As I prepare this piece, we sit at the halfway mark of 2020. For most, if not all, of us who provide Internal Audit and Risk Management services to our organizations, it is clear the risk assessments, audit plans and risk management projections we so diligently created just six to nine months ago are no longer worth the paper, presentation slides or spreadsheets they are written on. The pandemic has changed the game and we need a new game plan. I have yet to hear of an audit or ERM risk assessment completed prior to March 2020 that included the risk factors of global pandemic, world-wide economic shutdown, business closures or overnight transition to remote workforces.
Now is the perfect time to not only rethink our 2020 risk assessments but also to re-examine our overall approach to Internal Audit and ERM Risk Assessment in general. Implementing a new risk assessment game plan now will be critical to our success during the remainder of 2020 and into 2021.
The first half of 2020 is in the books. However, most Internal Audit shops haven’t made much of a dent in their 2020 work plans. Updating or re-calibrating your Internal Audit risk assessment right now is highly recommended before restarting your audit activity. The entire risk landscape for most organizations has changed dramatically over the past four months with new and emerging issues that now warrant attention from Internal Audit.
For organizations with existing ERM programs there are undoubtedly a few new risks on the radar that weren’t there just a few months ago. For organizations without ERM programs in place, now is a perfect time to start discussing the benefits of these programs with Senior Management and the Board. One immediate change companies should consider is to conduct and update their ERM risk assessments on a more frequent basis, in addition to ensuring their ERM risk assessments are addressing these new strategic risks:
Ed Williams, CIA, CRMA
Sr. Audit Manager
Risk & Compliance Services
+1 303 324 6106
ed.williams@jeffersonwells.com
About the Author
Ed is a Sr. Manager and Subject Matter Expert in the Jefferson Wells Risk & Compliance practice. He brings a deep background of 25 years’ experience practicing and consulting in the areas of Internal Audit, Enterprise Risk Assessment, Sarbanes-Oxley Compliance and Anti-Fraud Programs.
Ed has held CAE positions at multiple public, private and non-profit organizations and has extensive experience reporting to Boards of Directors and Audit Committees. He is a frequent trainer and educator for the IIA, ACFE, MISTI, Colorado State University and many client organizations.
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