Measuring the internal audit function The measurement of the internal audit function can involve a
balanced scorecard approach. Internal audit functions are primarily evaluated based on the quality of counsel and information provided to the audit committee and top management. However, this is primarily qualitative and therefore difficult to measure. "Customer surveys" sent to key managers after each audit engagement or report can be used to measure performance, with an annual survey to the audit committee. Scoring on dimensions such as professionalism, quality of counsel, timeliness of work product, utility of meetings, and quality of status updates are typical with such surveys. Understanding the expectations of senior management and the audit committee represent important steps in developing a performance measurement process, as well as how such measures help align the audit function with organizational priorities. Independent peer reviews are part of the quality assurance process for many internal audit groups as they are often required by standards. The resulting peer review report is made available to the audit committee.
Reporting of critical findings The
chief audit executive (CAE) typically reports the most critical issues to the
audit committee quarterly, along with management's progress towards resolving them. Critical issues typically have a reasonable likelihood of causing substantial financial or reputational damage to the company. For particularly complex issues, the responsible manager may participate in the discussion. Such reporting is critical to ensure the function is respected, that the proper "
tone at the top" exists in the organization, and to expedite resolution of such issues. It is a matter of considerable judgment to select appropriate issues for the audit committee's attention and to describe them in the proper context.
Audit philosophy Some of the philosophy and approach of internal auditing is derived from the work of Lawrence Sawyer. His philosophy and guidance on the role of internal audit was a forerunner of the current definition of internal auditing. It emphasized assisting management and the board in achieving the organization's objectives through well-reasoned audits, evaluations, and analyses of operational areas. He encouraged the modern internal auditor to act as a counsellor to management rather than as an adversary. Sawyer saw auditors as active players influencing events in the business rather than criticizing all degrees of errors and mistakes. He also foresaw a more desirable auditor future involving a stronger relationship with members of audit committee and the board and a divorce from direct reporting to the chief financial officer. is a framework outlining the relationship between
business functions,
risk management, and internal audit, delineating how responsibilities should be divided. It is designed "to assure the effective and transparent management of risk", by making accountabilities clear. The terminology is analogized from the military "
Line of defence" (and the concept of
defence in depth). • Under the first line of defence, risks are managed and controlled day-to-day. Here customer-facing
operational management has "ownership, responsibility and accountability for directly assessing, controlling and mitigating risks". see
Risk capital,
Regulatory capital,
Financial risk management, and .
Disruptive innovation Internal audit plays a critical role maintaining effective control mitigating emerging risks. Businesses will increase risk or bypass opportunity if auditors do not address disruption-related risks. Michael G. Alles has discussed that
Big Data is a
disruptive innovation that auditors must incorporate in practice. A 2019 study, ''Internal Auditors' Response to Disruptive Innovation'', reports on the evolution of internal audit to react to changes. Disruptions examined include data analytics, agile processes, cloud computing, robotic process automation, continuous auditing, regulatory change, and artificial intelligence. ==See also== •
Certified Information Systems Auditor •
Chartered Institute of Internal Auditors •
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO) •
Fraud deterrence •
Institute of Internal Auditors •
International Auditing and Assurance Standards Board •
IS audit •
Operational auditing •
Risk-based internal audit ==References==