Hello everyone, Anthony Stevens here. My latest book, "AI and the Future of GRC," which I am immensely proud of, has recently been unveiled to the public. To show you a glimpse of what you can expect, I am here today to discuss the first few chapters of the book and hopefully establish enough context to effectively highlight the value it can bring to leaders, professionals, and enterprises in the cyber GRC space.
The first part of the book expounds on the challenges that organizations currently face in their GRC processes and the largely untapped potential of artificial intelligence in resolving them. It is further divided into three sections:
Here, we explore how the integration of the Internet and digital technologies into our daily lives has transformed risk management and compliance practices within organizations, emphasizing the importance of data in extracting insights and informing decisions. We also analyze how modern GRC software advanced from monolithic solutions to AI-driven approaches due to the introduction of technological changes over the years and the expansion of GRC practices to other industries and markets. Along with AI, the convergence of alternative technologies like cloud computing and blockchain brings forth a new generation of GRC platforms.
Now we move on to examine the difficulties that organizations have been plagued with since the beginning, from manual record-keeping to tracking complex and continuously changing regulatory requirements. We outline challenges such as limited insights, lack of standardization in methodologies, and interconnected risks that impede the processes of risk assessment, risk mitigation, and risk management. Organizations must also make ethical considerations for data privacy, algorithmic bias, and responsible AI use and balance autonomy and control in their risk and compliance activities. We end the chapter with questions to help organizations identify obstacles in managing their GRC programs.
In the last chapter of the first part of the book, we take a look at how AI technologies morphed into machine learning, natural language processing, large language models and generative AI, and other newer approaches that redefine their role in GRC. With AI, organizations can leverage automation and better data visibility that can drive effective governance, enhanced regulatory compliance, predictive risk management, and more, leading the way toward a more resilient and secure future. We close the chapter with another set of questions to enable organizations to assess their readiness for integrating AI into their GRC programs.
With that, we conclude part 1 of "AI and the Future of GRC." Parts 2 and 3 of the book will dissect the practical applications of AI in the different domains of GRC and provide valuable insights into how organizations can accelerate change by incorporating AI into their business strategy.
"AI and the Future of GRC" is now available worldwide via Amazon and Amazon Kindle. Order the book here.