Like it or not, many of today's organizations have to plan for audits - in some
cases once a year, in other cases on an on-going basis. Of course, meeting compliance
and auditing requirements takes time, resources and money. That's why many organizations
have started to look at the effectiveness of their compliance and auditing strategies,
with an eye to streamlining and automating processes and simply making audits
less painful and costly.
For many organizations, IT compliance is being seen as essential to ensure
regulatory and business compliance. As a result, IT teams need a greater understanding
of business functions across divisions. They are no longer an invisible, backend
support unit only but can be more involved in streamlining business processes
as well.
To help organizations learn how to optimizing their auditing and compliance
strategies, I talked with Jorge Rey, an information security and IT audit manager
with Kaufman, Rossin & Co. a Miami-based accounting and consulting organization.
Here are some key recommendations from Mr. Rey:
Understand Your IT Compliance Needs: The bottom line of compliance is protecting
information. However, not all information needs to be protected the same way.
Depending on your compliance requirements, information will need to be protected
from unauthorized access, use, disclosure, destruction, modification, or disruption.
Understanding what information to protect and how to protect it will help
your organization design an information security program that addresses your
regulatory and business requirements. Furthermore, it will help you assess
what type of audits and related procedures will be required.
Understand the Types of Audits: Audits should be performed by an independent
and qualified group (internal or external). Each organization, regardless
of the size and complexity should want to understand how they are managing
their compliance efforts, IT risks and how they can improve their processes.
There are various types of audits that can be performed and these are: Financial,
Operational, Integrated (financial and operational), Administrative, Agreed
upon procedures, Information Security and Forensic audits. "Regardless
of the type of audit that is or should performed, some organizations depending
on their government or external requirements might require to have an external
audit group issue an audit report," says Mr. Rey.
Identify Your Potential Risks and Decide on the Optimal Frequency: Organizations
should assess and understand their regulatory and business risk to determine
the optimal mitigation strategies and audit frequency. If the organization
identifies vulnerabilities and threats to their information resources they
will be able to determine the frequency and future benefit of the audit. The
controls surrounding a business process should be audited more frequent when
the consequences are devastating for a company if the vulnerability is exploited.
Thus, the optimal frequency for audits depends on the potential threat and
the loss potential. "The frequency of audits should be established during
the audit planning. Analysis of short- and long-term planning should be covered
during the planning so new risks related to control issues, regulations, technology
or business processes are properly identified," says Rey.
Understand the Impact on IT: It's now more important than ever for business
to have an understanding of IT (as well, of course, as IT having an understanding
of business). "As a result of IT auditing and/or compliance requirements,
it is more important for business process owners to have a better understanding
of IT. Business owners are responsible for defining business requirements
while IT is responsible for implementing and/or maintaining these," says
Rey. "IT typically understands the business process (at the end, they
are the backbone of many organizations) but they should not be responsible
for making business decisions on behalf of business users unless explicitly
requested and risks accepted."