The Governance Desk helps senior leaders design and operate the architectural layer between their governance domains so they can see and govern the risks their dashboards cannot.
Who This Is For
These engagements are designed for enterprises that already have governance programs in place and need to understand why risk is still surfacing between them.
Typical sponsors include:
- Chief Risk Officer (CRO)
- Chief Data Officer (CDO)
- Chief Information Security Officer (CISO)
- Chief Audit Executive (CAE)
- Board Risk Committee Chairs
Connectivity Maturity Assessment
Measure the risk your dashboards cannot see.
What it is
A facilitated assessment that measures how well your governance domains function as a connected architecture, not just how mature each one is on its own.
What you get
- A quantified view of Connectivity Debt across your enterprise.
- A ranked map of the intersections where that debt concentrates.
- A cross-domain accountability map showing which senior roles own which pieces of the gap.
What changes
- Investment decisions shift from which domain is loudest to where Connectivity Debt is deepest.
- Boards see a single picture of governance that reflects how risk actually forms across domains.
- Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs), Chief Risk Officers (CROs), Chief Audit Executives (CAEs), and Chief Data Officers (CDOs) gain a shared view of the risks that live between their programs.
Request a Connectivity Maturity Assessment
Share a few details about your current governance landscape, and we will schedule a working session to scope the engagement.
Request a Connectivity Maturity AssessmentGovernance Architecture Design
Turn mature programs into a coherent architecture.
What it is
A design engagement that applies the ClarityOS model to your environment. It defines how your data, security, risk, compliance, and business governance programs connect to produce a single, accountable view of enterprise risk.
What you get
- A ClarityOS-aligned governance architecture map for your critical systems, vendors, and decision processes.
- Cross-Domain Risk Objects defined for your highest-exposure intersections, with named owners, failure paths, and escalation routes built into your governance design before the next system goes live.
- A set of architectural design principles and patterns your teams can apply as new systems and capabilities are introduced.
What changes
- New initiatives launch with cross-domain ownership, escalation routes, and failure paths defined in advance.
- War rooms shift from discovering who owns a compound event to executing a response that was already architected.
Explore a Governance Architecture Design Engagement
Use the contact form to request an introductory conversation about scope, timeline, and fit.
Explore a Governance Architecture Design EngagementCross-Domain Risk Function Design
Give the architecture an owner.
What it is
A targeted engagement to design and stand up the Cross-Domain Risk Function: the organizational capability that creates, maintains, and activates Cross-Domain Risk Objects and operates the cross-domain signal routes.
What you get
- A clear mandate and scope for the Cross-Domain Risk Function.
- Proposed reporting lines, decision rights, and interfaces with existing governance teams.
- A 6 to 12 month activation roadmap tied to your current structure and constraints.
What changes
- Cross-domain incidents have a named owner before they occur.
- GRC shifts from coordinating within domains to governing the intersections between them.
Design Your Cross-Domain Risk Function
Request a working session to explore how this capability would operate in your organization.
Design Your Cross-Domain Risk FunctionHow to Engage
- 1Send a brief description of your role, your current governance landscape, and the challenge you are trying to solve.
- 2We schedule a 45 to 60 minute working session to map your current state against the ClarityOS architecture.
- 3You receive a proposed engagement scope, including outcomes, timeline, and investment.
To begin, use the contact form or email [email protected] with the subject line: Engagement Inquiry.