Cloud-based Risk & BCM Software Platform – Off-the-shelf or Custom Build?

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Status: Final Blueprint Summary

Author: Shahab Al Yamin Chawdhury

Organization: Principal Architect & Consultant Group

Research Date: February 22, 2024

Location: Dhaka, Bangladesh

Version: 1.0


1. The Strategic Imperative for Integrated Resilience

The modern business landscape demands a proactive, integrated approach to resilience, merging two critical disciplines: Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) and Business Continuity Management (BCM).

  • ERM (Proactive): A forward-looking discipline to identify, analyze, and address potential risks before they materialize, aligning risk management with strategic objectives.
  • BCM (Reactive): A tactical discipline focused on ensuring critical business functions can operate during and after a disruption, minimizing impact and ensuring recovery.

Integrating these functions creates a synergistic framework for true operational resilience. This strategy must be anchored in global standards and address stringent regulatory mandates.

  • Global Standards:
    • ISO 31000: Provides principles for embedding a risk-aware culture across all organizational processes.
    • ISO 22301: The international standard for a Business Continuity Management System (BCMS), mandating processes like Business Impact Analysis (BIA) and defining Recovery Time/Point Objectives (RTO/RPO).
    • NIST CSF 2.0: A crucial framework for managing cybersecurity risk, structured around functions: Govern, Identify, Protect, Detect, Respond, and Recover.
  • Regulatory Mandates (South Asia Financial Services Example):
    • Directives from bodies like Bangladesh Bank (BB), Reserve Bank of India (RBI), and the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) make robust platforms non-negotiable.
    • Key requirements include mandatory BCP/DRP, near-zero RPO for critical systems, specified disaster recovery site (DRS) distances, and rigorous, documented testing.

2. The “Buy” Option: The Off-the-Shelf Platform Ecosystem

The “Buy” path involves selecting a solution from a mature market of specialized vendors.

Core Capabilities of Modern Platforms:

Modern platforms offer integrated modules for: Risk & Business Impact Analysis (BIA), BCM/DR Planning, Incident & Crisis Management, Compliance & Governance, Visualization & Reporting, and Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM).

Leading Enterprise Vendors:

VendorKey Differentiator
ServiceNowThe “Platform of Platforms” with deep, native integration into ITSM/ITOM workflows.
MetricStreamA “Connected GRC” pure-play vendor with strong risk quantification and AI capabilities.
RiskonnectAn “Integrated Risk Management” specialist combining insurable and non-insurable risks.
Fusion Risk MgmtA “Salesforce-Native” platform, offering high configurability and leveraging the Salesforce ecosystem.
LogicManagerProponent of a “Risk-Based Taxonomy” with a focus on user-friendliness and customer support.
IBM OpenPagesAn “AI-Infused Powerhouse” leveraging Watson AI for predictive insights and cognitive GRC.
Archer IRMA “Legacy Stalwart” known for its comprehensive functionality and extreme customizability.

Open-Source Alternatives:

Platforms like Eramba and

SimpleRisk offer a low-cost entry point but trade licensing fees for significant internal overhead in configuration, maintenance, and support. They are best suited for organizations with strong in-house technical expertise.


3. The “Build” Option: Engineering a Bespoke Solution

The “Build” path offers ultimate flexibility but carries substantial risks related to cost, time, and talent.

  • Architectural Blueprint: A modern microservices architecture is recommended for scalability and resilience, structuring the application as a collection of small, autonomous services (e.g., RiskRegisterService, BIAService, IncidentResponseService). The technology stack would involve a major cloud provider (AWS, Azure, GCP), a frontend SPA framework (e.g., React), and containerization with Docker/Kubernetes.
  • Team Composition: Success requires a dedicated, cross-functional team blending technical experts (Solution Architect, Developers, DevOps) with domain specialists (GRC/BCM Lead, Compliance Officers). Talent acquisition and retention are major risks.
  • Project Roadmap & Timeline: A custom build is a long-term commitment. An MVP alone typically takes 6-10 months to deliver initial value, with full functionality requiring 18+ months of iterative development.
  • Financial Investment:
    • Initial Development: Costs for a mid-scale solution range from $250,000 to $500,000+.
    • Long-Term Maintenance: Organizations must budget an additional 15-25% of the initial development cost annually for ongoing maintenance, support, and updates.

4. The Decision Matrix: Comparative Analysis

A direct comparison reveals the trade-offs between the two paths.

5-Year Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Comparison:

Cost CategoryYear 1Year 3 (Cumulative)Year 5 (Cumulative)
Custom Build$695,000$1,270,000$1,865,000
Off-the-Shelf$370,000$917,450$1,504,614

Analysis: “Build” has a high upfront cost, while “Buy” has a lower entry cost but significant recurring license fees. The TCO crossover point where “Build” becomes more cost-effective typically occurs after 5-7 years.

Strategic Value Scorecard:

Strategic DriverBuild RationaleBuy Rationale
Speed to MarketSlow (6-12+ months)Fast (2-4 months)
FlexibilityPerfectly tailoredConfigurable but constrained
Competitive IPCreates a proprietary assetUses same tool as competitors
Risk ProfileHigh project & talent riskLower project risk, vendor lock-in
Regulatory AgilityBurden on internal teamHandled by vendor experts

5. Strategic Recommendations

The optimal choice depends on the organizational archetype:

  • Highly Regulated Enterprise (e.g., Banking, Healthcare): Strongly favor the “Buy” option from a market leader. The value of vendor-managed regulatory intelligence and proven auditability outweighs other factors.
  • Agile Innovator (e.g., FinTech, Tech Startups): A nuanced choice. A flexible, API-first “Buy” solution is ideal for speed. “Build” is compelling only if the resilience process itself is a core competitive differentiator.
  • Cost-Conscious Organization (e.g., Manufacturing, Retail): The decision should be heavily driven by the TCO analysis. A user-friendly “Buy” solution or a well-supported Open-Source platform often provides the best balance of cost and capability.