Industry |
Corporate Investigation Risk Consulting Cyber Security |
---|---|
Founded | 2004 |
Headquarters | , |
Website | www.g3.co |
G3, or the Good Governance Group, is a strategic advisory consultancy which specialises in providing advice on risk mitigation, governance, cyber security and regulatory compliance.
The company was set up in 2004 by two former senior executives from Kroll Inc. [1] For a period of time it was owned by Kinnevik and it was then subject to a management buyout. [2]
In 2011, it was reported that the company was linked to an incident involving Adam Werritty, that led to the resignation of former UK Secretary of State for Defence Liam Fox. [3] [4] [5]
In 2012, it was reported that the Group had received £1.5 million from the government of Bahrain for "a media campaign to support the Kingdom of Bahrain's stance before the international community", during the Bahraini uprising. [6]
In June 2012, Proven acquired Palmer Legal Technologies, a provider of e-discovery and digital forensics services to litigation and dispute resolution teams involved in commercial litigation, internal compliance reviews and regulatory investigations. [7]
The firm has offices in London and New York City and works with multinational corporations and financial institutions on dispute resolution, regulation and compliance, cyber security, reputation management, integrity due diligence and corporate social responsibility. [8]
The company also provides intelligence for businesses, such as competitor analysis and cyber security, including for the defence contractor BAE Systems. [3] The company was reported to be worth £20 million in 2011. [3]
Mr Werritty was a regular visitor to Sri Lanka and Israel and had received payments from the Good Governance Group, which offers advice on international security, and the company Tamares Real Estate, which belongs to Poju Zabludowicz, the chairman of Bicom, an Israeli lobbying group.
Industry |
Corporate Investigation Risk Consulting Cyber Security |
---|---|
Founded | 2004 |
Headquarters | , |
Website | www.g3.co |
G3, or the Good Governance Group, is a strategic advisory consultancy which specialises in providing advice on risk mitigation, governance, cyber security and regulatory compliance.
The company was set up in 2004 by two former senior executives from Kroll Inc. [1] For a period of time it was owned by Kinnevik and it was then subject to a management buyout. [2]
In 2011, it was reported that the company was linked to an incident involving Adam Werritty, that led to the resignation of former UK Secretary of State for Defence Liam Fox. [3] [4] [5]
In 2012, it was reported that the Group had received £1.5 million from the government of Bahrain for "a media campaign to support the Kingdom of Bahrain's stance before the international community", during the Bahraini uprising. [6]
In June 2012, Proven acquired Palmer Legal Technologies, a provider of e-discovery and digital forensics services to litigation and dispute resolution teams involved in commercial litigation, internal compliance reviews and regulatory investigations. [7]
The firm has offices in London and New York City and works with multinational corporations and financial institutions on dispute resolution, regulation and compliance, cyber security, reputation management, integrity due diligence and corporate social responsibility. [8]
The company also provides intelligence for businesses, such as competitor analysis and cyber security, including for the defence contractor BAE Systems. [3] The company was reported to be worth £20 million in 2011. [3]
Mr Werritty was a regular visitor to Sri Lanka and Israel and had received payments from the Good Governance Group, which offers advice on international security, and the company Tamares Real Estate, which belongs to Poju Zabludowicz, the chairman of Bicom, an Israeli lobbying group.