Efficiency and security at scale: How Active Supply Chain Security delivers for Security AnalystsEfficiency and security at scale: How Active Supply Chain Security delivers for Security Analysts

Supply chain breaches are on the rise. AI-powered attackers are exploiting obscure nth-party vulnerabilities. Your organisation's security leader is looking to you for answers. 

What do you tell them – and what evidence do you rely on? 

In 2025, 85% of UK cyber security professionals experienced a digital supply chain security incident and 90% now consider supply chain security a leading concern. But outdated third-party risk management (TPRM) processes are limiting security analysts’ ability to uncover, monitor and mitigate today’s supply chain security risks. 

Traditional TPRM was not built for the modern day.

TPRM was created for a simpler world where suppliers were isolated entities and compliance was the primary objective. But today’s interconnected supply chains require continuous and coordinated defence, not static and siloed point-solutions. 

From Cyber and IT Risk Analysts to InfoSec and Data Protection Managers, cyber security professionals are being held back by traditional TPRM software’s lack of supply chain visibility, continuous monitoring and partner collaboration. 

To effectively analyse and combat modern cyber security risks, they require a supply chain security approach that:

  • Swaps tedious and manual assessment reviews for streamlined supplier onboarding. 
  • Provides access to continuously updated supplier risk data, not point-in-time snapshots. 
  • Visualises nth-party supply chain connections and identifies hidden concentration risks.
  • Provides alerts to emerging threats, breaches and attacks before suppliers report them.
  • Improves supplier relationships through seamless supplier collaboration.

In other words, security analysts need to move beyond outdated TPRM processes toward Active Supply Chain Security (ASCS).

ASCS: the modern security analyst’s approach to supply chain security

Active Supply Chain Security represents the evolution of TPRM for the modern era. It is not a feature upgrade to traditional assurance tools, but a new operating model for supply chain security, built on continuous visibility, shared intelligence, and systemic risk reduction across an interconnected ecosystem.

The result? Security analysts swap tedious and manual supplier assessments for what they do best: proactively mitigating actual risks and effectively strengthening organisational resilience. 

“TPRM was built for a simpler world. ASCS reflects today’s interconnected and rapidly evolving threat landscape. Its unified network-first approach reveals hidden concentration risks, provides nth-party visibility, and enables collective defence across your entire supply chain.” 
Haydn Brooks, Co-Founder and CEO, Risk Ledger

Architecturally flawed: 5 ways traditional TPRM fails modern security analysts

Are you stuck in a never-ending review cycle? 

Traditional third-party risk management (TPRM) processes typically involve endless questionnaires, periodic assessments, and unworkable risk scoring to assess risks posed by external suppliers. But this TPRM model no longer delivers the tools you need for today’s interconnected landscape. 

In 2025, our Every Link Matters report found that TPRM was severely lacking for cyber security professionals. In particular:

  • 36.8% complained about the lack of visibility into supply chain dependencies. 
  • 37.8% cited the inability to continuously monitor suppliers’ internal security controls. 
  • 34.6% regarded the lack of collaboration with industry peers as a key shortcoming. 

In short: TPRM isn’t failing you due to lack of effort - it’s failing you because it was built for compliance in a disconnected world, not resilience in a connected one.

Here’s five ways that traditional TPRM is holding you back.


1. Point-in-time assessments can’t keep up with real-time threats

A supplier’s security posture is fluid, not static. A questionnaire submitted on Monday can be irrelevant by Tuesday, so relying on annual assessments leaves you blind to real threats for 364 days of the year. What’s more, static assessments do not notify you when a supplier’s risk profile changes, so you only discover a weakness after it’s been exploited. 

2. Manual questionnaires waste time and generate incomparable data

72% of organisations still rely on spreadsheets to manage their TPRM programme. Without a standardised and automated assessment process, you end up constantly reviewing questionnaires and chasing suppliers instead of actually focusing on supply chain threats. This non-stop back-and-forth not only wastes your time, but also leads to rushed, fragmented and error-filled supplier answers, which makes it impossible to accurately assess risk levels across a diverse supply chain and slows down supplier onboarding. 

