When Audit Committees Want to “Hear No Evil” From Internal Audit
October 25, 2020Are We Ready to Move Beyond COVID-19 Risks?
November 9, 2020All crises eventually provoke some level of introspection, whether personal, organizational, or societal. Certainly, COVID-19 has borne this out. Much has been written about the pandemic’s impact on interpersonal relationships, culture, politics, economies, and technology, as we seek answers to the greatest global challenge of the century. I have shared plenty of perspectives in this blog alone.
This week, The IIA releases an insightful report that provides further perspective on the pandemic and its impacts on organizations. OnRisk 2021: A Guide to Understanding, Aligning, and Optimizing Risk is not intended to be a report on COVID-19’s effects on risk management and governance. Indeed, the report — now in its second year — is designed to offer key insights into risk alignment among boards, executive management, and internal audit. However, it is virtually impossible to discuss the risks we face without addressing the elephant in the room.
The 2021 report debuts at The IIA’s 2020 International Conference. The annual gathering of the world’s top internal audit leaders is virtual this year — yet another example of the pandemic’s disruptive sway over our lives.
However, observations from OnRisk 2021 go beyond noting the obvious fallout from lock downs, economic uncertainty, and work site disruptions spurred by COVID-19. It examines how the pandemic has generally improved alignment among risk management players on business continuity, risk management, and communications. It delves into the virus’s potential long-term influence on accelerating the use of technology. It explores how embracing technology will affect cybersecurity, talent management, disruptive innovation, and other risks.
As with last year’s inaugural edition, the value of OnRisk 2021 lies in insights drawn from measuring how key players in risk management view risks in relation to each other. The observations and information in the report also offer organizations the opportunity to carry out their own introspective examinations of risk management and governance.
OnRisk 2021 leverages a methodology that uses qualitative and quantitative surveys to measure how boards, the C-suite, and internal audit view 11 key risks facing organizations in the coming year. It measures respondents’ views on their personal knowledge of each risk, the capability of their organizations to manage each risk, and how relevant each risk is to their organizations. The data shows improved alignment on risk knowledge and capability, but potentially troubling dissonance on risk relevance.
The report is being released just in time for many internal audit departments to leverage its insights as annual risk assessment and audit planning gets underway for 2021. There are five key observations from the report that reflect a broad array of challenges and areas for improvement:
- Business continuity and crisis management and cybersecurity are the top-rated risks for 2021.Unprecedented challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as expanding reliance on technology and data, drive these two risks to the top of the list. They often are paired as some cyberthreats are heightened by the sudden relocation of employees to less secure work-from-home environments, as well as an intense shift to e-commerce brought on by the pandemic response.
- Two risks offer priorities for organizational improvement. All respondents rate disruptive innovation and talent management among the most relevant risks. Yet, C-suite respondents rank their personal knowledge and the organization’s capabilities related to these risks among the lowest.
- Management perceptions on risk relevance are generally not aligned with boards and CAEs. Board members and chief audit executives (CAEs) are largely aligned on their perception of the relevance of risks included in OnRisk 2021. However, management relevance rankings are lower overall, with an especially large gap in the perception of governance and economic and political volatility. Indeed, the C-suite assigns higher relevance to operational risks, such as talent management, culture, and business continuity.
- Perceptions on capability to manage risks are more aligned. This year, responses are more tightly clustered in ranking organizational ability to manage risk. The board overconfidence noted in last year’s report appears to have eased. Responses to COVID-19, which focused in part on renewed risk assessments and more frequent communication and collaboration among risk management players, likely drove stronger alignment on organizational strengths and weaknesses.
- Management sees organizational governance as a less relevant risk than do boards and internal audit. The disparity in relevance rankings for organizational governance as a risk is significant and telling. Management’s lower relevance ranking on this risk, combined with its higher rankings on personal knowledge and organizational capability, signal management overconfidence in this area and a disconnect from boards and CAEs.
Finally, the report provides in-depth examinations of each of the 11 key risks surveyed and includes recommended actions for each of the three risk management players.
I’ll close by sharing the opening paragraph to the introduction to OnRisk 2021, which I believe provides particularly useful perspective:
Risk is part and parcel to modern economic theory. Indeed, nearly from the beginning of organized society, the push to recognize, leverage, and manage risk has driven humankind to excel. As social, business, and government institutions have become more complex, global, and entwined, mastering the art and science of risk management has become ever-more imperative — and elusive.
As internal auditors, we must always endeavor to “master the art and science of risk management.” Reports such as OnRisk provide valuable insight and data to help us get there. However, the greatest lesson we can take from the report is its fundamental premise: When boards, executive management, and internal audit are aligned, the odds for organizational success are significantly higher.
As always, I look forward to your comments.
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