Victims of fraud often wonder why their auditors didn't flag the deception. "We got a clean opinion!" they might protest. "Why didn't they catch this during our annual audit?"
According to the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners, annual financial statement audits detect just 4% of all frauds. This does not mean that your annual audit is not worthwhile. It does serve a valuable purpose, just a different purpose than you might have considered.
The objective of an annual financial statement audit is to assure lenders, investors, or the public that the balances reported on the financial statements are materially correct. Audits do not verify 100% of the balances and transactions within the financial statements. They focus on material balances, and generally, they look at a sample of transactions.
Which Forensic Service Do You Need?
To assess, detect, or deter fraud, your business needs a forensic service designed for that purpose.
- Fraud investigations are conducted to identify and quantify employee misappropriation, corruption, or financial statement fraud — or some combination of the above. As compared with annual audits, fraud investigations typically look at more transactions, as well as influencing factors on those transactions. They can also include extensive interviews and examinations of physical evidence, and they may involve specialized analysis of computers and other electronic evidence. The investigator follows the facts wherever they may lead to uncover the who, what, when, and how much. Fraud investigations require predication, which is the totality of circumstances that would lead a reasonable, professionally trained, and prudent individual to believe that a fraud has occurred, is occurring, or will occur. In other words, a fraud investigation is conducted to find and fight the fire when an organization sees smoke.
- Forensic examinations are conducted proactively before you actually see any smoke. For example, you might undertake a limited forensic examination of high-risk areas such as credit card transactions. Or, if you’re pursuing a merger or acquisition, you can commission a forensic examination of the other entity as part of due diligence proceedings. Doing so can uncover things that wouldn’t be discovered in a financial statement audit, like inflated projections, collusion with vendors or business partners, and questionable business practices. A forensic examination may uncover small-scale fraud by identifying patterns that would be considered immaterial to a financial statement auditor.
- A fraud risk assessment typically focuses on one or two months when there is a lot of activity. The fraud assessor dives deep into that sample of transactions to identify fraud indicators and weaknesses in internal controls.
Being Proactive Is the Key to Health
Look at it this way: Your annual financial statement audit, and to some degree a forensic examination, is like getting a medical checkup required by a life insurance policy. A fraud investigation is like getting a specific medical test, such as a CT scan, to diagnose the underlying cause of issues or identify anomalies. A fraud risk assessment is like going to your primary doctor regularly for a physical or a wellness check.
With your health, you want to be proactive. You don’t want to wait for symptoms of poor health before seeing your doctor. Take a similar approach to your organization’s fraud health. Most people would rather discover a fraud proactively than be embarrassed when it blows up in a public way.
Your Provider Matters - Partner with Brinker Simpson & Company
Don’t wait for the smoke to turn into a fire. Being proactive about fraud prevention is crucial. With Brinker Simpson, you have access to experienced professionals holding Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) and Certified in Financial Forensics (CFF) credentials, ensuring that your organization is in capable hands.
Contact a Brinker Simpson advisor today to discuss how our tailored fraud and forensic services can provide you with the security and peace of mind you deserve. Our team is ready to assist you in developing an effective strategy to detect, prevent, and respond to fraud, ensuring your organization’s integrity and financial health.
Act now to secure your future. Reach out to us and let’s proactively safeguard your organization together.