Read this article if you are a town, city or county administrator, CFO, controller, finance director, accounting manager, selectman, or councilor at a governmental entity or nonprofit.
Does every audit feel like a rescue mission? Do you often feel like each year is the same as the last? You’re not alone. Many nonprofit and governmental agencies experience turbulence along the way; no audit is perfect. In this article, we’ll outline a strategic approach to help your audit journey progress to planned readiness.
Audit rescue mission
Every mission, whether it's rescue or readiness, starts with a plan. If you’re feeling the heat from what seems like everything being on fire, that’s okay. No amount of ‘doing more’ is going to get you closer to success. The best first step is to stop, pause, and take stock of where you’re at, what you’re working with, and where you’re headed. Look no further than your next audit cycle—whether that means the current audit you’re in, the one that just won’t end, or the one up ahead.
Step 1: Get a lay of the audit land
- Rearview perspective: What worked, what didn’t
- Critical issues: Prior year and recurring findings, internal control deficiencies, issues of non-compliance
- Operational pitfalls and inefficiencies: Staffing shortages, technical skills gap, lag times from external departments, technology limitations
- Known obstacles: New standards, new software implementations, turnover in auditors or internal organizational structure
Getting a lay of the land can be a simple first step to alleviate some weight from your back and lighten the mental load, putting you on the path forward.
Now that you know what you’re working with (and not!), it’s time to put pen to paper.
Step 2: Make an audit plan
- Deadlines: Know the end goal you’re working toward.
- Phases and milestones: Consider time needed for review and revisions, and the availability of resources along the way, include regular checkpoints to keep the momentum going, and adjust as needed.
- Know your cutoffs and when information is available: Prioritize areas based on when the information will or can be ready to work with.
- Get the word out: Identify key stakeholders in your plan and inform them of their role and key dates in support of the overall objective.
Step 3: Get started
- Don’t wait: Do what you can today.
- Organize as you go: Set aside copies of source documents as you become aware of them.
- Address things as they arise: Set up subaccounts for better tracking.
Every good plan is best executed with a team committed and aligned to success. Next, we’ll discuss how to champion your audit approach and make progress even when the going gets tough.
Run and refine your audit plan
Resources and recon, deploying your plan, checklists, technology, and champions—don't be afraid to work with your auditors throughout the year.
Step 4: Think outside the box
- Collaborate: Recruit internal and external department team members, organize an audit task force of champions, consider keeping seasonal employees, and create an internship program.
- Touch base with auditors: Call or meet regularly to keep them informed or ask for guidance.
- Network with other agencies: Inquire with peer agencies, share resources, and support each other.
- Connect with member organizations: Join listservs, research sample policies and procedures, and attend local chapter meetings and trainings for additional resources and insights.
- Leverage technology: Partner with IT to set up custom reports, create templates, set alerts and reminders, explore project management tools, or create calendars.
Step 5: Simplify for success
- Break down complex areas into bite-sized tasks: Consider reviewing and maintaining details for capital assets, grants, leases, and SBITA during mid-year or on a quarterly basis.
- Transition away from annual and manual: Transition from one-time year-end to multi-period reconciliations and adjustments, including budgeted transfers, indirect cost allocations, accruals, and fund balance maintenance and reporting.
- The balance sheet can be your best friend: Expand period-end procedures to include reconciliation and monitoring of all balance sheet accounts, track grant reimbursements through deferred revenue to cut down on time spent reviewing expense and revenue account details, make sure AP and AR tie out every month, and track down payroll liability discrepancies as they occur.
Shift to audit readiness
Progress, not perfection, is the mindset to have when preparing your agency for an audit. Having a system in place that catches 90% of the heavy lift during the year sets you up to address the outliers as they surface, with more capacity and ease to adapt under pressure.
For more tools in your toolbox, here are some additional tips to maintain progress toward a successful audit:
- Beginning balances: Tick and tie the balance sheet to the financial statements both before and after the year has been closed in your accounting system, including reconciling the beginning fund balance.
- Just another month: Do as much as you can throughout the year so that year-end tasks feel like just another month within your operations.
- Period 13 and 14: Track year-end financial statement adjustments in period 13 and audit adjustments in period 14 to keep things more organized and report appropriately for budgetary purposes.
- Government-wide statement tracking: Setting up General Long-term Debt Group (GLTDG) and General Fixed Asset Account Group (GFAAG) funds and accounts to better manage the tracking and reporting of long-range elements of year-end and the financial statements that would otherwise live in a subsidiary module or system.
- Pooled cash: Rely on pooled cash to ensure transactions and funds are balancing properly.
- Pre-audit pseudo-internal audit: Set an internal materiality threshold and review for internal control compliance, set revenue and expenditure materiality thresholds at the budget level, and review for inconsistencies throughout the year to get ahead of questions at year-end from the auditor’s analytics.
If you’d like to discuss what working with a consultant could look like for your organization, reach out to our Governmental Accounting team. We’ll walk with you through the process, help ease the burden, and set you up for long-term success.