The Problem with Identity Governance Nobody Talks About
Most identity governance programs do one thing well. They review everything.
Every user. Every entitlement. Every system.
On paper, this looks like strong control.
In reality, it creates a different problem.
Because Risk Doesn’t Work That Way
Access risk is not evenly distributed.
Some permissions carry real impact. Privileged roles, sensitive systems, and critical operations drive that risk.
Most access does not.
But governance treats all of it the same.
This Is Where Things Break
During access reviews, everything looks equal.
A high-risk admin role sits next to low-risk application access.
There is no difference in visibility.
There is no difference in structure.
So reviewers treat them the same.
And That Changes Behavior
When everything looks equal, nothing stands out.
Reviewers focus on completion, not interpretation.
Governance becomes a process of moving through volume.
Not understanding risk.
The Result
Everything gets reviewed.
But not everything gets understood.
And that is where risk remains.
The Real Issue Isn’t Coverage
Most organizations already have coverage.
They review access regularly. They document decisions. They meet governance expectations.
But governance assumes equality.
Risk does not.
The Shift That Actually Matters
Effective governance reflects how access is structured.
It makes high-risk access visible.
It reduces noise.
It restores signal.
Governance fails when it assumes all access is equal.
It becomes effective when it reflects how risk is actually distributed.
Tap on the link to know more: Why Equal Treatment of Access Leads to Unequal Risk in Identity Governance
https://www.openiam.com/blog/e....qual-access-unequal-