Solution

Dashboard reporting for clear program visibility

Leadership wants to know where the program stands; each team needs different numbers to act. Here is how role-based dashboards give a current, connected view — and how that becomes shareable reporting, with VeriGRC behind it.

Reporting should not be outdated before it is shared

Program status often lives in a deck someone rebuilds every month from exported spreadsheets — and by the time it is ready, it is already behind. A CISO, a compliance owner, and a vendor manager each need a different slice, but they should all be looking at the same source. Role-based dashboards give each team a current, connected view as of the latest update, and turn it into reporting that can be shared — so the conversation is about the work, not the spreadsheet. The decisions behind the numbers, like risk acceptances, stay connected too.

From a role-specific view to shareable reporting

How program data becomes a view each team can act on — and a report they can share.

  1. 1

    Start from a role-specific view

    Each team opens a dashboard built for it — a CISO command center, an executive scorecard, a compliance view, an analyst workbench — instead of a one-size-fits-all screen.

  2. 2

    See current status and trends

    Dashboards show where things stand as of the latest update, with trends over a time range — so each view is a current, connected picture rather than a number rebuilt by hand.

  3. 3

    Surface what needs attention

    Tiles highlight the risks and items requiring attention, so the work that needs eyes rises to the top instead of hiding in a long list.

  4. 4

    Drill into the work behind a number

    Because dashboards read from the same data as the rest of the platform, you can move from a headline metric toward the records and decisions behind it.

  5. 5

    Export and share

    Turn a dashboard into a branded PDF or presentation-ready export for the people who need it, and connect it to your audit and reporting.

Dashboard reporting — frequently asked questions

What is dashboard reporting in GRC?

Dashboard reporting gives teams a connected view of where a GRC program stands — status and trends across vendors, risks, controls, evidence, and readiness — without exporting data and rebuilding the same charts every month. Different roles see views built for what they need to decide.

Are VeriGRC dashboards updated in real time?

No. Dashboards show where things stand as of their latest update, with an indicator of when the data was last refreshed. They are designed for a current, connected view of your program rather than a live, second-by-second feed.

What can I see on a VeriGRC dashboard?

Dashboards surface status and trends across vendors, risks, controls, evidence, and assessments — including framework readiness, risk trends over a time range, and tiles that highlight the risks and items requiring attention.

What formats can I export?

Dashboards can be exported as branded PDF and presentation-ready formats, and exports can be scheduled for the stakeholders who need them. Audit packages are produced as branded PDFs.

How does VeriGRC support dashboard reporting?

VeriGRC ships role-specific dashboards that read from one data model, show a current view as of the latest update, surface what needs attention, and export to branded, shareable formats — connected to your compliance, third-party risk, risk register, and audit reporting.

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