The VOR is anchored in the Dutch Corporate Governance Code, which operates on a "comply or explain" basis. Listed Dutch companies either apply the relevant best practice provisions or explain in their board report why they have chosen to deviate from them. The updated Code was approved in March 2025 and published in the Government Gazette (Staatscourant), giving the VOR a formal anchor in Dutch governance practice.
Four best practice provisions in the Code are particularly relevant for the VOR:
Under provision 1.4.3, the required level of assurance is partly prescribed and partly a management choice. Financial reporting requires reasonable assurance and sustainability reporting requires at least limited assurance, while the management board itself determines the appropriate level of certainty for operational and compliance risks. The Code does not prescribe a specific framework either, which gives organizations the flexibility to choose one that fits their strategy, sector and risk profile. The COSO Framework is one of the most widely used reference points for internal control and is often cited in the context of the VOR, but companies are free to adopt a different framework as long as the management board can clearly justify and document its choice.
The VOR is a requirement of the Dutch Corporate Governance Code, which applies on a "comply or explain" basis to listed Dutch companies. The most directly affected groups include:
Even where the VOR is not formally required, many organizations choose to align with it voluntarily. For any company that wants to strengthen the link between its risk management activities and its external reporting, it is a useful benchmark and a clear way to show stakeholders that risk and control are taken seriously at board level.
While the Dutch Corporate Governance Code does not prescribe a specific template, many organizations structure their VOR around the following elements:
The exact format may vary by organization, but these topics commonly form the basis of a well-substantiated VOR.
A credible VOR requires more than a year-end assessment. Management boards are expected to substantiate their conclusions with documented evidence demonstrating how risks were identified, monitored and controlled throughout the reporting period. This requires a structured approach to risk management, control execution, testing and remediation activities.
Impero supports the operational building blocks behind the statement:
Substantiating a VOR across a complex organization – with multiple risk categories, control owners and reporting lines – is difficult to do well in spreadsheets. With Impero, you can bring your risk and control data into one platform and build the audit trail your management board, audit committee and external auditor will expect to see.
We help you document risks and controls in a structured way, assign clear ownership, automate recurring control tasks and track testing results over time. When the audit committee asks how a particular VOR statement is substantiated, you have the evidence ready, without pulling it together from different systems at year-end.
By digitizing your risk management and control activities, you reduce the administrative burden on your finance, risk and compliance teams and build a foundation that scales with the VOR and adapts as the Dutch Corporate Governance Code continues to evolve.
A well-substantiated VOR starts with knowing your risks, your controls and who is responsible for them. Impero gives you the tools to manage all of that in one place.
Get started with Impero today and take the first step toward a more transparent, well-governed risk management environment.
Entdecken Sie weitere Begriffe, Konzepte und Rechtsvorschriften im Bereich Governance, Risk und Compliance (GRC), die Ihnen dabei helfen, Ihr Risikomanagement und Ihre internen Kontrollen zu vereinfachen.
ICFR bezieht sich auf die Prozesse und Kontrollen, die eine Organisation einrichtet, um die Richtigkeit und Verlässlichkeit ihrer Finanzberichte sicherzustellen. Das Ziel besteht darin, wesentliche Falschdarstellungen zu verhindern und aufzudecken, unabhängig davon, ob sie durch Fehler oder Betrug verursacht werden, bevor Finanzinformationen an Stakeholder, Regulierungsbehörden oder Prüfer berichtet werden.
Die Verhinderung von Steuerhinterziehung bezieht sich auf die Regeln, Prozesse und Kontrollen, die Organisationen einführen, um illegale Steuerpraktiken zu verhindern, und ist Teil eines umfassenderen Rahmenwerks für die Einhaltung von Vorschriften und Governance.
Third-Party Risk Management (TPRM) bezeichnet den Prozess der Identifikation, Bewertung und Minderung von Risiken, die aus der Zusammenarbeit mit externen Parteien wie Anbietern, Lieferanten, Dienstleistern oder Partnern entstehen.
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