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SecurityScorecard

SecurityScorecard provides security ratings and risk assessments to help organizations evaluate the cybersecurity posture of their external partners. It uses data from multiple sources to generate risk scores and identify potential vulnerabilities in third-party networks.

Cost considerations

Cost considerations

Functionality

Functionality

Compatibility

Compatibility

User experience

User experience

Customer support

Customer support

Why these ratings?

Cyberse perspective

Summary by Cyberse

Microsoft Sentinel may be considered a good fit for you due to its powerful capabilities.


Here’s a few tips on how to maximize its capabilities:

We use the following criteria to rate this product’s functionality:

Cost considerations

SecurityScorecard starts around $16.5k for five vendors and then adds roughly $1.5–2k per additional vendor while questionnaires sit in a separate Atlas module that costs extra. The vendor offers only a free self-rating tier; full TPRM pricing is hidden behind sales quotes, so budgeting is uncertain. Higher entry fees, per-vendor surcharges, and opaque packaging make overall cost above the market norm.

Functionality

SecurityScorecard automatically discovers vendors and keeps an up-to-date inventory. AI analyses questionnaire responses and scores them quickly, while continuous external scanning updates ratings daily and flags issues. Built-in dashboards surface risk trends and the workflow assigns remediation tasks to vendors for tracked resolution.

Compatibility

SecurityScorecard offers out-of-the-box connectors to ServiceNow and Archer GRC systems. Native apps send continuous ratings into Splunk SIEM and surface supplier risk inside Coupa procurement. SAML-based SSO and an open REST API are available, but ratings update daily rather than near-real-time, so the score is 4 instead of 5.

User experience

Users on review sites describe the interface as “easy to use,” with dashboards that non-technical teams and vendors navigate quickly. A few reviewers mention tasks like removing misattributed domains or interpreting busy charts, so admins face a small learning curve. These factors keep usability high but short of the friction-free experience that would merit a 5.

Customer support

SecurityScorecard runs a ticket-based support team that answers requests 8 a.m.–5 p.m. ET on weekdays. The help center offers a searchable knowledge base and suggests articles while you fill a ticket, giving quick self-service guidance. Reviews show enterprise clients get timely responses but lower tiers wait longer, so support is dependable yet falls short of 24×7 options some rivals provide.