3/20/2026 at 7:20:35 PM
A lot of startups move fast with a small team.You build something great and big corporation X wants to buy a subscription but you need to be certified.
Much of this is a good checklist but some of it is very european.
"Where is the risk register to track controls in your 7 person company?"
Now instead of doing what your team does best, you are doing paperwork theater for frameworks designed for a 100,000 employee enterprise.
You are documenting things nobody will read, making up processes that don't exist and translating the operations of a lean company into bureaucratic language.
What's needed is a variant of these standards for small teams, which is proportionate and pragmatic.
by fareesh
3/20/2026 at 7:44:34 PM
Exactly this. But my question here is also: is there not a competitive advantage to a big enterprise that applies standards in a more intelligent way? You have a SaaS, I have a Fortune 500 company that could use your product but I cannot use it because my procurement process is as long and winding ad the Road to Hana. In the meantime my competitor has a smarter procurement process that takes into account the impact and risk involved in renting your software. Don’t they get a competitive advantage over me by having a better process and as a result getting better vendors?by IgorPartola
3/20/2026 at 7:55:47 PM
Unfortunately in most cases the buyers have way more liability/risk using a small vendor than opportunity. Often this is coming from regulators in certain industries.In scenarios where the company REALLY REALLY wants to buy the SaaS, they often will invest in the company, one of the reasons for which being to ensure they have the resources to go through all the red tape.
by mushufasa
3/20/2026 at 7:45:44 PM
I’ve found CIS Controls v8.1 to be good and sane, with actual benefits to security. Level 1 is a solid base, and Level 2 is good for picking from depending on where risks exist in your business.CIS Benchmarks are worth a look too: They’re best practices for securing typical cloud platforms, SaaS and OS.
by bartman
3/20/2026 at 7:42:17 PM
Maybe you suouldn't be hacking due diligence if your team isn't ready for itby ljm
3/20/2026 at 7:43:18 PM
What is the purpose of a business though? To make profits for its owners. If the profit lies in doing all this corporate theater then that's the business. A company that focuses only on providing a service and product but ignores how their customer needs to use said service and product is going to go out of business.by phyzix5761
3/20/2026 at 8:25:00 PM
That is "a" purpose of a business, but not the primary purpose. The primary purpose of business is to provide a service or product people want. You can want profits all day long but if you don't have something people want you don't have a business.by eikenberry
3/20/2026 at 8:00:01 PM
This is as designed to gatekeep these customers. Those in control of the checklists stand to benefit.by bradfox2