Auditing Chapter 3: Audit Planning I
Fraud
An intentional act through the use of deception to obtain an unjust or illegal advantage
Audit strategy
A strategy that sets the scope, timing, and direction of the audit and provides the basis for developing a detailed audit plan
General controls
Controls that apply to a company's IT system as a whole, including policies and procedures for the purchase, maintenance, and daily operations of an IT system, security, and staff training
Materiality
Information that impacts the decision-making process of the users of the financial statements
Professional scepticism
Maintaining an attitude that includes a questioning mind, being alert to conditions that may indicate possible misstatement due to error or fraud, and a critical assessment of audit evidence
Application controls
Manual or automated controls that operate at a business process level and apply to the processing of transactions by individual applications
Closing procedures
Processes used by a client when finalizing the books for an accounting period
Execution stage
The audit stage involving detailed testing of controls and substantive testing of transactions and accounts
Reporting stage
The audit stage involving evaluating the results of the detailed testing in light of the auditor's understanding of their client and forming an opinion on the fair presentation of the client's financial statements
Planning stage
The audit stage involving gaining an understanding of the client, identifying risk factors, developing an audit strategy, and assessing materiality
Sufficient appropriate evidence
The quantity and quality of the evidence that has been gathered
Corporate governance
The rules, systems, and processes within companies used to guide and control
Going concern
The viability of a company to remain in business for the foreseeable future