I recently spoke with an auditor who was lamenting about his organization hiring a team of consultants to evaluate how well a business unit was addressing process changes needed to better solve a set of client problems. He thought internal audit should have been tasked with this work. Audit has the competency and it would have cost the organization a lot less. However, he believes his organization doesn’t value internal audit as a relevant partner. As auditors strive to become relevant partners to our organizations, we can increase our value by focusing on solving market problems.
TeamMate Product Management follows a methodology based on solving market problems. This means that we need to understand how our customers work, why they perform certain tasks, how they perform those tasks, and what aggravates them in the process. If we do our job really well, we can identify what activities on their daily list they wish could be automated so they can focus on strategic tasks.
With all that knowledge, we then explain to our development team the details of a specific market problem to solve. What do they need to accomplish? What is the problem? Why is it a problem? How often does this problem occur? What impact does the problem have on their work? We do not, however, propose a solution during this discussion. We need to know everyone working together to solve the problem understands the user and her pain point so that they design the best solution, not just a workable solution. It needs to be a solution that will allow that user to feel heard, understood, and engaged with TeamMate, not just as a software vendor, but as a partner.
So how can internal audit use this approach? After all, internal audit wants to be seen as more than just a vendor of an audit report. Here are 10 steps that demonstrate how internal audit can use the market problems approach: