33
Lessons
From practical
experience of control self-assessment programmes.
1. Why controls are not
performed
Controls are generally not performed for one of
three reasons:
- The control is hard to perform or even impossible
- The control is not seen as important (I don't have the time)
- They don't know how to do it (haven't been trained)
In setting up CSA you map the processes and define the controls and difficult or impossible controls are "kicked out". The questionnaire is only aimed at the key controls and therefore all those that are in the questionnaire are by definition important. If the user does not know how to perform the control, they have the back-up of the best practice references and the action plans to help them improve and to help them understand what they have to do. In short, the system helps train them.
2. What gets measured gets
improved
By implementing CSA, we are measuring the state of
controls within the business. What gets measured gets improved because it is
reported on, because it is discussed and because a clear way to improve is
provided (by the action plans within the system). "From Worst to First" by
Gordon Bethune (CEO Continental Airlines) majors on the idea of measurement as
the driver of improvement to the extent that it transformed his company from
possibly the worst airline performer to one of the best.
3. Responsibility
One of
the major reasons for implementing a CSA programme is to make it clear that the
responsibility for controls, the ownership of controls, rests with the user. If
the user is simply sent a questionnaire (paper or system), that is not
responsibility, that is checking up on them. The system needs to be accessible
at any time to the user so they come to use it as they need it, so that it
becomes theirs - that is ownership. One very large intranet system was made
available once per day to the users and the questionnaire had to be filled in on
that day - the programme failed within three months.
4. Common Language
One of
the benefits that is always quoted for CSA is the provision of a common language
of control. This can be a hard concept to grasp. One way in which this becomes
clear is in the naming of the programme. Giving the system an easy, memorable or
friendly name will help acceptance of the task. Then users will refer to their
CSA results by the name of the system and will be talking a language of control
without realising it. At ASDA, the system was called SAS (self-assessment
system) and users talked about their SAS scores. At Conforama, the system was
called Co-ol (contrôles on-line) which was seen as something in line with the
culture of the company.
5. Give and take
The
principle of reciprocity is very important. We are asking people to do something
for us - to report on their control environment. Naturally, they want to see
some benefit in return. By giving them access to procedures in an accessible
format (simple on-screen format) linked to the CSA system, then they are getting
something in return. If the procedures do not actually exist, the drafting of
simple procedures that relate to the control processes being surveyed can be a
very big win for the programme.
6. Visual impact
The
"look" of the tool is important. We are asking operators to do something and so
the tool needs to be easy, simple, intuitive and attractive. If the first thing
the user says is "I don't like the look of that" or "it isn't very colourful, is
it?", then the battle is lost in advance.
7. Forget paper
We are
talking about a system-driven control self-assessment programme. Nevertheless,
some companies try to perform a pilot on paper first, to test the questions (and
finish off the system in the mean time). This is a bad move unless the
paper-based programme is actually a series of screen-shots of the actual system.
In general, paper questionnaires get a 30-50% response rate, even after several
reminders. Paper pilots fail to test the acceptance of the system itself and get
the programme off to a very bad start.
8. Satori in CSA
"Satori"
is the Japanese word for a kick in the head or a sudden realisation. Successful
programmes deliver something extra that the programme team perhaps never
expected. These have included the tool being used directly for training of
users, and also for investigations into problems or discrepancies.
9. A dog is not just for Christmas (12-month
rule)
80% of CSA programmes fail in the first 12 months.
Failure means that users stop responding, stop using the system. If the
programme reaches its first anniversary then it is successful and will probably
continue to be successful. Learning from other programmes that are less than 12
months old may not be beneficial because it is not yet clear whether or not it
is a good model to base learning on.
10. Pilot, not Big
Bang
One of the features of the 80% projects is that they have
all been rolled out in a "big bang" approach with no piloting and with far too
many modules at one go. Piloting enables us to assess the acceptability of the
questions, the suitability to the culture and the best way of working for the
particular organisation.
