Firm-Wide AI Risk Audit

A systematic assessment of your firm's AI tool usage, governance posture, and oversight controls — producing a clear picture of where your exposure sits and what to do about it.

Firm-Wide AI Risk Audit

A systematic assessment of your firm's AI tool usage, governance posture, and oversight controls — producing a clear picture of where your exposure sits and what to do about it.

Firm-Wide AI Risk Audit

A systematic assessment of your firm's AI tool usage, governance posture, and oversight controls — producing a clear picture of where your exposure sits and what to do about it.

What it is

Most professional services firms have AI tools deployed across multiple departments, used in different ways, with no unified view of what is happening or what liability that creates. The Firm-Wide AI Risk Audit is a structured assessment that maps your firm's entire AI footprint, evaluates the controls in place, and produces a prioritized risk register your leadership can act on.


What we examine

We assess every dimension of your firm's AI usage — which tools are deployed, who is using them, what data they are accessing, whether human review protocols exist and are being followed, how vendor contracts allocate liability, and whether your current insurance program covers what you think it covers. No assumption is left unexamined.


What you receive

A comprehensive risk report covering your firm's AI governance maturity score, a tool-by-tool exposure assessment, identified gaps between your current insurance program and your actual AI liability exposure, and a prioritized set of remediation recommendations ranked by risk severity and implementation complexity.


Who it is for

Managing partners, general counsel, and risk managers at professional services firms who have adopted AI tools and need a defensible, documented understanding of their exposure before a claim forces the conversation.


Why it matters

Insurance carriers are increasingly asking detailed questions about AI governance at renewal. Regulators are beginning to require documented AI oversight frameworks. The firms that have already conducted a structured audit will be better positioned on both fronts — and will pay less for coverage because of it.