How can your internal audit function meet stakeholders’ needs to deliver not only assurance, but also to advise and anticipate risk? We’ve outlined nine proven ways to increase the impact and influence of internal audit.
Results from our 2016 Global Chief Audit Executive Survey showed that only 28 percent of chief audit executives (CAEs) believe their functions have strong impact and influence in their organizations. And 16 percent felt that internal audit had little to no impact at all.
So we’ve identified nine proven ways CAEs can effectively respond to stakeholders’ needs. And in doing so, increase internal audit’s impact and influence. These aren’t quick fixes or magical solutions. They require effort and commitment. But they work.
Impact and influence accrue over time with each improved process, reduced cost, and better-managed risk. Focusing on the areas listed above sets internal audit on a journey up the value chain. Along the way, compliance becomes more efficient; reporting more relevant; and advisory more credible, useful, and supportive.
We’ve repeatedly seen that when internal audit dedicates its best efforts to what matters most, its impact and influence are inevitably enhanced. So align your vision for internal audit with the strategic vision of the organization, your resources with stakeholders’ needs, and your professional approach with stakeholders’ ways of working.