CIA Syllabus
CIA Syllabus
4. Review workpapers
5. Conduct exit conference
6. Complete performance appraisals of engagement staff
C. Communicate Engagement Results
1. Initiate preliminary communication with engagement clients
2. Communicate interim progress
3. Develop recommendations when appropriate
4. Prepare report or other communication
5. Approve engagement report
6. Determine distribution of the report
7. Obtain management response to the report
8. Report outcomes to appropriate parties
D. Monitor Engagement Outcomes
1. Identify appropriate method to monitor engagement outcomes
2. Monitor engagement outcomes and conduct appropriate follow-up
by the internal audit activity
3. Conduct follow-up and report on management's response to
internal audit recommendations
4. Report significant audit issues to senior management and the
board periodically
III. Fraud Risks and Controls (5-15%)
A. Consider the potential for fraud risks and identify common types of
fraud associated with the engagement area during the engagement
planning process
B. Determine if fraud risks require special consideration when
conducting an engagement
C. Determine if any suspected fraud merits investigation
D. Complete a process review to improve controls to prevent fraud
and recommend changes
E. Employ audit tests to detect fraud
F. Support a culture of fraud awareness and encourage the reporting
of improprieties
G. Interrogation/investigative techniques A
H. Forensic auditing A
Note: All items in this section of the syllabus will be tested at the
awareness knowledge level unless otherwise indicated below.
I. Governance / Business Ethics (5-15%)
A. Corporate/organizational governance principles P
B. Environmental and social safeguards
C. Corporate social responsibility
II. Risk Management (10-20%)
A. Risk management techniques P
B. Organizational use of risk frameworks P
III. Organizational Structure/
Business Processes & Risks (15-25%)
A. Risk/control implications of different organizational structures
B. Structure (e.g., centralized/decentralized)
C. Typical schemes in various business cycles (e.g., procurement,
sales, knowledge, supply-chain management)
D. Business process analysis (e.g., workflow analysis and bottleneck
management, theory of constraints)
E. Inventory management techniques and concepts
F. Electronic funds transfer (EFT)/Electronic data interchange
(EDI)/E-commerce
G. Business development life cycles
H. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
framework
I. Outsourcing business processes
IV. Communication (5-10%)
A. Communication (e.g., the process, organizational dynamics,
impact of computerization)
B. Stakeholder relationships
V. Management / Leadership Principles (10-20%)
A. Strategic Management
1. Global analytical techniques
a. Structural analysis of industries
b. Competitive strategies (e.g., Porter's model)
c. Competitive analysis
d. Market signals
e. Industry evolution
2. Industry environments
a. Competitive strategies related to:
1) Fragmented industries
2) Emerging industries
3) Declining industries
B. Application Development
1. End-user computing
2. Change control
3. Systems development methodology
4. Application development
5. Information systems development
C. System Infrastructure
1. Workstations
2. Databases
3. IT control frameworks (e.g., eSAC, COBIT)
4. Functional areas of IT operations (e.g., data center operations)
5. Enterprisewide resource planning (ERP) software (e.g., SAP R/3)
6. Data, voice, and network communications/connections (e.g., LAN,
VAN, and WAN)
7. Server
8. Software licensing
9. Mainframe
10. Operating systems
11. Web Infrastructure
D. Business Continuity
1. IT contingency planning
VII. Financial Management (13-23%)
A. Financial Accounting & Finance
1. Basic concepts and underlying principles of financial accounting
(e.g., statements, terminology, relationships)
2. Intermediate concepts of financial accounting (e.g., bonds, leases,
pensions, intangible assets, R&D)
3. Advanced concepts of financial accounting (e.g., consolidation,
partnerships, foreign currency transactions)
4. Financial statement analysis (e.g., ratios)
5. Types of debt and equity
6. Financial instruments (e.g., derivatives)
7. Cash management (e.g., treasury functions)
8. Valuation models
9. Business valuation
10. Inventory valuation
11. Capital budgeting (e.g., cost of capital evaluation)
12. Taxation schemes (e.g., tax shelters, VAT)
B. Managerial Accounting
1. Managerial accounting: general concepts
2. Costing systems (e.g., activity-based, standard)
3. Cost concepts (e.g., absorption, variable, fixed)
4. Relevant cost
5. Cost-volume-profit analysis
6. Transfer pricing
7. Responsibility accounting
8. Operating budget