Beyond Audit. Robert L. Mainardi

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the planning phase, it is important to remain focused on the key business processes, which drive the achievement of the business deliverables (objectives). This is accomplished by reviewing the business developed policies and procedures, available flowcharts, and process walkthroughs with business personnel. The auditor should use every meeting and interaction with business team members to strengthen and foster the audit and business partner relationship. Auditors should spend more time with their business partners explaining the learning approach an audit requires and the corresponding reasons why it is so important. Let your business partners know how important the information sharing (and learning) is to an auditor during the planning phase as it sets the direction and focus of the upcoming audit. Additionally, all knowledge gained will be used in the development of the audit testing. With the proper business knowledge sharing, the audit planning documentation can be executed with minimal issues, questions, and business personnel disruption. Sufficiently detailed planning documentation will provide a solid foundation for the audit testing to be developed and executed, again, with minimal disruption to the client. This type of approach seems pretty standard. Meet with the client; gain an understanding; share information regarding the audit process; and learn as much as you can during planning. Appears to be pretty straightforward and simple. No – imagine trying to accomplish all of these things over the phone or video call without being able to sit down in the same room with the person and facilitate these critical discussions. I do not care how good a communicator you may be. Executing these discussions remotely poses significant barriers to success, not to mention an increased time commitment. If an initial planning meeting with a client to explain the audit process, introduce the team, and discuss the initial scope usually takes about an hour, consider doubling that budget at a minimum if you are doing it remotely. And I am going to assume, if this is a new client who has never been audited, the budget will be more than double. I am not suggesting the time commitment is not worth it. On the contrary, I believe it is not just worth it – it is mandatory. Do not skimp or rush through the audit department overview (or any other parts) during the introduction meeting with your client, because this meeting not only sets the tone for the current audit but is also the foundation for the audit and business partner relationship.

      Also, remember to prepare for this impromptu follow-up meeting with the client, as the auditors must be ready with the exact topics, questions, and data which are to be discussed in this call. If the auditor is not adequately prepared for this call, I can guarantee you three things:

      1 The call will not sound professional.

      2 The audit client will not be happy with the interruption and lack of respect regarding effective use of their time.

      3 The auditor will not receive all of the information required to complete the testing and possibly forget an item, which will require another call.

      All three of these outcomes damage the audit and business partner relationship, and in established relationships create unnecessary erosion. It may not seem like a significant issue at the time, but the repeated calls or interruptions due to a lack of preparation on the auditor's part will create stress on the relationship, which impacts the audit team's ability to access critical information to complete the audit in a timely manner (close to the allotted budget) and establish a productive communication channel to facilitate issue validation, root cause, recommendations, and action plan discussion needed to deliver a value in the final audit report.

      Over the past three decades of keynote addresses, conference workshops, and training events all over the world, I have always stated one undisputable fact about myself and my experience being an internal auditor: I was never the smartest or best auditor on the team, but I focused on building my business knowledge, observing successful audit and business personnel, executing assigned work to the best of my ability, and learning from my mistakes. In the end, however, I always credited my success of going from a staff auditor to a vice president of audit and facilitating training for over 30 years to my ability to communicate and build relationships both inside and outside of audit. Successful relationships will provide you with benefits ranging from learning from co-workers to successful partnerships with business unit personnel to add value. Use relationships to not only further your personal development, but also positively impact the effectiveness and efficiency of business processes you encounter throughout your career.

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