11. Ownership
We want the
users to own the controls and to own the system. We therefore have to listen to
them and take on board their comments in the pilot phase and also be seen to
listen to the comments that they make in the monthly or quarterly returns.
12. Culture
It is
frequently said that CSA requires an organisation to have a very open culture
where people see failure as the precursor to success and where people are not
sacked as soon as they do something wrong. On that basis, one very large US
consumer markets company (the largest in its subsector) refused to consider CSA.
In fact, an open culture is not a prerequisite, the process can be introduced
gradually if linked very tightly to provision of procedures and best practices.
A reduced number of questions, say six, are asked specifically on the procedures
provided. This gets the CSA process started and it can grow from there. A
culture of ownership and accountability makes the job easier, but it is not
necessarily impossible without it.
13. Too many
questions
Systems with hundreds of questions tend to fail or
quickly acquire a bad reputation with the users. One large UK organisation had
500 questions issued once a year and they tended to get a response rate of
around 20%. Multinationals with similarly sized questionnaires have found that
huge questionnaires do not encourage responsiveness or ownership.
14. Auditor
suitability
The "client's" internal audit people take on a new
role in CSA. They have to sell the tool and the programme to the users, they
have to train them, implement the tool, encourage response, help facilitate
knowledge sharing, and validate the results on a sample basis. This may be
foreign to them and they may not like doing it. If they don't like doing it,
they will do it badly and the implementation will be flawed; the users will not
take to the system easily. It is important to make sure that the internal
auditors involved in the project understand the process and are keen to deliver
it.
15. Effective
reporting
Reporting is the output of the whole system. The
users need to see how they have done immediately they have completed the
questionnaire, and they need to be able to compare this to how they did
previously. The reporting templates need to show the big picture for the
organisation and also be capable of drilling down into the detail. The reports
should be meaningful and easy to use; they should show change from quarter to
quarter and thus give 100% coverage on the assessment of controls every period.
The reporting should also enable comparison between units and between
processes.
16. Mapping
We start the
programme by mapping the processes and identifying the key controls. After that
we produce the content: the detailed questions, the way of answering the
question, the action plan. The mapping can reveal control weaknesses at the very
start which can be amended; it can identify controls that are redundant or
difficult to perform. It can also reveal control gaps and procedural gaps. The
opportunity here is to introduce a control or a procedure as part of the
implementation of the CSA programme.
17. Weighting
Most systems
allow weighting of responses to different questions. That is understandable but
there are two problems. The first is that if the questionnaire is only testing
key controls, then surely they should have the same weighting. We do not want to
be asking for responses to minor control questions. The second point is that
users often go back and try to check their overall score. If there are
weightings used in the calculation of an overall score, then the calculation
will be difficult to perform and the users will start to distrust the
system.
18. Include risk
The
system should include the risk being faced if the control is not in place, the
risk that the control is managing. This lends to the importance of the control
and also starts to raise the risk awareness of the users.
19. Link to best
practice
The link to best practice is crucial, either through
hyperlink or within the system itself in modified form. It gives a strong reason
for the users to use the system and it generates dialogue and change for the
better in terms of procedures and knowledge sharing.
20. Keep it up-to-date
If
the questions become out of date owing to changes in the way things are done, or
if the relevant procedures are also out of date, then the system loses
credibility and will soon fall out of use. Keeping it up to date, and as the
place to go to find out about new procedures and best practice, then it will be
successful.
21. Address a need
A CSA
programme is useful in itself. The choice of which area to address first is
critical since to implement it in other areas, we build on previous success.
Acceptance of the system is helped if the area that is being addressed first by
the programme is an area of acknowledged need, an area where there is perhaps a
problem that is not being successfully addressed at the moment.
