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The Diligent team
GRC trends and insights

Turn speak-up and third-party signals into an early-warning system

February 17, 2026
0 min read
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The fastest risk sensor in your organization isn’t a dashboard. It’s your people.

Every concern raised. Every pattern in investigations. Every third‑party or policy signal that suggests emerging risk.

For today’s compliance leaders, ethics and integrity programs are no longer check-the-box requirements. They’re early-warning systems for operational disruption, financial exposure and erosions in brand trust. Directors are looking for the same early signals — with 18% now explicitly including whistleblower allegations and reputational fallout in crisis-planning scenarios.

And the difference between “early warning” and “late reaction” often comes down to whether those signals live in a fragmented jumble of tools or in a unified system that lets compliance see patterns early and act decisively.

Connected compliance drives faster risk detection

Boards and regulators increasingly want proof that ethics and compliance isn’t just reactive, but that it’s designed to detect risk sooner and respond faster.

That’s why CCOs are being judged on:

  • Time to triage and resolution
  • Defensibility of investigations and remediation
  • Ability to spot patterns across entities and third parties
  • Ability to show that training and policies change behavior

Boards share this frustration: 39% say technology-enabled compliance monitoring tools would most improve oversight, signaling that manual, siloed programs can’t keep pace with today’s risk velocity.

But fragmented tools make this nearly impossible. When policy management lives in one system, training in another, cases in still another and third-party due diligence somewhere else, you don’t have insight. You have puzzles.

And puzzles cost time you don’t have.

Connected compliance: The operating system for state-of-the-art programs

The compliance programs pulling ahead are doing something deceptively simple: consolidating the fundamentals.

By connecting the various elements of a credible and defensible compliance program — including policy management, conflicts of interest, training, whistleblowing — compliance leaders can build a single source of truth. Not just for records, but for evidence-backed narratives.

That matters because regulators don’t just ask what you did. They ask:

  • What you knew
  • When you knew it
  • What you changed because of it
  • Whether your program actually worked

Connected systems make it easier to show proactive governance, and to demonstrate that compliance is a living program, not a binder on a shelf.

Whistleblowing and investigations as early-warning engines

Speak-up processes and investigations aren’t just case management. They’re intelligence, particularly when they have purpose-built AI embedded in them.

Early-warning systems need digital-first reporting channels so employees can raise concerns quickly. Structured workflows keep handling consistent. Faster routing, triage and escalation get issues to the right teams without delay. And strong documentation ensures every step is defensible and connected to the bigger compliance picture.

This becomes crucial when the real question isn’t just “What happened?” but:

  • Is this tied to a specific entity?
  • Does it involve a distributor, agent, or supplier?
  • Is this part of a pattern we’ve seen before?
  • Did the relevant group complete training?
  • Are there policy or conflict signals that matter?

In many organizations, answering those questions takes weeks because the data is scattered across systems and inboxes. That’s no longer acceptable — operationally or defensibly.

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Third-party risk, sanctions and modern slavery in one view

The extended enterprise is where compliance risk gets complicated fast.

Sanctions regimes shift. Modern slavery enforcement increases. Supply chains stretch across regions with different regulatory expectations. And third-party reputational risk can ignite overnight.

That’s why leading compliance programs treat third-party risk as continuous — not periodic.

With advanced, AI-equipped third-party monitoring tools, compliance teams can combine:

  • Continuous external monitoring
  • Ownership and sanctions screening
  • Reputational and adverse media signals
  • Deeper due diligence intelligence and benchmarking

This doesn’t just reduce risk. It changes posture. Instead of waiting for an annual review cycle, CCOs can detect and act earlier — and prove they did.

From “incident” to “institutional insight” in minutes, not weeks

Here’s what “connected compliance” looks like in practice:

  1. A whistleblowing report enters the system
  2. It’s immediately linked to relevant policies, training history and prior incidents
  3. The entity management software surfaces context: jurisdiction, compliance calendar, key officers, governance history
  4. Third-party monitoring surfaces related vendor profiles, sanctions signals and monitoring insights
  5. The CCO sees context, patterns and recommended next actions — not just a case file

That’s the difference between managing incidents and building institutional intelligence.

And it’s the difference between “we responded” and “we run a program designed to see risk sooner.”

Turn speak-up and third‑party signals into a real early‑warning system

See how Vault by Diligent and Third Party Manager work together to centralize whistleblowing, investigations and continuous vendor monitoring — so you can detect issues sooner, prove defensibility and strengthen trust. Request a demo.

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