GRC stands for governance, risk, and compliance. It commonly refers to a coordinated approach, set of processes, and supporting tools used by an organization to direct and control operations, manage risks, and meet regulatory and internal policy requirements in a consistent and traceable way.
Core components of GRC
In industrial and manufacturing environments, GRC typically includes:
- Governance: How decisions are made and overseen. This covers roles, responsibilities, policies, standards, and escalation paths that direct how OT, IT, quality, safety, and security are managed.
- Risk: Identification, assessment, treatment, and monitoring of risks, such as cyber risks in OT/ICS, safety risks, supply chain risks, and quality or compliance risks.
- Compliance: Processes to interpret and implement external requirements (laws, regulations, standards) and internal policies, along with evidence management to show that required controls and procedures are followed.
Operational meaning in manufacturing and OT
In regulated manufacturing and industrial operations, GRC activities commonly include:
- Defining and maintaining policies and standards for OT and IT systems, including security baselines and change control.
- Maintaining control frameworks mapped to regulations and standards (for example mapping NIST SP 800-53 controls to the NIST Cybersecurity Framework for OT/ICS environments).
- Conducting risk assessments for production systems, MES/ERP integrations, data flows, and third-party services.
- Tracking issues, exceptions, and remediation actions (for example for cyber findings, audit findings, or quality deviations that have compliance impact).
- Collecting and organizing audit-ready evidence from shop-floor systems, quality systems, and enterprise platforms.
- Reporting risk posture, control coverage, and compliance status to leadership and regulators.
Organizations may use dedicated GRC platforms or integrate GRC practices with existing tools such as ticketing systems, document control systems, MES, and cybersecurity monitoring solutions.
Common confusion
- GRC vs. cybersecurity: Cybersecurity is one risk domain managed within GRC. GRC is broader and also includes financial, operational, safety, and compliance risks.
- GRC vs. quality management: Quality management focuses on product and process quality. GRC focuses on organizational governance, risk, and compliance. In regulated manufacturing, quality systems often feed evidence and risk data into the broader GRC framework.
- GRC as a tool vs. a discipline: GRC is a management discipline and set of processes. GRC software tools support these processes but do not define them by themselves.
Relation to the source context
In the context of using NIST SP 800-53 to show NIST Cybersecurity Framework posture for OT/ICS, GRC provides the structure to map controls, aggregate risk and maturity information, maintain evidence for assessments, and report cybersecurity posture to leadership as part of an overall risk and compliance program.