00:00:03 The IIA
Hello, welcome to Getting Started With, where our job is to make your job easier.
00:00:09 The IIA
On this episode, we're getting started with automation basics for internal auditors.
00:00:13 The IIA
In this video, you'll learn what automation means for your work as an internal auditor.
00:00:18 The IIA
We'll cover 2 important angles, how automation shows up inside the processes you audit, and how you can use automation tools to do your own audit work more efficiently.
00:00:28 The IIA
By the end, you'll have a
00:00:30 The IIA
solid foundation for thinking about automation, whether you're testing in control or looking for ways to save time on the job.
00:00:36 The IIA
So let's get started.
00:00:39 The IIA
Picture a factory floor.
00:00:40 The IIA
Workers used to do every single step by hand.
00:00:43 The IIA
Then machines came in.
00:00:44 The IIA
The conveyor belt moves products along automatically, robotic arms assemble parts at exact intervals.
00:00:50 The IIA
Humans are still there, but now their job is to design the process, watch for problems, and step in when something breaks down.
00:00:58 The IIA
That shift from manual to automated is what's happening in business processes everywhere.
00:01:03 The IIA
And as an internal auditor, your job is to understand how those automated systems work, whether the controls built into them are effective, and whether the right people are overseeing the machines.
00:01:14 The IIA
Let's start with a term to learn.
00:01:16 The IIA
Automation is the use of technology to perform tasks or processes with minimal or no human intervention.
00:01:22 The IIA
In plain terms, a system does the work instead of a person, and the auditor's job is to make sure that system is doing it right.
00:01:31 The IIA
There are two distinct ways automation touches your work as an internal auditor.
00:01:36 The IIA
First, there are automated controls inside the processes and systems you're auditing.
00:01:40 The IIA
Second, there are automation tools you can use to do your audit work more efficiently.
00:01:46 The IIA
Think of our factory.
00:01:47 The IIA
You need to understand how the machines on the floor work, but you also have your own set of modern tools to help you inspect them.
00:01:54 The IIA
Let's take each one in turn.
00:01:55 The IIA
First, let's talk about automated controls inside the processes your organization uses.
00:02:01 The IIA
These are controls that a system performs without a human having to do anything.
00:02:05 The IIA
They're built into the technology itself.
00:02:08 The IIA
This is our next term to learn.
00:02:10 The IIA
Automated controls are controls that are performed by an information system without human intervention designed to prevent or detect errors, fraud, or other irregularities.
00:02:20 The IIA
In plain terms, the software catches the problem before a person even has to look for it.
00:02:26 The IIA
Back to our factory.
00:02:28 The IIA
An automated control is like a sensor on the conveyor belt that stops the line if a product doesn't meet weight requirements.
00:02:34 The IIA
It doesn't wait for a worker to notice.
00:02:36 The IIA
It acts instantly, every time.
00:02:39 The IIA
Some common examples of automated controls include a system that won't let a purchase order go through if it's above a set dollar limit, software that flags a duplicate invoice before it gets paid, a data entry field that only accepts valid date formats, a system that automatically reconciles accounts at period close.
00:02:59 The IIA
These controls are often more consistent than manual ones because they are applied the same way every time to every transaction.
00:03:07 The IIA
That consistency is one of their biggest advantages.
00:03:10 The IIA
When you're testing automated controls, the testing approach is a little different from testing manual controls.
00:03:16 The IIA
Here's a pro tip.
00:03:18 The IIA
An automated control either works or it doesn't.
00:03:21 The IIA
If it's configured correctly and the system is running as designed, the same result will happen every time.
00:03:27 The IIA
That means once you confirm the control is correctly configured and operating, a single well-documented test can provide sufficient evidence.
00:03:35 The IIA
The key is making sure you're testing the right thing, the system configuration itself, not just one transaction.
00:03:41 The IIA
If the control is set up correctly, every transaction benefits.
00:03:45 The IIA
If it's not, every transaction is at risk.
00:03:48 The IIA
When you're auditing a process with automated controls, there are four questions you want to answer.
00:03:54 The IIA
Is the control correctly configured in the system?
00:03:57 The IIA
Has it changed since it was last reviewed?
00:04:00 The IIA
Who has access to change the system settings?
00:04:03 The IIA
And are there manual overrides?
00:04:05 The IIA
And if so, are those overrides monitored?
00:04:08 The IIA
The last one is especially important.
00:04:11 The IIA
Automated controls can be bypassed.
