Prior to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), organizations were accustomed to collecting large sums of data that were often stored by third parties on their behalf. Though many of these organizations may have had a vendor risk management (VRM) program in place, the GDPR's increased focus on the risks of outsourcing data processing activities, extensive extraterritorial scope, and hefty fines have placed a new sense of urgency on the need for robust VRM programs.
Throughout our series on vendor risk management, we have discussed the ways VRM is changing today, from the biggest challenges to strategies for identifying and mitigating vendor risks. In this post, we focus on this year’s seminal privacy regulation, the GDPR, its impact on third-party risk management, and how your VRM program must evolve to meet these new requirements.
The GDPR has placed an unprecedented level of accountability on third-parties (those companies that process data on behalf of other companies). Under the GDPR, in-scope vendors must increase security and privacy measures around personal data-processing activities. The regulation has five key articles pertaining to the new responsibilities of third parties:
While the regulation has increased the requirements for vendors, the responsibility for incidents or data breaches remains within the data controller. This has led many organizations to restructure and strengthen their VRM programs.
The first step in aligning a VRM program with the GDPR is building a vendor assessment framework that addresses the organization’s specific requirements and incorporates recognized best practices. Developing this framework requires gathering and reviewing existing policy and procedures documentation, evaluating vendor questionnaires, selecting metrics for vendor assessments, and identifying opportunities for improvement.
Controllers can use the GDPR as an opportunity to establish or reevaluate the baseline requirements necessary for vendor relationships. As explained in part 2 of this series, the types of services to be provided, the purpose for data sharing, and the data types the vendor will access should determine which requirements a vendor must meet.
Concerning GDPR compliance, controllers must be able to identify in-scope vendors that have access to and/or may be processing EU personal data. When evaluating whether a third party will meet the organization’s baseline security and privacy requirements, organizations should consider:
Once an organization has determined that a vendor meets their baseline requirements and decides to enter into a contractual agreement, the contracting organization should ensure that the contract includes specific GDPR requirements, such as:
After a third-party vendor relationship has been established, a necessary, but often overlooked, step is conducting periodic vendor reviews. These evaluations and assessments should include the review of contracts, the lawful bases for data processing, security measures, and legal obligations. Data controllers can leverage the information gathered during baselining activities to help in these evaluations. They can also track their third parties based on the information obtained through the assessment activities. For example, this can be a review of documented technical and organizational safeguards found in SOC reports, contracts, or other types of attestation, which can be used to verify that the processor aligns with the necessary standards and controls for data protection and privacy, the requirements of the GDPR, and your organization’s unique requirements.
Third-party relationships will require a renewed focus for organizations who must be GDPR compliant. During this first year of the GDPR especially, organizations and their vendors will need to reevaluate key processes, policies, and contracts to ensure they meet these new requirements. Vendors will need to develop a firm understanding of their new data protection responsibilities under the GDPR, as well as the consequences of noncompliance, and make necessary changes to secure the data they handle on behalf of their clients. Contracting organizations must establish a detailed framework for their VRM program that aligns with the GDPR, identify opportunities for improvement, and carefully evaluate their current vendor relationships. Under the GDPR, both organizations and their vendors have the heavy responsibility of protecting data subjects’ information, a task that requires careful evaluation, improvement, and ongoing maintenance.
Focal Point specializes in helping companies and third-party organizations evaluate and improve their vendor risk and data protection programs and has a team of experts dedicated to understanding the requirements of the GDPR.
Disclaimer: Focal Point Data Risk, LLC is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. This content is intended for informational purposes only.
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