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Audit and Risk Professionals Say Biggest Challenge is Communicating with Executives

The most widespread challenge facing audit, risk management and compliance professionals is putting their work into a context that speaks to executives. According to the 2014 GRC Technology Pulse Survey, conducted by ACL, the company that is ...

2014 GRC Technology Pulse Survey 1  5491b069cd57f

The most widespread challenge facing audit, risk management and compliance professionals is putting their work into a context that speaks to executives. According to the 2014 GRC Technology Pulse Survey, conducted by ACL, the company that is transforming audit and risk, 42 percent of the more than 1,700 finance, audit, risk, and compliance professionals surveyed cited this issue as the largest obstacle they face today.

One reason this remains a challenge may well be that executives are not providing the resources required. A majority number of respondents reported that they are not using purpose-built audit and risk software, with 27 percent reporting they use Microsoft products like Word and Excel, shared drives or Sharepoint. While these general products are adequate for many tasks, they fall short of easily creating visibility around an organization’s major risks, or linking findings to actionable results.

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Despite these challenges, 91 percent of audit and risk professionals agreed that their vantage point in the organizations has them uniquely equipped to identify opportunities that would improve operational performance if senior management empowers them.

“The stark reality for GRC professionals is that it is impossible to demonstrate strategic value if your daily reality is dominated by administrative work. To create more time for value-added, strategic work, it is imperative that audit, risk, and compliance professionals get out of their spreadsheets and take advantage of technology built for them. Our research indicates that they still struggle to do so,” said Ross Paul, Vice President of Global Operations at ACL. “This surprising blind spot not only underutilizes GRC professionals who can have a positive impact on financial performance, it puts companies at great risk.”

This year’s GRC Technology Pulse Survey also revealed that GRC professionals think the most prevalent concern for organizations is data privacy and security. This is a change from 2013, when respondents indicated internal fraud, waste and abuse as the primary worry.

“It’s time for leadership to step back and evaluate what modern technology can do for them,” added Laurie Schultz, President and CEO at ACL. “Some of the historical technology providers in this profession are holding the industry — and by extension the careers of GRC professionals — back by hanging onto a cumbersome, antiquated approach to software design. Driving this shift, we have designed our next generation of solutions to harness the cloud and disrupt the status quo, making it easier to transition from legacy software and, in many cases, adopt technology for the first time.”