12 – Efficiencies in reporting, ControlPanelGRC’s AutoAuditor

The 2013 GRC Technology Innovator awards was filled with competition.  The number of submissions more than doubled over 2012.  With 57 submissions there were only twelve slots for winners.  GRC 20/20 looked through all of the submissions, asked for clarification where needed, and selected the 12 recipients to receive this honor.

Number 12 is ControlPanelGRC's AutoAuditor which showed technology innovation for efficiencies in reporting. 

ControlPanelGRC’s AutoAuditor enables companies to be in a state of continuous audit readiness by automating manual reporting processes, and through its intuitive design AutoAuditor adapts to each company’s specific reporting demands. This turnkey solution automates repetitive report generation processes to push the report output to appropriate business or risk owners for review; by eliminating any additional training or tedious setup, once installed AutoAuditor pushes reports directly to those necessary resources rather than needing to be pulled. With AutoAuditor preparing for an audit no longer has to be major cause of stress that requires internal teams to spend weeks researching reports, collating spreadsheets and manually tracking down paper reports buried in filing cabinets. Business or risk owners perform the value add steps of reviewing the output and the workflow engine captures the signoff and exception documentation. The automatic check and balance system not only pushes the necessary report on cue, but also records the mandatory review, which is then automatically saved as future audit evidence. Value is achieved in eliminating human error, missed analysis opportunities, and subsequently, possible penalties if the processes are not executed on a timely basis.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The GRC Mystery House

Governance, Risk Management, and Compliance – every organization does it.  There are variations in the opinion of what we call GRC.  Some like it and some do not.  Some use the term ERM in much the same way I use the term GRC, others may call it something else or not even have a name for it.

My position is that every organization does GRC.  You will not find an executive in anorganization that will tell you they do not govern the organization, they do not manage risk, and they do not comply with obligations and policies.  The components of GRC are in every organization.  They may be ad hoc, fly by the seat of our pants approaches.  They may be very mature and integrated.  The question is not if you do GRC but how mature your GRC practices are whether you call it GRC or something else.  GRC, using the only definition in a publicly vetted standard –OCEG’s GRC Capability Model, is “a capability to reliably achieve objectives [governance] while addressing uncertainty [risk management] and acting with integrity [compliance].”

Mature GRC practices involve architecture.  Design to integrate and leverage risk and disparate processes, information, and technology.  It is not about a software vendor who provides Enterprise GRC – that may be a component and part but that alone does not mature GRC.  Most organizations have multiple GRC technologies, information, documents, and processes.  Sometimes these work together in harmony producing mature GRC other times it is broken and fragmented leading to redundancy, inefficiency, and failures.

Most organizations suffer with immature GRC architecture.  They remind me of the Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California.  This house was built in the 1800’s at excessive costs with no overall design or architect.  In fact it had 38 builders and no blueprint.  In the end it has 160 rooms, 47 fireplaces, 6 kitchens, 10,000 windows, 65 doors that open to a blank wall, 25 skylights in floors not ceilings, and 13 abandoned staircases that go up to nothing – or perhaps down to nothing.

This is the reality of immature GRC in many organizations.  The confusion of the Winchester Mystery House are there: 160 different assessment formats; 47 different policy formats; 6 different risk frameworks/taxonomies; 10,000 documents and spreadsheets; 65 risk and compliance management report formats; and 25 different technologies ranging from spreadsheets, custom built risk software, to commercial solutions.  This is a reality for large organizations – one financial services firm I worked with last year on the GRC technology strategy mentioned they had thousands of documents and spreadsheets for risk and compliance assessments and various technologies in place.  A hospital chain told me they had over 18,000 policies that were highly redundant nearly 30 hospitals each with their own risk and compliance programs.  An international financial services and insurance firm told me the line of business was screaming at them because of the number and different formats for risk and compliance assessments.

To solve this, organizations need to understand the maze of GRC processes, information, and technologies in place and architect approach that brings greater levels of effectiveness, efficiency, and agility to the business.  Your GRC architecture should align with your enterprise architecture and fit the way the organization operates.

As we look ahead at 2013 – how are you going to make GRC processes more effective, efficient, and agile?