3.Check-box compliance drains resources without reducing risk

TPRM delivers ‘Compliance Theatre’. It’s a box-ticking performance to show regulators you’re ‘reducing risk’ rather than genuine defence. As suppliers can be 100% compliant with a specific framework and still be catastrophically vulnerable to a modern attack, this compliance-first TPRM mindset creates an unwanted imbalance in your workload: maximum assessment effort for minimal security reward. 

4. Nth party and concentration risks remain completely invisible

In a modern, hyper-connected economy, your organisation’s security is only as strong as an obscure company deep in your supply chain. But TPRM only vets your direct third-party relationships, ignoring the vast, invisible web of 4th, 5th, and nth parties that those suppliers rely on. These unseen nth party vulnerabilities and unidentified concentration risks (i.e. suppliers relying on the same data storage provider) leave you unprepared for cascading supply chain disruptions and firefighting problems that could have been avoided with proactive mitigation.

70% of organisations cannot currently identify concentration risks.

5. Fragmented approach to a shared threat

With traditional TPRM, there’s another security analyst, in another organisation, trying to solve the exact same problem as you, at the exact same time, but in total isolation. This self-protection model not only leads to wasted effort, but fails to recognise that a weakness anywhere in the ecosystem eventually becomes a threat to everyone. Then, when a security incident does occur, TPRM’s lack of collaboration and shared intelligence prevents successful mitigation and containment. 

The ASCS evolution: continuous, collective supply chain defence

Active Supply Chain Security is not:

  • Another questionnaire-heavy TPRM tool
  • A superficial external risk rating
  • A static trust centre
  • A compliance reporting system

Active Supply Chain Security is a continuous, network-first supply chain security model that connects organisations and suppliers into a living ecosystem of shared visibility and collective defence.

Just as cloud-based collaboration requires distributed security models, today’s interconnected supply chains require collective, coordinated network defence. It’s no longer enough to treat suppliers bilaterally - you need a more coordinated and ecosystem-wide approach to managing supply chain risk.

That’s why Active Supply Chain Security (ASCS) moves beyond traditional TPRM's static, siloed and compliance-focused approach to deliver: 

  • Standardisation at scale. Share one assessment with all suppliers, creating a common language of risk, improving risk data and eliminating duplicated effort.
  • Network-first visibility. See your supply chain as it truly exists - a living network of interconnected relationships - not a static list.
  • Continuous monitoring & insights. Identify concentration risks, nth-party dependencies, and emerging threats in real-time.
  • Collective defence. Work seamlessly with your suppliers, share intelligence with network partners, triage mitigation action with other analysts and collaboratively build ecosystem resilience. 

Here’s the breakdown of each element in more detail. 

1. Standardising security assessments

  • One common language of risk. Standardised assessments create a common language for the entire ecosystem, enabling seamless partner collaboration, efficient security reviews, simplified due diligence and streamlined regulatory reporting. 
  • One common profile. Suppliers maintain a single, standardised security profile, so you can access up-to-date, consistent and peer-validated supplier assessments at any time without needing to manually chase suppliers. 
  • Faster supplier onboarding. With all your suppliers on one network, you can assess suppliers instantly with pre-built workflows and standardised processes — reducing onboarding time by over 50%.

ScotRail cut supplier onboarding time by 54%

2. Visualising the supplier network

  • Network‑first supply chain mapping. With thousands of organisations sharing intelligence on one ever-growing network, you can stop guessing about supply chain dependencies and start mitigating risks. 
  • Nth‑party visibility. With the full picture of your nth tier connections, you can proactively uncover shared dependencies, take action to avoid cascading failures before they happen and impress your security team lead. 
  • Concentration risk insights. A bird's-eye view of your entire network’s concentration risks enables you to make risk-based decisions to mitigate sudden disruptions (i.e. sanctions, policy changes). 

70% of organisations cannot currently identify concentration risks.

3. Continuously identifying threats

  • Continuous risk monitoring. Receive continuous updates about changes in supplier risk profiles, including cyber security incidents or compliance lapses, so you can respond before any damage is done.
  • Real‑time risk signals. With real-time risk signals, intuitive dashboards and simulated disruptions, you can easily assess the impact of potential threats and learn about vulnerabilities before they become problems. 
  • Emerging threat detection. By pinpointing emerging threats and potential vulnerabilities, you have time to execute your response plans and get ahead of incidents before they escalate.

