
Third-party risk management is no longer a “nice to have”. With regulations like DORA, NIS2, and the AI Act on the horizon or already in force, and with geopolitical uncertainty and ESG expectations rising, organizations are under growing pressure to understand and manage the risks hidden in their supplier landscape.
KPMG sees that reality up close. In a recent conversation with one of their third-party risk leaders, Hokkie Blogg, Partner Advisory at KPMG, we explored our brand-new partnership with them and how our collaboration helps clients move from policy on paper to risk management in practice.
3rdRisk is a tool that is fit for purpose and relatively easy to deploy. It’s a complete tool, with a lot of regulations built in out of the box, that can be plug-and-play included in the tool’s monitoring. — Hokkie Blogg, Partner, KPMG in the Netherlands
The relationship between 3rdRisk and KPMG did not start from scratch. It goes back to earlier collaborations between our founders and KPMG’s team in a previous chapter of their careers.
When our KPMG counterpart moved firms, the relationship moved with them. They already knew the 3rdRisk proposition, had seen how it addressed third-party risk challenges in practice, and recognized the same issues at KPMG clients. That familiarity made it a natural step to explore a formal partnership.
In their words, the foundation for the collaboration lies in three things:
From there, the idea was simple. KPMG brings deep advisory expertise. 3rdRisk brings a focused, fit-for-purpose TPRM platform. Together, we can help organizations not only design their approach but actually run it.
Naturally, we were also curious about what KPMG sees in the market that led them to recognize that their clients could benefit from a collaboration with 3rdRisk. Simply, KPMG’s clients are dealing with a mix of external pressure and internal complexity.
On the external side, several forces are pushing TPRM up the agenda:
On the internal side, clients often struggle with very practical questions:
KPMG already supports organizations with the strategic and policy side of this. They help define TPRM policies, set risk appetites, and identify which controls are needed. Naturally, clients then ask the next question: How do we implement this in a manageable way, without drowning in spreadsheets?
That is where technology, more specifically, 3rdRisk comes in.
When KPMG looked at the technology landscape, they saw a familiar pattern. Many solutions are built as classic GRC tools first, with TPRM added as one of many modules. These platforms can be powerful, but they also tend to be complex to implement, tightly linked to broader ERP or GRC environments, and heavy on licensing and configuration. They are not always a fit for purpose solution.
3rdRisk is different in a few important ways:
For KPMG, this makes 3rdRisk a practical tool to support the advisory work they are already doing. They can help clients define what “good” looks like, then configure 3rdRisk so that policies, risk appetite, and controls actually show up in day-to-day supplier management.
KPMG knows how traditional GRC implementations work, and they also know how challenging they can be. For many organizations, a full GRC rollout is a multi-year journey. This is time, and often money, that isn’t always readily available. Especially when a company already has various tools in their toolkit, with limited resources for a complex, expensive GRC tool.
The collaboration with 3rdRisk gives clients two choices:
Another practical aspect is flexibility. KPMG can use the 3rdRisk platform as part of joint propositions with us, or under a white-label structure in their own offerings. That means they can tailor how the platform shows up for each client, while still relying on the same core capabilities and technology.
For clients, the benefit is straightforward. They get:
That means you can book plenty of progress, without being thrown into the deep end. No complex tooling for you to wrap your head around. Instead, you can count on KPMG and 3rdRisk to help you go from theoretical policies to practical risk management.
In our discussion, we were also curious about the biggest recurring challenges that KPMG sees in third-party risk programs. Three key themes stood out.
In their view, a strong TPRM program starts with those fundamentals. You decide what risks you accept, then define policies and controls to match. A platform like 3rdRisk helps to embed that logic in day-to-day processes, so TPRM does not remain a theoretical framework. In fact, it even helps you assign things like risk appetite, so you can evaluate your measures and the residual risk.
Regulation reinforces this more structured, practical approach. Directives such as DORA and NIS2 explicitly require organizations to look at third-party and supply chain risks. Once you start addressing those requirements, it makes sense to take a broader, more integrated view of third-party risk rather than focusing on a single topic in isolation. After all, managing only a portion of the risks is like cleaning only a part of your house. It’s a good start, but you’d feel much better with it all done.
For KPMG, the collaboration with 3rdRisk is a way to connect their advisory strength with a practical, purpose-built TPRM solution. For 3rdRisk, it is an opportunity to support more organizations that are ready to move beyond spreadsheets and scattered questionnaires.
Both parties share a common goal: to make third-party risk management structured, transparent, and easy to manage for everyone; from the board and risk team to the suppliers responding to the questions’
Want to learn more about the 3rdRisk platform? Request a walkthrough to see it in action.