Article | REF: G5135 V4

Systems management audits - Implementation

Author: Michel JONQUIÈRES

Publication date: December 10, 2024

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ABSTRACT

The implementation of systems management audits is governed by a series of process and sequences which must be mastered. Further to the starting point of an audit, the audit team that has been previously designated shall prepare the study of the audit, conduct it properly and finally conclude it, in a logical way that has to be respected. Each one of these three different steps is divided into several sequence, some of them being optional depending on the type and the nature of the job to be done. These steps will lead the team to set audit statements, that must necessarily rely on irrefutable evidences (said as « tangible »). Used  by the audit team, those statements will help to build their own judgement on the management system and hand the audit conclusions over to the partner or the auditees.

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AUTHOR

  • Michel JONQUIÈRES: Member - IAS (Institut international de l'audit social/sociétal), Paris, France

 INTRODUCTION

The audit is undeniably one of the high points in the life of any management system.

Whether carried out internally (a "simple" or "first party" audit), at a supplier's site (a "second party" audit) or by an independent third party with a view to certification (a "third party" audit), the audit of a management system involves following a virtually immutable procedure that must be respected.

Bringing together an audit team (audit manager and auditors) and one (or more) auditee(s), a management system audit is a formidable tool for progress on behalf of the auditee. It reveals the strengths of the management system (which need to be reinforced) and highlights the weaknesses and shortcomings of the management system (which obviously need to be remedied in order to perpetuate the management system in place).

The logical sequence of a management system audit is based on three distinct phases:

  • pre-audit ;

  • the audit itself;

  • post-audit.

Each of these sequences contains essential phases which enable the audit to be carried out properly, thus enabling a judgment to be made on the "state of health" of the management system.

Carrying out a management system audit requires the skills of an audit team, generally comprising an audit manager and auditors. The skills and personal qualities of each member of the audit team feed into the output of any management system audit.

But auditing a management system is not an exact science: the audit team only takes "samples", and its passage is not a 100% guarantee of the quality of the management system in place.

Auditees and members of the audit team must therefore demonstrate both rigor and curiosity.

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KEYWORDS

audit   |   management system

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