Types of due diligence
Summarize
Summary of Types of Due Diligence
The due diligence process involves various types aimed at assessing the critical aspects of a third party. The types of due diligence conducted depend on the engagement's nature, criticality, and associated risks. Understanding these types helps organizations mitigate potential risks effectively.
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Key Features
- Information Security Due Diligence: Evaluates data protection practices, cybersecurity measures, and employee training to safeguard sensitive information and prevent data breaches.
- Financial Due Diligence: Assesses the financial health of the third party by reviewing financial statements and indicators, ensuring they can fulfill obligations.
- Legal Due Diligence: Examines legal compliance, contracts, and ongoing litigation to identify potential legal risks impacting your organization.
- Operational Due Diligence: Evaluates operational capabilities, infrastructure, and processes to ensure the third party can deliver required products or services.
- Compliance Due Diligence: Verifies adherence to laws and regulations, identifying potential compliance gaps that could lead to legal or reputational issues.
- Reputation Due Diligence: Assesses the third party’s integrity and past performance through background checks and media coverage, ensuring alignment with organizational values.
Key Outcomes
Utilizing Third-party Risk Management tools enhances the due diligence process by providing:
- Questionnaire templates for financial assessment sent through the third-party portal.
- Due Diligence Request (DDR) workflows for orchestrating internal and external assessments.
- Reports and dashboards for tracking active requests and timelines.
Access these features via the Vendor Management Workspace, ensuring activated plugins for preconfigured workflows and risk mapping. This structured approach to due diligence helps organizations make informed decisions and mitigate risks effectively.
In the due diligence process, you typically conduct several types of due diligence to gather relevant information and assess various aspects of the third party. The particular types of due diligence that you conduct vary depending on the nature and criticality of the engagement and the risks involved.
- Information Security due diligence
Information security due diligence is critical. It involves evaluating the third party's data protection practices, cybersecurity measures, and information handling processes. This includes assessing their data security policies, incident response capabilities, encryption practices, and employee training on data protection. The objective is to safeguard sensitive information and mitigate the risk of data breaches or unauthorized access.
- Financial due diligence
Financial due diligence involves assessing the financial health and stability of the third party. It includes reviewing financial statements, analyzing profitability, liquidity, debt levels, cash flow, and other financial indicators. The goal is to understand the financial viability of the third party and help ensure that they have the capacity to fulfill their obligations.
- Legal due diligence
Legal due diligence involves examining the legal and regulatory compliance of the third party. It includes reviewing contracts, agreements, licenses, permits, and legal documents. The purpose is to identify any legal risks, liabilities, ongoing litigation, or regulatory non-compliance that could impact your organization's interests.
- Operational due diligence
Operational due diligence focuses on assessing the operational capabilities and processes of the third party. It involves evaluating their infrastructure, facilities, supply chain, production processes, quality controls, and capacity to meet your organization's requirements. The goal is to help ensure that the third party can effectively deliver the desired products or services.
- Compliance due diligence
Compliance due diligence involves verifying the third party's adherence to applicable laws, regulations, and industry standards. It includes assessing their compliance programs, policies, and procedures related to areas such as anti-corruption, data privacy, information security, environmental practices, and labor standards. The objective is to identify any compliance gaps or risks that could result in legal or reputational issues for your organization.
- Reputation due diligence
Reputation due diligence focuses on evaluating the third party's reputation, integrity, and past performance. It involves conducting background checks, reviewing references, searching for news or media coverage, and assessing any past controversies or ethical issues. The purpose is to help ensure that the third party has a positive reputation and aligns with your organization's values and expectations.
Financial due diligence example
Financial due diligence evaluates a third party or engagement's financial health and stability. Third-party Risk Management supports this process by providing:
- Questionnaire templates with financial questions and document requests that you can send to the third party or engagement using an assessment through the third‑party portal.
For more information see, Sample questionnaires and Create an external assessment.
- Due Diligence Request (DDR) workflows that orchestrate internal review, external assessment, approvals, and contract risk checks.
For more information see, Due diligence workflow.
- Reports and dashboards to track active requests, aging items, and completion timelines.
For more information see, Monitoring the due diligence request process.
Access these features by navigating to the Vendor Management Workspace:
- Go to . On the Risk tab, select the due diligence management icon
.
- On the Due diligence management page, select a stage (IRQ, Due diligence, Approvals, Contract risk, Final review, Closed) to view actionable lists.
- Open a Due diligence request record to manage the workflow.
- To send financial questionnaires or document requests from a DDR or an Assessment record, create an assessment.
- Use the Due Diligence Management page to monitor status and aging.
For more information see, Monitoring the due diligence request process and Create an external assessment.