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An auditor is someone who prepares and examines financial records. They ensure that financial
records are accurate and that taxes are paid properly and on time. They assess financial operations
and work to help ensure that organizations run efficiently.
In addition to examining and preparing financial documentation and written reports, auditors must
explain their findings. This includes face-to-face meetings with organization managers and individual
clients.
Examines financial statements to be sure that they are accurate and comply with laws and
regulations
Computes taxes owed, prepares tax returns, and ensures that taxes are paid properly and on time
Inspects account books and accounting systems for efficiency and use of accepted accounting
procedures
Auditors assess financial operations and work to help ensure that organizations run efficiently.
Many auditors specialize, depending on the particular organization that they work for. Some
specialize in assurance services (improving the quality or context of information for decision makers)
or risk management (determining the probability of a misstatement on financial documentation).
Other auditors specialize in specific industries, such as healthcare. Some workers with a background
in accounting and auditing teach in colleges and universities.
Public auditors -
do a broad range of accounting, auditing, tax, and consulting tasks. Their clients include
corporations, governments, and individuals. They work with financial documents that clients are
required by law to disclose. These include tax forms and balance sheet statements that corporations
must provide potential investors. For example, some public auditors concentrate on tax matters,
advising corporations about the tax advantages of certain business decisions or preparing individual
income tax returns. They review clients' financial statements and inform investors and authorities
that the statements have been correctly prepared and reported. Some public auditors specialize in
forensic accounting or investigating financial crimes, such as securities fraud and embezzlement,
bankruptcies and contract disputes, and other complex and possibly criminal financial transactions.
Forensic auditors -
combine their knowledge of accounting and finance with law and investigative techniques to
determine if an activity is illegal. Many forensic auditors work closely with law enforcement
personnel and lawyers during investigations and often appear as expert witnesses during trials.
Government auditors maintain and examine the records of government agencies and audit private
businesses and individuals whose activities are subject to government regulations or taxation.
Auditors employed by federal, state, and local governments ensure that revenues are received and
spent in accordance with laws and regulations.
Internal auditors -
check for mismanagement of an organization’s funds. They identify ways to improve the processes
for finding and eliminating waste and fraud.
External auditors -
are independent auditors that do not work for the company they are auditing. Investors,
government agencies and general public companies rely on this type of auditor to present an
unbiased and independent report.
are internal auditors who review controls for their organization's computer systems, to ensure that
the financial data comes from a reliable source.
Auditors have distinct personalities. They tend to be conventional individuals, which means they’re
conscientious and conservative. They are logical, efficient, orderly, and organized. Some of them are
also enterprising, meaning they’re adventurous, ambitious, assertive, extroverted, energetic,
enthusiastic, confident, and optimistic.
While both an accountant and an auditor are responsible for the accounting processes of a
company, there are some differences between the two professions. An auditor is responsible for
reviewing the work of the accountant on a quarterly or annual basis, and is often hired from an
outside firm to do so. An accountant, on the other hand, is usually an employee of the company for
which they work, and the work done by an accountant is done on a daily basis. An accountant will
create the financial statements for the company, and the auditor will look the financial statements
over to make sure they are accurate.
Auditors perform (internal) financial and risk management audits and independent statutory
(external) financial audits of commercial and public sector organisations.
Auditors assess local and central government departments with the aim of improving efficiency and
effectiveness.
What does an auditor do? Typical employers | Qualifications and training | Key skills
Auditors are specialists who review the accounts of companies and organisations to ensure the
validity and legality of their financial records. They can also act in an advisory role to recommend
possible risk aversion measures and cost savings that could be made.
Auditors work in the accounting departments of a huge range of firms and with independent
chartered and certified firms, examining the money going in and out of organisations and making
sure it is recorded and processed correctly.
checking that financial reports and records are accurate and reliable
identifying if and where processes are not working as they should and advising on changes to be
made
ensuring procedures, policies, legislation and regulations are correctly followed and complied with
Auditors work typical office hours from 9.00 am to 5.00 pm, Monday to Friday. They may need to
work extra hours or during the weekend to meet deadlines, particularly during tax audits.
Auditors sometimes travel to meet clients and visit factory or warehouse locations in order to make
stock and equipment checks.
Internal auditors:
External auditors:
work with private firms of accountants, or in the public sector for the National Audit Office
carry out obligatory audits of the public sector and governmental bodies
may be called to examine the finances of private businesses, especially those working in association
with governmental bodies.
External auditors play a vital role in ensuring that money raised by taxes is used effectively and
efficiently.
There are routes into a career in audit for both university graduates and school leavers, though
routes differ depending on whether you are aiming for internal or external audit.
External auditors must first qualify as chartered accountants with a professional accounting body.
For more information about how to qualify, see our accountant job description.
Alternatively, you can gain a qualification with the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and
Accountancy (CIPFA) to work as an auditor in the public sector. For more information on this route
into audit, see our public finance accountant job description.
It is also possible for graduates to gain a professional accounting qualification while working for the
National Audit Office, which offers a three-year graduate scheme
Achieving qualifications can take three to five years but you will work while studying. Employers
often provide financial help with exams and allow time for study leave.
