Why SAP Access Governance Needs Business Context, Besides Automation
Question: Which SAP security and compliance tasks could be automated? Once automated, how should organizations approach monitoring those processes for visibility and risk control?
Chris Radkowski, SAP GRC Expert at Pathlock
SAP environments have never been more complex or more exposed. Tens of thousands of
- roles,
- custom authorizations,
- segregation of duties (SoD) conflicts, and
- audit requirements that span business processes —
- finance, procurement, and
- HR
- The automation tools exist.
- The frameworks exist.
- The gap is execution, and the risks are increasing.
The clearest automation wins are in SoD conflict detection, access certification, and compliant provisioning.
Access reviews that used to take weeks of manual spreadsheet work can now run continuously, enabling manager reviews and surfacing exceptions rather than during a year-end audit.
User access, historically where toxic or excessive entitlements accumulate, can be governed by policy engines that enforce least privilege at the point of request.
Patch and configuration compliance checks, SAP basis monitoring, and critical or sensitive access tracking are all strong candidates for automation because they're rule-based, high-volume, and deterministic.
The issue most organizations miss is that SAP security conversations have been dominated for too long by IT infrastructure thinking.
We focus on who can access the system based on their role, not on the business functions that can actually be performed within it.
However, as business applications and ERPs are increasingly becoming interconnected with AI agents performing actions across multiple systems and workflows, this approach is no longer sufficient.
For example,
- If an AI agent connected to SAP is allowed to automate accounts payable processes and makes a mistake due to improper governance, it can execute thousands of transactions before anyone notices.
- Such errors can quickly result in financial loss, audit findings, regulatory exposure, and operational disruption.
- This is what I'd call the business application privilege problem.
When we automate access governance processes for SAP, we need to monitor functional privileges with business context and risk in mind, for example, the ability to approve transactions, modify critical data, and execute sensitive business processes, not just role-level access.
The audit trail that matters to regulators isn't
- Who accessed the server
- It's who approved the PO
- And whether that person should have been able to
Monitoring is where operational reality gets difficult. SAP access data lives in a different system than your SIEM.
- Your GRC tool may not talk to your identity governance platform.
- Your basis team, security team, and compliance team all have partial visibility and misaligned objectives.
Automation without integration just shifts the silos around. Effective monitoring requires moving from point-in-time compliance snapshots to continuous controls monitoring tied to actual business processes, with automated escalation paths that don't depend on a human remembering to check a dashboard.
Structured audit evidence needs to be generated automatically, not reconstructed after the fact when an auditor asks.
Looking ahead, the risk surface is shifting in ways that traditional SAP governance models aren't built for. Governance frameworks are only beginning to catch up.
The organizations ahead of this aren't necessarily the ones with the best tools. They're the ones that have stopped treating SAP security as an IT compliance exercise and started treating it as a business risk problem. That reframe changes what you automate, what you monitor, and who owns the outcome.