22. Action plans
To get
improvement, an action plan is required. Normally this is produced by the system
for any questions where the response has shown a weakness. The action plans need
to be drafted with care and this is frequently more difficult than it may
appear. If someone is not performing a control and acknowledges this in the
questionnaire, then the action plan is not simply "do it". The action plan needs
to state how to improve, say by referring to training or to procedures, and then
taking a course of action that directly addresses the weakness.
23. Specific questions and specific
answers
For questions to be meaningful, they should be clearly
stated and detail specifically how they should be answered. This is so that
there is consistency in the answers and so that the results can lead to a
specific improvement. Vague policy type questions do not tend to produce results
that can be acted on effectively.
24. Bottom-line
benefit
Many companies need to see a bottom-line benefit to a
CSA programme. This can be difficult to produce unless it is worked out upfront
in expectation of delivery of the benefit. There is case history to prove that a
bottom-line benefit can be achieved. Improved controls can be shown by the
reporting out of the CSA system but sometimes this is not convincing enough for
the board and a bottom-line benefits case has to be prepared.
25. Other feedback
A
return from various parts of the organisation is an opportunity to get other
information, not just the comment sections attached to the control questions but
other information as well such as specific operational data or customer
satisfaction feedback perhaps on a service provided by head office. This has
been done successfully for items of data that are not reported in normal
management reporting but which are an issue at any point in time, and also on
satisfaction with an outsourced payroll processor.
26. Link to bonus
Some
companies like to make the CSA scores a factor in the calculation of management
or staff bonuses. This can work and it can also lead to cheating on the scores.
As long as cheating is dealt with appropriately in this context, then the
linkage to bonus can work beneficially.
27. Sponsoring
authors
Writing procedures to go with the programme is not
sustainable long-term by the Internal Audit department. The role of Internal
Audit with regard to sharing best practice and disseminating new procedures is
that of facilitator, a sort of funnel between the various parts of the
organisation where procedures may originate (the sponsoring authors) and the
users who rely on them. Making sure this facilitation works, is a key success
factor for the CSA programme.
28. Leverage
The way to
leverage a CSA programme is to build on its infrastructure and expand the CSA
process to other areas of operation. Once a CSA implementation is seen to be
successful in an organisation and is talked about, other departments tend to
queue up to implement their own CSA programme using the structure established in
the first implementation.
29. Be flexible
There is
no right or wrong method of scoring (1-10, ABC, Y/N, 123), no right or wrong
timing of returns (monthly, quarterly, half-yearly), just the one that suits the
company best given its culture and given what it is trying to achieve in the
programme. Some companies like to diarise the completion of the questionnaire in
small chunks, other like to add a procedural news bulletin at the sign-on to the
system, funnelling all news about controls down this same channel. There is no
one-size-fits-all solution.
30. Are they telling the
truth?
Control self-assessment relies on users telling the
truth. The results show the status of controls within the organisation and it is
important to feel sure that these are accurate. Internal Audit tend to perform
validations on the results by re-performing the questionnaire on a sample of
returns where that is possible. The sample may be chosen at random or as a
result of comparing the return to other known data that may indicate that the
result is erroneous.
31. Senior management
buy-in
If senior management don't buy in to the project, don't
get enthusiastic about it, then you may have problems with the response rate. If
senior management are interested, if they ask about it, talk about it, discuss
it, then users see it as important. There are cases where the project has been
faltering until it was realised that senior management did not actually
understand the project; once they did, they were strongly in favour and the
project became much more successful.
32. Response rate
We
expect a response rate of over 98%. That is normal for a successful
implementation. Senior management buy-in, as mentioned above, helps the process.
In addition, checking the users have understood it shortly after the training,
then reminders to the users toward the completion date, and also on the
completion date will help make it happen. Non-responding users are then
highlighted and reported to senior management. Usually that is enough to ensure
very high response rates for system based control self-assessment
programmes.
33. Project plan
If there
is no project plan, or there is one but it is not used to control the project,
the project can easily fail. There are several examples of this in the history
of CSA where well-conceived CSA programmes have failed because the project
manager has not stuck to the plan or has not had one.