audit analytics
ComplianceFinanza e GestioneFisco, Contabilità e Paghe23 marzo, 2021

Want audit analytics on every audit?

You are not alone.  88% of audit teams are either in the process or plan to make analytics a part of every audit, according to the recent TeamMate Audit Benchmark, which has received over 1,200 responses from internal auditors around the globe.

The next question often is, “How do we do that?” But before asking that question, I would first ask, “What do you expect to get from these analytics?” When I hear from auditors and audit management about what they want to get from analytics, it generally falls into one of two categories – either management analytics or audit testing analytics.

Management analytics typically provide a high-level look at the data, sometimes with the ability to slice and dice it for different perspectives or drill down into the data. These are often put together in standardized dashboards that measure recent activity against KPI’s or prior month, quarter, or year performance. This type of analytics can be valuable to management.

However, audit testing analytics generally refers to analyzing the data and looking for some kind of anomaly. Sometimes the anomaly is known before running the analytics. For instance, if we want to look for any paid invoices that were prepared and authorized for payment by the same person. Other times, the anomaly is unknown, such as looking for unusually high dollar transactions or transactions that are unique because they are the only transaction that follows an unexpected pattern. The focus is on analytics to help substantiate the audit.

There is some overlap between management analytics and audit testing analytics, mostly because management analytic tools can do some audit testing and vice versa. You will find visualization to be the focus of management analytics tools. Tests like finding duplicates, outliers, Benford’s analysis, and other tests auditors need to perform are the focus of audit testing analytics tools. These are different tools. You will want a tool that can support your analytics focus, or multiple tools if you plan to do both.

One last thing, most teams on this path realize that they need more than just their one analytics expert involved, which means you will want a tool that can do what you need it to do but is also intuitively easy to use by all auditors.

Ken Petersen
Associate Director, Product Management
Ken has over 25 years of experience in developing and implementing systems and working with data in a variety of capacities while working for both Fortune 500 and entrepreneurial software development companies. Since 2002 Ken’s focus has been on the Governance, Risk, and Compliance space helping numerous customers across multiple industries implement software solutions to satisfy various compliance needs including audit and SOX.
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