Greetings!
I work for a CU that also uses JHA. When you say that you want each product to be its own individual file, are you thinking along the lines of each
product has it's own separate Vendor page? If so, the only thing I could think of would be to change the name of the
Vendor to something unique, like "Jack Henry - Banno" and then have the product "Banno" - although I don't know that I could personally recommend this and not sure what adverse effects it would have, if any. We do not have nearly 53 products with them, so I sympathize with your circumstance!
Regarding the latter portion, you may already be aware of this, but JHA has a pretty robust client portal where you can get all manner of due diligence documents such as SOC reports, incident reports, sample insurance, etc. If you don't already have access to this, I would highly recommend reaching out to your point person (perhaps the executive mentioned below or a member of your IT department) to gain access.
Hope this helps, I am a bit of a novice myself! :)
Original Message:
Sent: 06-29-2022 03:00 PM
From: Anonymous Member
Subject: Specific Vendor Question
This message was posted by a user wishing to remain anonymous
My credit union uses a popular critical vendor known as Jack Henry. Under Jack Henry we have 53 products we use with them. Each product has its own vendor owner and each product risk rating. However, one of our executives is the vendor owner for Jack Henry in its entirety. We do not like how this vendor is set up in Venminder and I would like any suggestions on a different way to set it up so that each product is In its own individual file. Also the documents on the vendor as a whole are not organized and half the products are tagged in a soc 1 2020 report and half are in a Soc 2 2020 report. but I found out really whomever uploaded these never knew which product the socs and other due diligence specifically covered so she just tagged random vendors. Can someone offer some great advice