Internal auditors do not have to qualify as accountants, though it could be helpful. Graduates can
have a degree in any discipline but subjects such as accountancy, economics and IT are particularly
beneficial. School leavers can enter the profession by starting as a trainee auditor and completing
on-the-job training in order to progress.
For more information about school leavers routes into audit, see the finance sector of
TARGETcareers, our website aimed at school leavers.
Strong IT skills
Excellent interpersonal and communication skills, including good presentation and report writing
skills
View our graduate accountancy and financial management vacancies and internships
In the past, companies often relied on accountants from their audit firms to assist in reconciling
accounts, preparing the adjusting journal entries and writing financial statements.
Small companies, in particular, often lacked the level of accounting sophistication necessary to carry
out these tasks. Relying on the audit firm often made sense from the perspective of efficiency and
cost containment.
But an increased focus on auditor independence has come about during the last decade in new
requirements by the American Institute of CPAs and a host of related regulatory guidance issued by
the Securities and Exchange Commission, the General Accounting Office and the U.S. Department of
Labor.
The standards generally restrict the nonattest services – such as tax or consulting services – that
auditors may perform and the circumstances under which those services may be allowed. The
increased regulations serve to muddy an already often-misunderstood set of expectations.
What auditors do
The outside, independent auditor is engaged to render an opinion on whether a company’s financial
statements are presented fairly, in all material respects, in accordance with financial reporting
framework. The audit provides users such as lenders and investors with an enhanced degree of
confidence in the financial statements. An audit conducted in accordance with GAASand relevant
ethical requirements enables the auditor to form that opinion.
To form the opinion, the auditor gathers appropriate and sufficient evidence and observes, tests,
compares and confirms until gaining reasonable assurance. The auditor then forms an opinion of
whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.
✎ Inquiring of management and others to gain an understanding of the organization itself, its
operations, financial reporting, and known fraud or error
At the completion of the audit, the auditor may also offer objective advice for improving financial
reporting and internal controls to maximize a company’s performance and efficiency.
For a clear picture of the role of external auditors, it helps to understand what you should not expect
auditors to do. The emphasis is on “independent.”
First and foremost, auditors do not take responsibility for the financial statements on which they
form an opinion. The responsibility for financial statement presentation lies squarely in the hands of
the company being audited.
Auditors are not a part of management, which means the auditor will not:
This list is not all-inclusive. But, in short, the auditor may not assume the role and duties of
management.
In practical terms, there are a number of tasks you should not expect your auditor to perform.
✎ Maintain client permanent records, including loan documents, leases, contracts and other legal
documents
Your external auditor may perform some of these duties under guidelines of the American Institute
of CPAs, Department of Labor, Government Accountability Office, Securities and Exchange
Commission or Public Company Accounting Oversight Board. However, these same guidelines may
preclude the auditor from performing some of these functions.
The words, “The financial statements are the responsibility of management,” appear prominently in
an auditor’s communications, including the audit report.
Management’s responsibility is the underlying foundation on which audits are conducted. Simply
put, without management having responsibility for the financial statements, the demarcation line
that determines the auditor’s independence and objectivity regarding the client and the audit
engagement would not be as clear.
It is important for a company’s management to understand exactly what an audit is – and what an
audit does and does not do. The auditor’s responsibility is to express an independent, objective
opinion on the financial statements of a company. This opinion is given in accordance with auditing
standards that require the auditors to plan certain procedures and report on the results of the audit,
while considering the representations, assertions and responsibility of management for the financial
statements.
Auditing standards are very clear that management has the following responsibilities fundamental to
the conduct of an audit:
1. To prepare and present the financial statements in accordance with an applicable financial
reporting framework, including the design, implementation and maintenance of internal controls
relevant to the preparation and presentation of financial statements that are free from material
misstatements, whether from error or fraud
✎ All records, documentation and other matters relevant to the preparation and presentation of
the fin
he role of a Risk Manager is to communicate risk policies and processes for an organisation. They
provide hands-on development of risk models involving market, credit and operational risk, assure
controls are operating effectively, and provide research and analytical support. Risk Managers must
have excellent quantitative and analytical skills, along with the ability to apply those skills across a
variety of business processes.
The duties under a Risk Management job description include the following:
Designing and implementing an overall risk management process for the organisation, which
includes an analysis of the financial impact on the company when risks occur
Performing a risk assessment: Analysing current risks and identifying potential risks that are
affecting the company
Performing a risk evaluation: Evaluating the company’s previous handling of risks, and
comparing potential risks with criteria set out by the company such as costs and legal
requirements
Conducting policy and compliance audits, which will include liaising with internal and
external auditors
Building risk awareness amongst staff by providing support and training within the company
A degree in the following subjects is not vital but can be included in a job description:
Risk Management
Finance or Economics
Science
Statistics
Engineering
Law
If a candidate does not have a degree, a career in risk management is certainly still possible, but
would mean working up the career path, likely starting at an administrative level.
When compiling a Risk Management job description, it’s important to also display the following
skills:
Commercial awareness
Numerical skills
Are you looking for a Risk Management role? View our latest Risk Ma