With increasing demands and diminishing resources, how can internal audit teams keep up? Deloitte’s Agile Internal Audit methodology could be the answer. The articles below offer a closer look at the basics of an Agile approach, how internal audit functions can adopt this methodology and strategies for Internal Audit to advise on the risks of business agility.
Since their origin in software development, Agile processes have been successfully employed in countless initiatives and within a wide variety of business settings.
Building on the original Agile approach, Deloitte’s Agile Internal Audit (Agile IA) methodology challenges both the mindset of internal auditors and their established business processes. It allows the internal audit function to focus on stakeholder needs, accelerate audit cycles, drive timely insights, reduce wasted effort, and generate less documentation.
Of course, Agile methods have only recently been implemented by internal audit departments, prompting questions about whether it is possible to adopt Agile in Internal Audit while remaining true to the IIA Standards. Additional questions about which methodologies to adopt, as well as how to customize and implement them and how Agile projects themselves should be addressed, also invariably arise.
Our Agile IA library gives you the opportunity to explore the basics of Agile IA; their compatibility with IIA Standards; and how to best adopt them to drive efficiency, efficacy, and innovation in your organization and beyond.
Beginning with their origins in software development, Agile methods have been effective in countless initiatives in various business settings. Building on the original Agile approach, Agile Internal Audit uses methods that change both the mindset of internal auditors and their business processes.
As discussed above, Agile is a change methodology for the internal audit group and its stakeholders. This is crucial, because internal auditors’ work relates to every business and function that affects the organization’s performance and value—and unilateral efforts to change such a function generally fail.
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