Less than 50% of organisations monitor risks beyond their direct, third-party relationships

4. Collectively defending the ecosystem

  • Secure collaboration. By creating a connected community of industry peers, you can share intelligence with network partners, identify common threats and reduce systemic risk across the ecosystem. 
  • Proactive incident response. By leveraging network-level insights, ecosystem mapping and emerging threat detection, your whole industry moves from reactive independent firefighting to proactive united response.
  • Collective defence model. With your security team working together with industry counterparts, you optimise the entire ecosystem's resources and ensure every link in the chain is fortified.

Benefits of Active Supply Chain Security for Security Analysts 

Reviewing endless assessments is not the best use of your time. It’s not why you were hired, it’s not the value you can deliver, yet it takes up a huge part of your day-to-day and keeps your security leaders up at night. 

Relying on outdated TPRM processes: 

  • Your security leaders are worried. 60% of cyber security leaders consider third party supply chain risk "innumerable and unmanageable.”
  • Your suppliers are exhausted. Suppliers’ security teams are drowning in repetitive questionnaire requests and sales teams are frustrated at stalling deals. 
  • Your potential is held back. While you should be focused on emerging supply chain risks, you’re wasting up to a week to review a single security assessment. 

But Active Supply Chain Security turns the ‘unmanageable’ into the ‘unthinkable’: a cyber security framework that bolsters resilience and delivers tangible benefits to security analysts.

1. Streamline supplier assessment reviews — with no manual effort

No more supplier rejection. No more chasing responses. No more onboarding bottlenecks. Instead of completing endless repetitive questionnaires, your suppliers fill out, maintain and update just one security profile, which means no more tedious reviews on your part. What’s more, as most of your suppliers are already on the network with completed profiles, you can connect and start assessing suppliers immediately with pre-built workflows and processes, reducing onboarding time by over 50%.

2. Access continuously-updated supplier data — without chasing

With suppliers maintaining live security profiles across all client relationships, you receive continuously updated and higher-quality security data. In addition, you get automated alerts each time their security posture changes without the need to manually chase them. This not only cuts out mundane and monotonous work from your day-to-day, but enables you to skip the back-and-forth with suppliers and deliver more actionable insights than static questionnaires to your security leader. 

3. See your entire supply chain network — at-a-glance

Say goodbye to linear spreadsheet-based lists of suppliers. By mapping your 3rd, 4th, and nth-party dependencies on a living network, you easily uncover hidden concentration risks and systemic vulnerabilities that traditional tools miss. By shining a light on changing nth-party connections, you also easily understand how disruptions cascade through your ecosystem and can make informed, risk-based decisions to mitigate threats. 

4. Demonstrate superior supply chain risk management with network-level insights

With standardised frameworks aligned to regulations, controls relevant to your organisation (i.e. ESG), network-level insights and compelling visualisation, you can easily demonstrate to security leaders and regulators that you're ahead of systemic risks, not just ticking compliance boxes. Meanwhile, by learning about emerging threats from community signals and gathering intelligence insights from other security analysts in the network, you can provide detailed security intel that far surpasses what traditional one-to-one supplier assessments deliver. 

5. Detect and respond to emerging threats proactively

See risks others can’t. By overlaying live threat intelligence across your supplier ecosystem, you quickly identify which suppliers are potentially impacted, understand exposure pathways, and can prioritise remediation efforts. What’s more, real-time security updates enable you to identify supplier exposure (and cascading risks) earlier than traditional tools allow, so you know now what's happening before your suppliers tell you and can proactively mitigate threats with other community partners.

“Security leaders, analysts and suppliers working together across the ecosystem is one of the most powerful levers in supply chain security. ASCS supports this coordinated defence while strengthening operational resilience.”
Haydn Brooks, Co-Founder and CEO, Risk Ledger

5 signs it’s time to move toward Active Supply Chain Security 


1. Security is a bottleneck when onboarding suppliers

Are you reviewing endless security assessments and constantly asking suppliers the same questions when onboarding new suppliers? 

