlie Jones - Dropping the S-BOM - a new approach to third party software assessment
Join me in a conversation with Charlie Jones from Reversing Labs to talk about the limitations of traditional cyber controls, a new approach to testing - Static Binary Analysis - and the impact of recent regulations.
--------
58:36
--------
58:36
Third Party Therapy - Stephen Boyer - The Changing World of Cyber Monitoring
Great conversation with Stephen Boyer - Chief Innovation Officer and co-founder of Bitsight about the growth of the cyber threat and how TPRM can use data to dynamically monitor this risk.
A bi-weekly podcast about the world of third party risk. Many of us are in the same position, facing ever evolving challenges, trying to keep up with new regulations and laws and it often feels like we are struggling to keep up. I want to really open up the conversation on this topic by speaking with practitioners to discuss key topics, understand what worked well and what went wrong, what people struggle with and to bring in ideas from other industries too. I’ll be asking the questions that folks may feel silly or uncomfortable asking too.
So, why not join me for a series of informal interviews and discussions to really open up the conversation for the third party risk community?