BlueVoyant releases its fifth annual global survey into supply chain cyber risk management. The 2024 study demonstrates progress in third-party risk management (TPRM) as respondents shifted focus from TPRM awareness and adoption to enforcement and compliance. The survey results also highlight ongoing investment in technology and talent to enhance supply chain security.
This year's study found 81% of organizations reported negative impacts from supply chain breaches over the past twelve months, down from 94% in 2023. While this is a marked improvement, the vast majority of organizations are still reporting breaches.
"More organizations than any previous year indicated that their primary focus is no longer on awareness of the third-party risk management problem or adoption of a program, but rather with the operational, day-to-day challenges of managing an effective program," says Joel Molinoff, global head of Supply Chain Defense at BlueVoyant. "While this progress also brings many new challenges, it indicates a major step in the right direction when contrasted with previous years where many organizations had poor tracking of third-party vendors, little to no leadership oversight, and virtually no collaboration when it came to remediating cyber issues."
Key Takeaways:
- Increased budget and resources: 86% of respondents say TPRM budgets have increased.
- Increased collaboration with suppliers: More than 36% of organizations — up from 19% in the prior year — say they have pursued a far more active role in working with their suppliers each step of the way to ensure remediation of identified cyber risks.
- Intense difficulty in healthcare: Of the six sectors evaluated in the survey, healthcare and pharmaceutical companies reported the highest rate (87%) of being negatively impacted by a breach in their third-party ecosystem over the last twelve months. More than a third of healthcare organizations (36%) reported having no means to detect threats in third parties, also the highest rate across industries.
- Monitoring and periodic vendor assessment need to take a higher priority: Only 32% of third-party vendors are reported to be regularly monitored (1,459 suppliers out of a total of 4,510 on average in this survey). At the same time, 50% of organizations say they do not periodically assess all their vendors because of challenges related to resources, technology, and expertise.