Non-standardised assessments lead to duplicated effort, incomparable security data and onboarding delays. But with ASCS’ standardised and centralised supplier assessment processes, you can create a common language of risk, easily compare suppliers’ security postures, rapidly verify supplier statements and accelerate supplier onboarding — at scale. 

Signs you need ASCS

❌ Spreadsheet-based questionnaires for new suppliers

❌ Inconsistent supplier responses

❌ Incomparable security data

2. Supplier security assessments are updated periodically 

Are you relying on third-party suppliers updating their security assessments every 6-12 months? 

Long gaps between assessments deliver quickly-outdated security data, leaving you on the back foot for the majority of the year. But with ASCS, your suppliers constantly update one security profile, so you receive real-time alerts to changes in their security posture, identify risks proactively and can plan remediation efforts for emerging threats before it’s too late. 

Signs you need ASCS

❌ Point-in-time assessments

❌ Chasing suppliers to update their security profiles

❌ Outdated security questions not aligned to new regulations

3. Cannot see your supply chain connections beyond 3rd or 4th parties

Are you basing your entire supply chain security on the security postures of your contracted Tier 1 suppliers? 

Focusing on third-party suppliers leaves you blind to network concentration risks and exposed to nth-party vulnerabilities cascading through the ecosystem. But with ASCS, map your supplier ecosystem as it truly exists to uncover your hidden nth-party dependencies, track changing supplier relationships, and identify concentration risks shared between your suppliers — at-a-glance.

Signs you need ASCS

❌ Can’t name your suppliers’ suppliers

❌ Unaware of ecosystem concentration risks

❌ Not tracking suppliers’ changing connections 

4. Reactive and independent firefighting to third-party breaches

Are you finding out about supply chain breaches from third parties and only initiating defence mechanisms after attacks have occurred? 

Waiting to find out about breaches from impacted suppliers is already too late. But with ASCS’ continuous alerts and proactive threat management, you get immediate visibility into which suppliers are exposed, how vulnerabilities cascade through your ecosystem and where to prioritise action. 

Signs you need ASCS

❌ No coordinated plan with supply chain partners for breaches

❌ Not sharing security intelligence with partners

❌ Waiting until threats reach your door to take action

5. Satisfying compliance regulations but still suffering breaches

Are your suppliers 100% compliant with industry regulations, but you’re still learning about breaches in the supply chain?

Even if you’re manually updating your security questionnaire for new regulations, point-in-time compliance audits do not offer sufficient protection for today's rapidly evolving supply chain threats. But with ASCS, you can continually detect real-time threats, free up your security team to remediate emerging risks, and streamline compliance reporting with up-to-date data. 

Signs you need ASCS

❌ Equating compliance with adequate protection

❌ Using outdated data for reporting

❌ Manually updating assessments when regulations change

Sectors most vulnerable to TRPM software limitations 

Any sector with vast interconnected supplier networks can suffer from nth party and concentration vulnerabilities. But if you work in an industry that is heavily-regulated and highly-prized by cyberattackers - such as Financial Services, Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) and the Public Sector - then traditional TPRM is leaving you dangerously exposed. 

Financial Services

  • Attacks are at an all-time high. 82% of UK financial firms were hit by supply chain attacks in the last 12 months (56% suffered 2+).
  • Obscure nth parties are putting you at risk. E.g. The data breach at SitusAMC impacted 1000+ downstream financial institutions, including the likes of JP MorganChase and Morgan Stanley.
  • Regulations are getting tougher. It’s your responsibility to adhere to the likes of the UK’s FCA and PRA Operational Resilience rules, NYDFS 500 and EU's DORA. 


Critical National Infrastructure

  • State-sponsored targeting. 95% of UK CNI organisations suffered a data breach in 2024-2025, with state-supported actors increasingly targeting critical infrastructure. 
  • Non-resilient supply chains. CNI relies on sub-contractors that are traditionally less cyber security-conscious and frequently targeted by cyber attackers (especially the construction industry). 
  • Tough new regulations. Regulators are applying increasing scrutiny to CNI's cyber security resilience, with the UK’s Cyber Security and Resilience Bill (2025/2026) raising non-compliance penalties to £17 million or 4% of global turnover. 

