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Ontdek hier het laatste nieuws, bekendmakingen, en publicaties op het gebied van internal audit

KPMG: Internal Audit - Top 10 Considerations for 2017
KPMG: Internal Audit - Top 10 Considerations for 2017
27.01.2017 Publicatie

Competing in a rapidly changing world, companies must grapple with emerging challenges seemingly every day: cyber threats, emerging and potentially disruptive technologies, business performance risk and more. In this increasingly complex environment, Internal Audit (“IA”) has a crucial role to play to help the organization in managing risks associated with these diverse business trends. This is also in line with the UK and Dutch Corporate Governance Codes. An impactful IA function will stay current with these wide-ranging business issues as they emerge so it can help monitor related risks and their potential effects on the organization. To provide the greatest value, IA must find opportunities to challenge the status quo to reduce risk, improve controls and identify potential efficiencies and cost benefits across the organization. To help IA functions achieve these goals, KPMG surveyed IA functions from companies in multiple industries globally and in the Netherlands. The result is KPMG Internal Audit: Top 10 Considerations for 2017, which outlines areas where IA should focus so it can effectively add value across the organization and maximize its influence on the company. Top 10 Considerations for 2017: Cybersecurity Culture/Soft Controls Integrated Assurance Regulatory compliance Third party relationships Anti-bribery/anti-corruption Emerging technologies Data analytics and continuous auditing Performance risk Strategic alignment

Global Perspectives and Insights: Elevating Internal Audit’s Strategic Impact
Global Perspectives and Insights: Elevating Internal Audit’s Strategic Impact
04.01.2017 Publicatie

The increasing importance of internal audit’s role as the third line of defense in effective risk management and control has raised its visibility both within and outside of the organization. As a result, chief audit executives (CAEs) and internal audit departments are looking for ways to utilize their unique expertise to enhance their value to the overall corporate mission. This leads to the question — asked by all high performing support areas such as finance, human resources, IT, and legal — how can we have a strategic impact on the organization? Internal audit is uniquely positioned to be a strategic partner. With reporting relationships to the chief executive officer (CEO) or other executive officer, audit committee, and the board, high performing CAEs combine intelligence, expertise, diligence, and curiosity in a manner that positions internal audit for a critical strategic role. Despite this, CAEs are not generally recognized for the potential strategic impact that they can have on their organizations. For CAEs looking to elevate the strategic role of internal audit, several questions should be answered to take this next logical and desired step. Does the CAE understand the strategic mission of the organization at a deep level? Does the CAE understand the perspective of the CEO and board and make the effort to become a trusted partner, offering advice and solutions that address key problems? Is internal audit aligned with the strategic mission? Is internal audit anticipatory and proactive (rather than reactive)? Does the CAE provide assurance on risk management? Unfortunately, traditional perceptions of internal auditing can lead to wariness on the part of others to embrace internal audit as a strategic partner. Further, internal audit must balance the independence that is required for its role against the level of involvement in the tactical duties necessary to achieve the organization’s goals. After all, it is the mandate of internal audit to assess these tactics. But proactively addressing these challenges can lead to a real opportunity for internal audit to be recognized as a strategic partner and contributor.

CBOK: Achieving Excellence in Assurance, Strategic Risk Insights, and More
CBOK: Achieving Excellence in Assurance, Strategic Risk Insights, and More
29.12.2016 Publicatie

Global macroeconomic uncertainty and rock-bottom interest rates, soaring regulatory expectations, cybersecurity threats and attacks, legacy information technology (IT) systems, Fintech, blockchain, and other disruptive innovations are all examples of the staggering collection of market and regulatory challenges that confront the financial services industry (FSI), making it the most demanding sector in which internal auditors operate. Amid the industry’s growing macroeconomic, regulatory, procedural, and technological complexity, internal audit within FSI must fulfill its core mission of delivering assurance excellence. Yet, internal auditors must do more. Effective assurance alone no longer guarantees success. This is an important message conveyed by FSI participants in the 2015 Global Internal Audit Common Body of Knowledge (CBOK) Stakeholder Survey. The results of this global survey of stakeholders— specifically, the results from the responses of executives and board members who work closely with internal auditors—reveal best practices that internal auditors in FSI should consider in their quest to continually improve performance and deliver more value to their organizations. Among the key findings: Internal audit reporting structure, the chief audit executive’s (CAE’s) relationships with the boards and the executive teams, and the entire function’s communication skill and style represent key success factors. Assurance is paramount. The consultative, value-added work that stakeholders clearly want auditors to deliver cannot detract from assurance. Assurance work is most valuable when it is aligned with the strategic risks of the organization and provides credible challenges to the effectiveness of risk management activities within the organization. CAEs and internal auditors should convey both good and bad news while exerting their influence to focus attention (at the board level and throughout the organization) on specific risks. CAEs also should possess the authority necessary to elevate and communicate strategic issues quickly to executive management and the board. Stakeholders expect internal audit to assess governance effectiveness and to monitor the values and behaviors that influence the organization’s risk culture. Stakeholders believe that internal audit should take on a more active role in assessing and evaluating the organization’s strategic risks and emerging risks

Harnessing the power of cognitive technology to transform the audit
Harnessing the power of cognitive technology to transform the audit
28.12.2016 Publicatie

Your work as an audit professional is fundamentally about trust. It's important to explore how you can continue to promote trust during this time of profound change across the business landscape. Given the explosion of data and the digitization of our lives, we want to promote a discussion about how the audit profession must evolve its tools and approach to keep up with the pace of change and remain relevant in a dynamic marketplace. Specifically, our profession must embrace the use of advanced technologies, including data and analytics (D&A), robotics, automation and cognitive intelligence, to manage processes, support planning and inform decision making. KPMG is constantly thinking about the development of innovative capabilities and technologies that will enhance quality and strengthen the relevance of audits into the future. Where auditors once searched manually through reams of financial information to hunt down the anomaly that may give pause to the appropriateness of a company’s assertion, the accumulation of large data sets and the application of advanced analytics and cognitive technologies make it possible to rapidly and precisely analyze larger, more complete populations of financial and non-financial data. The use of these technologies can also generate richer, more detailed audit evidence for evaluation and provide executives with actionable insights about their organizations, their core processes and their controls. What’s more, supervised cognitive systems can learn from each encounter with new information enabling continuous refinement of the knowledge and analytical capabilities of the system. It’s really simple: Cognitive technology isn’t just changing the face of financial reporting and auditing, it’s revolutionizing it. To prepare for this environment, tomorrow’s teams of professionals must possess more than just an understanding of accounting and auditing – they will need stronger critical thinking, analytical, data science and IT skills to complement their financial and business acumen. To that end, KPMG is committed to fostering a culture of innovation and learning, especially within the Audit Practice.