Unit 4.1 Internal Control Systems
Unit 4.1 Internal Control Systems
‘‘Ultimately, all stakeholders in the company should share the same high-level goal
of establishing a strong system of internal controls.’’
INTRODUCTION
This chapter and the next cover the topic of internal controls—i.e., the
controls established to protect the assets of an organization. This chapter
defines corporate governance, IT governance, and internal controls. We also
identify the components of an internal control system, the different types of
controls, and various control activities. Finally, we illustrate a cost-benefit
analysis, which is a method managers use to determine which control
procedures are cost effective.
Control Activities. These are the policies and procedures that the
management of a company develops to help protect all of the different assets
of the firm. Control activities include a wide variety of activities throughout the
firm and are typically a combination of manual and automated controls. Some
examples of these activities are approvals, authorizations, verifications,
reconciliations, reviews of operating performance, and segregation of duties.
Through properly designed and implemented control procedures,
management will have more confidence that assets are being safeguarded
and that the accounting data processed by the accounting system are reliable.
This chapter provides several examples of control procedures, and also
illustrates control activities that should be included in every company’s internal
control system.
Information and Communication. Managers must inform employees about
their roles and responsibilities pertaining to internal control. This might include
giving them documents such as policies and procedures manuals (discussed
later) or posting memoranda on the company’s intranet. This could also
include training sessions for entry-level personnel and then annual refresher
training for continuing employees. Regardless of the method, all employees
need to understand how important their work is, how it relates to the work of
other employees in the firm, and how that relates to strong internal controls. It
is equally important that management understand the importance of keeping
good working relationships between all layers of management so that
employees feel safe communicating any possible problems they may find.
When this is the case, employees at all levels can actually enhance the
effectiveness of good internal controls. Also, they will be much more likely to
point out any problems they may detect, and corrective action can be initiated.
Once the internal control system is in place (i.e., managers have worked
through the 1992 and the 2004 COSO Frameworks), IT managers work with
operational managers throughout the organization to determine how IT
resources can best support the business processes. To achieve appropriate
and effective governance of IT, senior managers of the organization will
typically focus on five areas. First, managers need to focus on strategic
alignment of IT operations with enterprise operations. Second, they must
determine whether the organization is realizing the expected benefits (value)
from IT investment. Third, managers should continually assess whether the
level of IT investments is optimal. Fourth, senior management must determine
their organization’s risk appetite and plan accordingly. And finally, they must
continuously measure and assess the performance of IT resources. Here
again is an opportunity for managers to consider a ‘‘dashboard’’ to have
access to key indicators of these five focus areas to support timely decision-
making.
Perhaps it was the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and the many governance lapses
prior to the enactment of this legislation, that prompted the IT Governance
Institute (ITGI) to recognize a need for and to develop a framework for IT
governance. This governance framework, called Val IT, is a formal statement
of principles and processes for IT management. Val IT is tightly integrated
with COBIT. Although COBIT helps organizations understand if they are doing
things right from an IT perspective, Val IT helps organizations understand if
they are making the right investments and optimizing the returns from them.
So, COBIT focuses on the execution of IT operations, and Val IT focuses on
the investment decision. In essence, this is also a model for continuous
improvement for an organization’s IT governance program.
Val IT includes three very helpful publications that may be downloaded for
free at the ISACA website (www.isaca.org), and these documents are: (1) Val
IT Framework 2.0, (2) Val IT Getting Started with Value Management, and (3)
Val IT The Business Case.