Cybersecurity Reference > Glossary
Operational Dependency Risk
Operational Dependency Risk refers to the cybersecurity vulnerabilities that arise when an organization relies heavily on third-party services, systems, or infrastructure.
This risk emerges when critical business operations depend on external entities whose security posture, availability, or operational continuity may be outside the organization's direct control.
These dependencies can include cloud service providers, software-as-a-service platforms, supply chain partners, telecommunications providers, or any external system that supports essential business functions. When these dependencies experience security incidents, outages, or compromises, the ripple effects can significantly impact the dependent organization's operations, data security, and service delivery.
Common manifestations include supply chain attacks where malicious code is inserted into trusted third-party software, cloud service outages that render business applications unavailable, or data breaches at partner organizations that expose sensitive customer information. Organizations face particular challenges in managing these risks because they often have limited visibility into their dependencies' security practices and incident response capabilities.
Effective mitigation strategies include conducting thorough vendor risk assessments, implementing redundancy and backup systems, establishing clear service level agreements with security requirements, and maintaining incident response plans that account for third-party failures. Regular monitoring and assessment of critical dependencies help organizations identify potential vulnerabilities before they materialize into actual security incidents.
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