Your GRC Tasks. Automated. Repeatable.

TI Playbooks turn your team's most important GRC routines into structured, repeatable AI workflows — scheduled, consistent, and high quality.
Every GRC team runs the same critical workflows over and over: weekly control reviews, monthly user access review, quarterly board briefings, gap assessments. Today, those workflows depend on the right person, the right knowledge, and enough time. TI Playbooks change that. Describe the workflow in plain language, point it at the right data, and let your AI GRC analyst handle the rest — automatically, on your schedule.

Built-In Playbooks

Start immediately. Pre-built playbooks cover common GRC tasks every team needs to run.

Custom Playbooks

Describe any workflow in plain language and turn it into a repeatable, schedulable automation tailored to your program.

Scheduled or On-Demand

Run instantly when you need it, or set a recurring schedule — weekly, monthly, quarterly.

More Consistent Work. More Capacity. Less Guesswork.

Using natural language to describe a repeatable GRC task and handing it off to a team of AI agents changes what your program can accomplish.

Higher Quality, Every Time

Remove the inconsistencies. Every playbook run follows the same workflow and produces the same caliber of output — regardless of who runs it.

Reduce Tribal Knowledge

When GRC work lives inside playbooks, it belongs to the team — not any one individual. Onboard new members faster and keep critical workflows running through any transition.

Do More With the Same Team

Playbooks give your team the leverage to catch up on routine work and stay ahead. Workflows that used to take days run in the background while your team focuses on high value work, not chasing data and performing mundane tasks.

Free Resources for High-Value Work

Offloading repeatable workflows to AI agents means your team spends less time on routine tasks and more time on the work that requires human judgment.

HOW IT WORKS

Describe It. Run It. Schedule It.

Think of a TI Playbook as a brief to a new member of your team on how to accomplish a task. You describe the workflow they need to follow, and a team of expert AI agents — already contextualized with your GRC data — carries it out.

Setting up a playbook involves three steps. First, specify the context: use everything available, or focus on a specific content type — your policies, controls, knowledgebase. Second, describe the workflow in plain language. The playbook could interact with you mid-run to collect additional information or confirm a choice. Third, define the delivery — a report added to the reports library, for example.

Behind the scenes, Trustero's multi-agent architecture builds a plan, engages the right specialized agents, performs semantic search and mapping, generates documents, and summarizes information from across your GRC program. Every result includes reasoning and cited references — exactly what you'd expect from a great analyst.

How-it-works
Specify the context — all GRC data, or focused on specific content such as policies, controls, or a knowledgebase
Describe the workflow in plain language — no code, no configuration
Define the output format — a report, gap analysis, summary, or recommendation list
The playbook may interact with you mid-run to collect inputs or confirm direction
Run on demand or set a recurring schedule — weekly, monthly, quarterly
See Playbooks in Action

BUILT-IN AND CUSTOM PLAYBOOKS

Start Fast. Make It Yours.

Trustero ships with a library of built-in playbooks for the most common GRC workflows — so your team can get off the ground immediately. As your program evolves, build custom playbooks that reflect how your organization specifics: your intricacies, your reporting cadences, your internal standards, and your specific workflows.

Built-in playbooks cover tasks like:

  • Executive risk report with a summary of top risks by severity and business area, surfacing key trends, ownership, and risk concentrations.
  • Organizational User Access Review, based on policies, organizational chart, and user and employee lists
  • Policy Design Assessments against a new framework with gaps and recommendations
  • Generate controls against a new framework, considering your current state

Custom playbooks let you go further — tailoring the context, workflow, and output to exactly what your program requires.

Benefits
Built-in playbooks get your team running immediately on the most common GRC tasks
Custom playbooks adapt the workflow, context, and output to your specific program
Both types support scheduling and on-demand execution
Results land in your reports library — ready to share with stakeholders
Playbooks grow with your program as requirements and frameworks change
Explore Built-In Playbooks

How GRC Leaders Use TI Playbooks Every Day

From recurring operational reviews to expanding into new compliance frameworks, TI Playbooks fit the way compliance and risk teams actually work. Here are some examples.
GRC Director
A Weekly Compliance Status Report That Runs Itself

Scenario:
A compliance program manager needs a weekly view of control performance across all active frameworks — with the top ten control owners flagged for issues, broken down by department, and corrective action recommendations attached. Previously, assembling this report meant hours of manual data collection across systems. With a scheduled TI Playbook, it runs every Monday morning and lands in the reports library, ready to review and distribute.

Outcome: A consistent, high-quality compliance status report every week — with no manual effort.
Compliance Manager
Monthly User Access Reviews Without the Manual Work

Scenario:
User Access Reviews are a non-negotiable part of most compliance programs — and a consistently time-consuming one. A compliance manager sets up a monthly TI Playbook that pulls the relevant access data for each system, the up-to-date org chart and employees list, identifies issues against defined policy criteria, and produces a structured report with findings documented and ready for remediation tracking.

Outcome: Monthly UAR completed and documented automatically, with issues flagged and ready to act on.
GRC Analyst
Know Whether Your Control Test Procedures Are Actually Working

Scenario:
A GRC analyst needs to assess whether existing control test procedures are adequate given the evidence currently on hand. The team sets up a playbook that reviews all test procedures, evaluates them against the available evidence and control objectives, and produces a prioritized list of improvements — highlighting where procedures are weak, missing coverage, or misaligned with what evidence is being collected.

Outcome: A clear, actionable picture of procedure quality — and a roadmap to improve it.
Third-Party Risk Analyst
Vendor Reviews Without the 80-Page Deep Dive

Scenario:
A TPRM Analyst receives a stack of vendor credentials — SOC 2 reports, security questionnaires, penetration test results — that need to be reviewed before a vendor can be onboarded or renewed. Instead of assigning a team member days to read and summarize each document, they run a TI Playbook. The playbook examines the credentials, highlights potential issues, and recommends remediations or compensating controls where gaps are found.

Outcome: Vendor reviews completed in a fraction of the time — with issues surfaced and documented.
GRC Director
Know Exactly Where You Stand Before Committing to a New Framework

Scenario:
The company is expanding in a new market and the GRC team needs to quickly evaluate whether to adopt a new compliance framework. Instead of spending weeks reviewing the new requirements and mapping them against their environment, they run a Policy Design Assessment playbook against the framework. The playbook performs a semantic comparison of existing policies against the new framework's requirements, explains the gaps in plain language, and proposes remediations — giving leadership a clear picture of the effort involved before any work begins.

Outcome: A complete gap and remediation picture for a new framework — produced in minutes, not weeks.
GRC Team / CCO
Launch a New Framework on Your Existing Foundation

Scenario:
A new version of an already adopted framework has been published. The GRC team needs to determine which controls must be updated and new controls to be added.Rather than spending weeks mapping new to old controls, they run a TI Playbook that analyzes their existing controls and evidence, identifies what already applies to the new framework's requirements, and generates a set of tailored controls to close what's missing — giving the team a strong starting point for the expansion.

Outcome: A framework update rollout accelerated significantly by building on what's already in place.