Robert L. Mainardi

Beyond Audit


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both from an annual perspective and previous audit. As we discussed in the previous chapter, you can never prepare enough, and in a remote audit, you have to prepare and plan twice as hard as before and be dedicated to the details of your audit methodology. Take my advice on this point and make your remote audit life much easier: Review the annual planning documentation, ask questions to the person who completed it, gain an understand of the business objective(s) and supporting processes, and set an initial scope based on the objective(s) and previous findings from the last audit. This first step in preparing for the remote audit will provide a solid foundation for you to effectively plan and build a test approach to satisfy the audit objectives and deliver a value-added report to your client.

      Every audit you participate on will have challenges, but the remote audit will exacerbate simple ones into much more difficulties throughout the audit. Regardless of the audit type, the biggest challenge is availability of the client. Whether the clients like it or not, they should be a key participant in every audit due to their knowledge of the process, access and understanding of the data, system knowledge, and overall process experience.

      I think many times auditors take for granted the availability of client access when executing a traditional audit. That luxury is missing during a remote audit. I know this may seem like a simple concept, but it plays a huge role when the auditor is trying to complete the planning process and is missing critical data or information to close the loop on one particular process piece. Gone is the time of getting up from your desk and finding someone in the process area to question regarding the missing information. An auditor's ability to follow up, ask qualifying questions, or retrieve missing documentation becomes much more complicated when they do not have immediate access to the business team. And there is no telling when and if your business partner is going to answer the phone to address the next question from their audit counterpart.

      Understanding the Business Process

      The next step in this research part of planning is going to focus on any previous audit activity, external exams or reviews, as well as open and closed action items. The easiest one of these is going to be the previous audit activity. This information is readily available to you along with the supporting evidence and access to the individuals who performed the actual audit. I would suggest reaching out to whoever completed the last review to get their perspective on the area, business personnel, challenges encountered during the audit, and the final report. Discussing these topics with the person directly involved with the project will yield much more valuable information than just reading through the documentation. Plus, it will save you time, and we all know that in every audit, that is a precious commodity.

      Another component during this phase that must be included is understanding the rules that the business operation is required to follow. These rules include the established policies and procedures and all federal, state, and local laws. It is important to note, especially during a remote audit, when looking at the policies and procedures that you must be especially aware of the details surrounding workaround scenarios. These types of scenarios include exception processes, manual overrides, management discretion decisions, and supervisory overrides.