A focused course, tailored for you
The Bank Third Party Risk Manager Evidence Pack
Tier the vendor book, run due diligence that survives an OCC exam, and ship board-ready third party reporting every quarter.
The vendor inventory is the first document examiners pull. Everything downstream of it, tiering, due diligence, ongoing monitoring, board reporting, has to reconcile back to that one list. When it does not, the finding writes itself.
Includes a hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access, generated for your specific situation.
Why this course
A Third Party Risk Manager at a US regional bank carries a book that runs into the hundreds of vendors and fourth parties. The accountability is not just collecting SOC reports. It is producing, on demand, a defensible packet for any vendor in the inventory that shows how it was tiered, what due diligence was run, what residual risk was accepted, who accepted it, what monitoring runs against it, and how exit would work. The recurring friction is fragmentation. Tiering rationale lives in spreadsheets. Due diligence questionnaires sit in a GRC tool that does not talk to the contracts repository. SOC 2 reports are collected but the bridge letter and the carve-out review never make it back to the residual risk register. Fourth-party concentration is implied by the vendor list but never named. When an OCC examiner asks for the packet, assembling it takes weeks and the inconsistencies show. This course turns that packet into a standing artefact, refreshed on a schedule, ready to hand over.
What you walk away with
- A vendor tiering matrix with documented rationale that survives an examiner challenge on any individual vendor.
- A due diligence questionnaire and review packet aligned to FFIEC Appendix J and OCC heightened standards for third parties.
- An ongoing monitoring scorecard refreshed on a defined cadence per tier, with red flags routed to named owners.
- A fourth-party concentration view that names the actual concentration risks rather than implying them.
- A quarterly board reporting pack that fits in two pages and answers the questions the risk committee actually asks.
The 12 modules
How this addresses your situation
Specific modules that map to what you said you are dealing with.
What you get with this course
- Twelve written modules in the Art of Service learning environment
- Vendor inventory schema and maintenance template
- Tiering matrix template with worked examples across vendor types
- FFIEC Appendix J aligned due diligence questionnaire and reviewer rubric
- SOC 2 review checklist and residual risk register template
- Material outsourcing contract clause checklist and redline standard
- Ongoing monitoring scorecard per tier with refresh cadence
- Fourth-party concentration mapping template
- Exit plan packet template for critical vendors
- Incident triage runbook and customer notification decision tree
- Quarterly board risk committee reporting pack template
- Hand-built implementation playbook tuned to a US regional bank vendor book
What you will have in hand by Day 1, Week 1, Month 1
Within 24 hours: learning environment account provisioned, implementation playbook delivered
Week 1: rebuild vendor inventory and tiering matrix using module 1 and 2 templates
Weeks 2-3: refresh due diligence questionnaire and SOC review checklist, work through modules 3 and 4
Weeks 4-5: contract clause map and monitoring scorecard installed, modules 5 and 6
Weeks 6-8: fourth-party concentration view, exit plans for critical vendors, modules 7 and 8
Weeks 9-10: incident playbook and quarterly board pack stood up, modules 9 and 10
Weeks 11-12: standing evidence file and annual program calendar finalised, modules 11 and 12
Before and after
Vendor evidence is collected but fragmented across spreadsheets, the GRC tool, the contracts repository, and inboxes. When an examiner asks for the packet on a sampled vendor it takes a week or more to assemble and the inconsistencies show. Board reporting is descriptive rather than decision-supporting and fourth-party concentration is implied but never named.
Every vendor in the inventory has a standing evidence file that reconciles to tiering, due diligence, monitoring, contract, and exit. The packet is producible same day for any sampled vendor. Board reporting fits two pages and answers the questions the risk committee actually asks. The program operates against a refresh calendar rather than reacting to the next exam.
What happens if you do not address this
The cost of an unprepared third party risk function is paid in matters requiring attention from the regulator, audit findings that compound year over year, and a board that loses confidence in the program. The remediation cycle that follows is significantly more expensive in time and credibility than the standing operating model this course installs.
Who it is for
Built for the Third Party Risk Manager at a US regional bank or large credit union who owns the vendor management program end to end. Reports into operational risk, ERM, or the CRO function. Accountable to the board risk committee on a quarterly cadence and to the OCC, FDIC, or state regulator on exam cycles. Manages or coordinates due diligence analysts, works alongside procurement and legal on material contracts, and is the single throat to choke when an examiner asks for the vendor evidence file.
How it arrives
Text-based course in the Art of Service learning environment, plus downloadable templates and worked examples for every module, plus the hand-built implementation playbook delivered alongside course access.
Time investment. Roughly three to five hours per week across twelve weeks for the modules and templates, plus the time the function spends rebuilding its own artefacts against the templates. Most teams run modules 1 through 4 in the first month while the rest of the book continues on the current cadence, then phase the remaining modules in.
Why $199 is the right number
Generic vendor management training is built for the general procurement audience and stops short of the bank-specific FFIEC, OCC, and board reporting expectations. Big-firm advisory engagements deliver similar artefacts at multiples of the cost and rarely leave the function with a standing operating cadence. This course delivers the artefacts and the operating model the function runs on after the engagement would have ended.
FAQ
30-day money-back guarantee. If after a week of working through the materials this is not what you needed, reply to the receipt email and a full refund is processed. No questions, no forms.
Within 24 hours your account in the learning environment is provisioned and the tailored implementation playbook is delivered alongside it.