The Most Interesting Auditor in the World
Posted on Apr 26, 2012
Posted on Apr 26, 2012
Posted on Apr 25, 2012
One morning, a few Sundays ago, I was sitting on my back porch after finishing Michael Lewis’s Moneyball and I began wondering if there wasn’t something in that book that might be important to the profession of Internal Audit. I became convinced there was an argument to be made that, just as Billy Beane found new measures of success to identify talented ballplayers, so might Internal Audit look at the ways it measures success of the department and the staff to obtain better results. So I started typing away at my computer with the thought that I’d put together a quick post on the subject.
continue reading...Posted on Apr 23, 2012
Posted on Apr 16, 2012
Posted on Apr 10, 2012
We interrupt our free-flowing discussions about audit skills because I’m looking for help regarding some concepts I stumbled across that may connect to improving the way we communicate. Which, when you stop and think about it, isn’t that big a leap from our discussion about innovation and creativity; at the root of both of these is the way we use connections to learn more. But I won’t belabor that correlation too much because my point is not to actually connect this to the Moneyball discussion we’ve been having; it is, as I said, to get a little help out there.
continue reading...Posted on Apr 5, 2012
Sheesh. These recaps are starting to take as long as the entire post. Suffice to say that, so far, we have talked about how the movie/book Moneyball might speak to the profession about the way it determines an internal auditor is “successful”; we talked about hiring the right people, not just the right people for the job; and we talked about how we may be focusing on the wrong traits and skills, and should be focusing on creativity and inquisitiveness instead. Let's dig into those two a little more.
continue reading...Posted on Apr 2, 2012