Supply chain security management systems evolve to address emerging threats, regulatory expectations, and expanded organizational scopes beyond traditional logistics environments. The transition to ISO 28000:2022 introduces revised concepts, updated clause structures, and enhanced governance expectations that redefine how security management systems operate across modern supply networks. This training program presents structured transition frameworks, requirement comparison models, system alignment architectures, and gap evaluation structures that define the update of Security Management Systems. It provides an institutional perspective on how organizations realign existing systems with revised requirements to ensure continuity, compliance, and strengthened security governance.
Analyze structural differences between ISO 28000:2007 and ISO 28000:2022 requirements.
Classify updated clauses, terminology, and governance expectations within security management systems.
Evaluate gap analysis frameworks supporting transition and alignment processes.
Assess system adjustment structures addressing risk, control, and operational changes.
Examine validation and monitoring structures ensuring effective transition alignment.
Supply chain security and risk management professionals.
Compliance and governance specialists.
Security management consultants and advisors.
Operations and logistics managers.
Professionals responsible for maintaining and updating security management systems.
Institutional drivers influencing updates in supply chain security standards.
Conceptual differences between ISO 28000:2007 and ISO 28000:2022 frameworks.
Terminology updates and revised definitions within security management contexts.
Overview of updated clause architecture and governance orientation.
Alignment between evolving security risks and updated standard expectations.
Clause-by-clause comparison between previous and updated ISO 28000 versions.
Governance changes affecting leadership, policy, and accountability structures.
Updates in organizational context and stakeholder consideration frameworks.
Documentation and information management changes within security systems.
Integration of revised requirements within existing management system structures.
Gap analysis models identifying differences between current and updated systems.
Transition planning architectures supporting structured alignment processes.
Risk based transition structures addressing operational and security disruptions.
Prioritization frameworks for addressing identified system gaps.
Resource planning structures supporting transition execution.
Adjustment frameworks addressing updated security risk and control structures.
Governance realignment structures supporting revised accountability models.
Process modification architectures aligning operations with updated requirements.
Documentation update structures ensuring conformity with revised standards.
Integration mechanisms connecting updated systems with organizational processes.
Monitoring frameworks evaluating effectiveness of transition alignment.
Verification structures ensuring conformity with ISO 28000:2022 requirements.
Internal audit alignment structures addressing updated system configurations.
Management architectures assessing transition outcomes and readiness.
Oversight frameworks supporting sustained alignment with revised security standards.