This blog is the second in the series, Account Reconciliation as a Control.
The account reconciliation is an effective procedure that can help an organization identify fraud and errors, but the review is the step that makes the procedure an internal control. If it isn’t reviewed, then it isn’t a control. With this blog, I hope you see the importance of performing a review, and that you find a few tips that will help you perform an effective review.
To help illustrate why a review is important, I’m reminded of a conversation with my mother when I was a kid. She asked me, “When are your mid-term exams?” “They were last week,” I responded. “When did you study?” was my mother’s next obvious question. I thought for a moment, and then told her, “On the bus.” To which she queried, “How did you do?”
As you can imagine, I didn’t do too well on the tests. There were two types of reviews performed during my mid-terms—1) when I studied the materials on the bus, and 2) when my teachers graded my tests. Needless to say, the review performed by my teachers was more effective.
I hope the following will help enhance your review process:
So, why is it necessary for us to perform a review? Let’s take my mid-term grades. If my teachers had asked me to assign my own grades, my grades would have been higher than what I actually earned or deserved. They would not have reflected the reality of what I had learned. This is the equivalent of an employee performing an account reconciliation and no one reviewing it. Without a review, you have less confidence in the recon’s accuracy. Do you think my grades assigned by me or by my teachers were more reflective of reality? If you answered, “Teachers,” then you are right.
Finally, I mentioned fraud and errors several times throughout this blog series, but I haven’t explained how account reconciliations can identify either. I promise next week we will have plenty of examples that relate to pitfalls when performing or reviewing account reconciliations.
If you ever have an idea for a future blog or a question about a published blog, please contact me with your thoughts. I would love to hear from you.
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