00:04:13 The IIA
If someone can override the system without anyone knowing, the control isn't as strong as it looks on paper.
00:04:19 The IIA
Watch out for this common mistake, assuming that because a control is automated, it's always working correctly.
00:04:26 The IIA
Automation reduces the need for human intervention, but it doesn't eliminate the need for human oversight.
00:04:32 The IIA
Systems can be misconfigured.
00:04:34 The IIA
Settings can change.
00:04:35 The IIA
People with the right access can turn controls off or work around them.
00:04:39 The IIA
So, your job as an internal auditor isn't to assume the machine is working.
00:04:44 The IIA
It's to verify it.
00:04:46 The IIA
Here's a time saver.
00:04:47 The IIA
For repetitive controls, consider using a data analytics tool to test the entire population of transactions rather than pulling a manual sample.
00:04:56 The IIA
The tool can flag exceptions automatically.
00:04:58 The IIA
You get more coverage and it takes less time than manual sampling.
00:05:02 The IIA
It's one of the clearest cases where using automation in your own work directly makes your audit results stronger.
00:05:10 The IIA
Now let's flip to the other side.
00:05:12 The IIA
Automation isn't just something you audit.
00:05:14 The IIA
It's also something you can use.
00:05:16 The IIA
The global internal audit standards say that internal audit functions should use technology to improve their effectiveness and efficiency.
00:05:24 The IIA
Standard 10.3 specifically requires the chief audit executive to regularly evaluate the technology used by the internal audit function and pursue opportunities to improve.
00:05:35 The IIA
That applies to every auditor on the team, not just leadership.
00:05:40 The IIA
What does that look like in practice?
00:05:42 The IIA
It means using tools to do things that used to require manual effort.
00:05:47 The IIA
Things like pulling and sorting large amounts of data, tracking open findings, scheduling follow-ups, or building dashboards that show the status of the audit plan at a glance.
00:05:57 The IIA
These aren't fancy or futuristic ideas.
00:06:00 The IIA
They're practical ways to spend less time on repetitive tasks and more time on thinking and judgment that only auditors can do.
00:06:09 The IIA
Let's define our next term to learn.
00:06:11 The IIA
Audit automation is the use of technology tools and techniques to perform audit tasks with less manual effort, including data analysis, workflow management, and reporting.
00:06:22 The IIA
In plain terms, using tools to do the routine work faster so you can spend more time on the thinking.
00:06:29 The IIA
Some of the most common ways auditors use automation in their own work include:
00:06:35 The IIA
Data analytics tools which let you analyze an entire population of transactions rather than just a sample.
00:06:42 The IIA
Automated work papers and checklists which standardize how the team documents its work.
00:06:48 The IIA
Audit management systems which track open findings, deadlines, and the status of management's responses.
00:06:54 The IIA
And workflow tools that can send automated reminders when action plans are approaching their due dates.
00:07:01 The IIA
You don't have to use all of these at once.
00:07:03 The IIA
Even one or two can make a real difference in how efficiently your team works.
00:07:08 The IIA
Here's a bright idea.
00:07:10 The IIA
If your team is still using spreadsheets to track open audit findings, look at whether your organization's audit management system or even a simple workflow tool could automate those status updates and follow-up reminders.
00:07:23 The IIA
Manual tracking of due dates is exactly the kind of repetitive task automation handles well.
00:07:29 The IIA
Freeing your team from that kind of administrative work gives them more time for the analysis and judgment that drives value.
00:07:36 The IIA
One more thing to watch out for.
00:07:38 The IIA
Automation is a tool, not a replacement for your judgment as an auditor.
00:07:42 The IIA
A data analytics tool can flag anomalies, but it's your job to decide whether each anomaly is a real risk or a false alarm.
00:07:51 The IIA
The tool gets you information.
00:07:53 The IIA
You interpret it.
00:07:54 The IIA
Make sure you understand what your automation tool is doing, what data it's looking at, and how it's reaching its conclusions.
00:08:01 The IIA
If you can't explain the methodology, you can't stand behind the results.
00:08:06 The IIA
And always document not just what the tool found, but how and why you used it.
00:08:12 The IIA
Thanks for watching Getting Started with Automation Basics for Internal Auditors.
00:08:17 The IIA
If you found this helpful, check out our episodes on data analytics basics and IT audits to keep building your technology skills.
00:08:25 The IIA
You can find these and other helpful resources, including tools, podcasts, and training at the links below.