
What Private Companies Should Prepare for Independent Auditors
Audit delays rarely happen because the financial statement audit itself is complicated. They happen because management wasn’t ready when fieldwork began. Understanding what independent auditors need from management before fieldwork starts can make the entire process smoother.
Missing schedules, unreconciled accounts, and unclear ownership of audit requests are among the most common reasons private company audits run long or create avoidable rework.
What is Management Responsible for During an Audit?
Management owns the financial statements, maintains internal controls, and is responsible for providing complete and accurate records. Independent auditors evaluate that information, perform testing, and issue an opinion.
Auditor independence prevents them from making management decisions, closing the books, operating controls, or taking responsibility for the financial statements.
Management should also expect to provide written representations near the end of the audit, confirming certain responsibilities and information provided during the engagement.
As Bennie J. Lewis, CPA, President & Partner at Assurance Dimensions, puts it: “We don’t audit in a bubble and try to play ‘gotcha’ accounting with our clients. Anything we can do to make the process clearer or reduce the depiction of our team as the boogeyman is always a good thing.”
What Independent Auditors Typically Need From Management
Independent auditors work from a prepared-by-client (PBC) list, a structured set of documents and schedules required before and during fieldwork. This typically includes:
- The trial balance
- General ledger
- Bank statements
- Bank reconciliations
- Accounts receivable and payable schedules
- Payroll reports
- Fixed asset schedules
Beyond accounting records, auditors often need supporting documents such as contracts, debt and lease agreements, board meeting minutes, and any legal or litigation updates. Management should also be prepared to explain unusual transactions, significant estimates, accounting changes, and major business events.
Common Audit Bottlenecks Private Companies Can Avoid
Most audit delays trace back to a few preventable issues, such as late PBC submissions, missing invoices or contracts, reconciliations that don’t tie to the trial balance, and key personnel who are unavailable during fieldwork.
Before the audit begins:
- Assign each PBC item to a specific owner with an internal deadline
- Reconcile major accounts monthly, not just at year-end
- Store contracts, minutes, and recurring support documents in one accessible location
- Flag any unusual transactions or business changes for the audit team early
- Block fieldwork dates on key team calendars
Working with Assurance Dimensions
Preparing for an engagement with independent auditors means providing the audit firm with complete, timely information so they can work efficiently and independently, without surprises on either side.
If your private company needs audit support or is preparing for a first-time audit, contact Assurance Dimensions to learn how our team supports a clearer, more organized audit process.
