finance/accounting/audit-support/SKILL.md
Support SOX 404 compliance with control testing methodology, sample selection, and documentation standards. Use when generating testing workpapers, selecting audit samples, classifying control deficiencies, or preparing for internal or external audits.
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Important: This skill assists with SOX compliance workflows but does not provide audit or legal advice. All testing workpapers and assessments should be reviewed by qualified financial professionals. While "significance" and "materiality" are context-specific concepts that are ultimately assessed by auditors, this skill is intended to assist professionals in the creation and evaluation of effective internal controls and documentation for audits.
SOX 404 control testing methodology, sample selection approaches, testing documentation standards, control deficiency classification, and common control types.
SOX Section 404 requires management to assess the effectiveness of internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR). This involves:
An account is significant if there is more than a remote likelihood that it could contain a misstatement that is material (individually or in aggregate).
Quantitative factors:
Qualitative factors:
| Account Type | Key Assertions | |-------------|---------------| | Revenue | Occurrence, Completeness, Accuracy, Cut-off | | Accounts Receivable | Existence, Valuation (allowance), Rights | | Inventory | Existence, Valuation, Completeness | | Fixed Assets | Existence, Valuation, Completeness, Rights | | Accounts Payable | Completeness, Accuracy, Existence | | Accrued Liabilities | Completeness, Valuation, Accuracy | | Equity | Completeness, Accuracy, Presentation | | Financial Close/Reporting | Presentation, Accuracy, Completeness |
Design effectiveness: Is the control properly designed to prevent or detect a material misstatement in the relevant assertion?
Operating effectiveness: Did the control actually operate as designed throughout the testing period?
When to use: Default method for transaction-level controls with large populations.
Method:
Advantages: Statistically valid, defensible, no selection bias Disadvantages: May miss high-risk items, requires complete population listing
When to use: Supplement to random selection for risk-based testing; primary method when population is small or highly varied.
Method:
Advantages: Focuses on highest-risk items, efficient use of testing effort Disadvantages: Not statistically representative, may over-represent certain risks
When to use: When random selection is impractical (no sequential population listing) and population is relatively homogeneous.
Method:
Advantages: Simple, no technology required Disadvantages: Not statistically valid, susceptible to unconscious bias
When to use: When population is sequential and you want even coverage across the period.
Method:
Example: Population of 1,000, sample of 25 → interval of 40. Random start: item 17. Select items 17, 57, 97, 137, ...
Advantages: Even coverage across population, simple to execute Disadvantages: Periodic patterns in the population could bias results
| Control Frequency | Expected Population | Low Risk Sample | Moderate Risk Sample | High Risk Sample | |------------------|--------------------|-----------------|--------------------|-----------------| | Annual | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | Quarterly | 4 | 2 | 2 | 3 | | Monthly | 12 | 2 | 3 | 4 | | Weekly | 52 | 5 | 8 | 15 | | Daily | ~250 | 20 | 30 | 40 | | Per-transaction (small pop.) | < 250 | 20 | 30 | 40 | | Per-transaction (large pop.) | 250+ | 25 | 40 | 60 |
Factors increasing sample size:
Every control test should be documented with:
Control identification:
Test design:
Test execution:
Conclusion:
Sign-off:
Sufficient evidence includes:
Insufficient evidence:
Organize testing files by control area:
SOX Testing/
├── [Year]/
│ ├── Scoping and Risk Assessment/
│ ├── Revenue Cycle/
│ │ ├── Control Matrix
│ │ ├── Walkthrough Documentation
│ │ ├── Test Workpapers (one per control)
│ │ └── Supporting Evidence
│ ├── Procure to Pay/
│ ├── Payroll/
│ ├── Financial Close/
│ ├── Treasury/
│ ├── Fixed Assets/
│ ├── IT General Controls/
│ ├── Entity Level Controls/
│ └── Summary and Conclusions/
│ ├── Deficiency Evaluation
│ └── Management Assessment
A deficiency in internal control exists when the design or operation of a control does not allow management or employees, in the normal course of performing their assigned functions, to prevent or detect misstatements on a timely basis.
Evaluation factors:
A deficiency, or combination of deficiencies, that is less severe than a material weakness yet important enough to merit attention by those charged with governance.
Indicators:
A deficiency, or combination of deficiencies, such that there is a reasonable possibility that a material misstatement of the financial statements will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis.
Indicators:
Individual deficiencies that are not significant individually may be significant in combination:
For each identified deficiency:
Controls over the IT environment that support the reliable functioning of application controls and automated processes.
Access Controls:
Change Management:
IT Operations:
Controls performed by people using judgment, typically involving review and approval.
Examples:
Key attributes to test:
Controls enforced by IT systems without human intervention.
Examples:
Testing approach:
Manual controls that rely on the completeness and accuracy of system-generated information.
Examples:
Testing approach:
Broad controls that operate at the organizational level and affect multiple processes.
Examples:
Significance:
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