Want to know your true software exposure in South Korea before a renewal or audit? A compliance assessment builds an independent effective licence position. Below are independent firms offering it in South Korea, listed alphabetically with balanced pros and cons.
Published 26 January 2026 · Last reviewed 16 March 2026 · A directory, not a ranking
A compliance assessment — building an effective licence position, or ELP — is the exercise of working out exactly what software an organisation is entitled to, what it actually has deployed, and the gap between the two. In South Korea it is most valuable as a proactive health check: a clear, independent picture of exposure before a vendor renewal or audit, so the organisation negotiates from knowledge rather than reacting to the vendor’s count.
The firms below are independent advisors that build effective licence positions and cover South Korea through APAC or global teams. They work for the buyer, not the publisher, and are listed alphabetically with balanced pros and cons. Where a firm holds a vendor partnership or reseller relationship, that tie is shown as a con — a factual trade-off, never a verdict.
South Korea applies its own civil-law framework and a strict data-protection regime under the Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA), which bears on how usage data is collected for an assessment. Most enterprise software agreements are governed by foreign law or a Korean-entity contract and priced in won or US dollars, so currency and multi-year terms matter alongside the licence count. Korean enterprises tend to value thorough, well-documented analysis and long vendor relationships, which makes a defensible, independent ELP especially useful at renewal.
Because vendors hold the entitlement and usage records, an independent reconciliation gives the buyer its own baseline. Language and on-the-ground support vary by firm; confirm Korean-language capability directly. Nothing here is legal advice; engage qualified Korean counsel for any contractual question.
The points above are general information about the South Korea market, not legal advice. Local law and your contract govern any specific situation — take qualified South Korea advice before acting.
Independent compliance and ELP specialists covering South Korea, listed alphabetically — a directory, not a ranking.
Independent multi-vendor licensing-compliance and audit-defense boutique focused on building defensible effective licence positions before and during vendor reviews.
Independent IBM and ILMT/PVU specialist with no IBM ties, focused on sub-capacity compliance and licensing optimization.
Independent Oracle advisory led by former Oracle staff, focused on Oracle and Java contracts, compliance position and negotiation, with no Oracle affiliation.
DEMO — listings are compiled from public information and labelled demo until the verified registry is live. Firms are listed alphabetically, never ranked. Independence is shown as a pro; a reseller, Big-Four or vendor-side audit relationship is shown as a con — each a factual trade-off for you to weigh.
Up to the compliance assessment (elp) hub and the South Korea market hub, across to sibling services.
An ELP reconciles what you are entitled to against what you have deployed, vendor by vendor, to show the true compliance gap. It is the factual baseline you need before a renewal or audit.
So you negotiate from your own numbers, not the vendor’s. A proactive ELP surfaces over- and under-licensing early, when there is time to remediate or re-purchase on your terms rather than under audit pressure.
Coverage is via APAC and global teams. Korean-language capability and local presence vary by firm; confirm directly when matched. We note each firm’s stated regions, not a guarantee of local staffing.
Each row shows independence status. Independence is a pro; reseller or vendor-partner ties are shown as a con. This is a directory, not a ranking, and firms appear in neutral alphabetical order.
It can. South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Act bears on usage telemetry that touches individuals. Reputable firms scope collection accordingly; for legal questions engage qualified Korean counsel.
Yes. Matching is free for buyers and confidential. No vendor sees your brief. You describe your situation once and we route it to firms covering compliance assessment in South Korea.
Get matched, free and confidentially, with independent firms building compliance assessments and ELPs in South Korea.
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