Depth
Is senior specialist judgement available for the work that now creates risk?
Outgrown DPO provider?
Some organisations do not need to start by buying a new service. They need to understand whether the model they already have can still carry the work.
Capped hours, reactive advice, slow escalation, thin evidence, single-adviser dependency or weak board reporting can all be signs that the provider model has fallen behind the organisation.
The useful next step is not blame. It is a clear comparison of the operating model the organisation has now against the risk, scrutiny and evidence it needs to withstand.
Explore Shield
Common symptoms
These signals do not automatically mean the current provider is wrong. They mean the organisation may have outgrown the structure, depth or rhythm it originally chose.
Provider-fit checks
The question is what the organisation needs the DPO model to do reliably when scrutiny, urgency or complexity increases.
Is senior specialist judgement available for the work that now creates risk?
Can exposed matters move quickly into review before positions harden?
Can the organisation show the record behind advice, decisions and follow-through?
Can leadership see unresolved risk and action, not just activity?
Does the model depend too heavily on one person, inbox or undocumented history?
Should the organisation maintain, reinforce, redesign or replace the arrangement?
Possible next routes
The page should help leadership compare the pressure they feel against the level of operating support they need.
For a structured view of whether the current arrangement should be maintained, reinforced, redesigned or replaced.
Explore DPO Model ReviewFor organisations where the current DPO route remains right but needs senior backup around complex decisions.
Explore DPO SupportFor organisations that need senior-led outsourced DPO cover with continuity, escalation, evidence, reporting and adoption.
Explore ShieldFor legal, board, audit or procurement stakeholders who need a clearer evidence position before deciding.
Review board evidenceFrequently asked questions
These questions help separate a provider arrangement that needs reinforcement from one that may need redesign or replacement.
Use model review where the current arrangement may no longer fit. Use DPO Support where the internal or retained DPO remains the right structure but needs senior backup. Use Shield where the organisation needs a fuller outsourced DPO operating model with senior judgement, evidence discipline, escalation, reporting, adoption and continuity.
You may need a DPO if your organisation is a public authority, carries out regular and systematic monitoring on a large scale, or processes special-category or criminal-offence data on a large scale. Even where appointment is not mandatory, a DPO-style operating model may still be useful if the work has become high-risk, visible or difficult to evidence.
A consultant usually advises on a defined project or question. An outsourced DPO model is a continuing DPO function with agreed role, escalation, reporting, independence and contact arrangements. The important distinction is not the title alone. It is whether the organisation has a working model that can receive issues, review risk, record evidence and report clearly over time.
A fractional model usually gives lighter access to DPO capability for a defined level of need. A fuller outsourced model is more appropriate where the work requires deeper continuity, senior escalation, regulator-facing discipline, board-aware reporting or a controlled operating method around complex privacy work.
If the organisation starts carrying more complex risk, more sensitive data, regulator-facing work, contested DSARs, AI systems, vendor exposure or board scrutiny, the support model should be reviewed. The next step may be DPO Support, a DPO Model Review or Shield, depending on whether the organisation needs reinforcement or a fuller operating model.
Next step
If the current DPO arrangement feels too thin, the safest first step is a structured comparison of the model you have, the risk you now carry and the evidence leadership needs to rely on.