Public Sector

  • Public Sector in attackers’ crosshairs. The UK National Cyber Security Centre recorded a 130% rise in “nationally significant” cyber attacks in 2025. 
  • Complex supply chains. It only takes one weak link to bring down the entire interconnected Public Sector supply chain, such as CrowdStrike’s IT outage's impact on major transport operators. 
  • Increasing scrutiny. For governmental bodies, it’s not just regulations that are getting tougher, but also public scrutiny - with the National Audit Office claiming the government does not know how vulnerable its legacy systems are to cyber threats that are ‘severe and advancing quickly’.

Risk Ledger’s Active Supply Chain Security approach

In 2018, Risk Ledger pioneered the network-first approach to supply chain security. Now, we’re leading the shift to Active Supply Chain Security.

By standardising supplier data, connecting thousands of organisations onto a living network, and overlaying proactive threat intelligence, our four-stage approach is helping organisations move beyond fragmented TPRM toward a more connected and continuous supply chain security model.

  1. Standardised Assessment Frameworks - Suppliers complete one profile, keep it updated, and share it across the network, creating a common language of risk.

  2. Supply Chain Visualisation - We map thousands of organisations, enabling nth-party visibility, concentration risk detection, and shared intelligence.

  3. Proactive Threat Management - We overlay new vulnerabilities or attacks on the network map and database in real-time, highlighting impacted suppliers and cascading network exposure, enabling you to prioritise remediation. 
  1. Defend-as-One - We enable collaboration and intelligence-sharing with the wider ecosystem, optimising resources and building network-wide cyber resilience. 

Together, these capabilities form the foundation for organisations progressing toward Active Supply Chain Security — continuous visibility, systemic risk reduction, and collaborative defence across Financial Services, Critical National Infrastructure and the Public Sector. Because in today's interconnected world, every link matters.

 Customer Spotlight: Synectic Solutions

Synectics Solutions is a leading provider of fraud prevention and risk intelligence solutions, trusted by over 160 organisations across financial services and government as their first line of defence. 

Challenge: Synectics Solutions’ was relying on a laborious, manual TPRM process - based on customised questionnaires and spreadsheets - which was time-consuming and unscalable.

Solution: Risk Ledger's platform enabled Synectic’s compliance team to automate supplier assessments, standardise due diligence, and constantly monitor changing supplier profiles, while also delivering far-reaching visibility over their extended supply chain. 

Result: 

  • Clear, auditable records for new FCA compliance rules.
  • Seamless risk collaboration between internal teams. 
  • Cut onboarding time in half. 

“I’d estimate that we spend less than half the time to onboard a new supplier using Risk Ledger than using previous processes.” Steve Sands, Information Security Consultant and Data Protection Officer, Synectics Solutions

Read more

Your Active Supply Chain Security checklist 

For security analysts in highly-regulated and targeted industries, Active Supply Chain Security is not an optional TPRM upgrade. It’s the difference between monotonous and time-consuming review cycles and industry-leading supply chain risk mitigation. 

To protect against today’s supply chain threats, make sure you are:

  • Using one standardised supplier assessment when onboarding new suppliers.

  • Receiving continuous updates and alerts when suppliers change their security posture.

  • Getting live visibility of nth party relationships and concentration risks deep in your supply chain ecosystem.

  • Seeing new vulnerabilities emerge in real-time and instantly know who is impacted.

  • Seamlessly collaborating with supply chain partners, sharing threat information and coordinating mitigation action.

In today’s interconnected world, security is no longer an individual effort. It requires organisations and suppliers to Defend-as-One — strengthening every link across the ecosystem.

Defend-as-One

Cyber security approaches evolve with the digital threat landscape. 

Zero Trust Architectures now protect cloud-connected IoT devices. Endpoint Protection Platforms (EPP) combats today’s rapidly evolving zero-day threats. Active Supply Chain Security enables today's interconnected supply chains to defend-as-one. 

Find out how other security analysts are enhancing their supply chain security processes with ASCS. 

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