Maybe AI Will Help KPMG Finally Get Gud at Auditing

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Yesterday, KPMG announced it is integrating generative AI into its in-house audit system called Clara. This, says KPMG US Vice Chair of Audit Scott Flynn, will empower the firm’s 9,000 auditors to deliver quality audits. Finally. “KPMG Clara with AI will not only free up resources to spend more time on the areas of highest risk, but will directly help our teams exercise professional skepticism to protect the capital markets,” he said.”

“These artificial intelligence capabilities enhance our overall transformation to deliver a better audit experience for our people and the companies we audit,” he added. “Our AI capabilities will further strengthen our engagement teams to more effectively engage Audit committees and management committees.”

And now, the press release talking points:

KPMG Clara with AI is connected to our broader transformation efforts to enhance audit quality through our Trusted AI framework. For example, new generative AI capabilities will help teams:

  • Refine risk assessments: AI assistants can review documents to help engagement teams identify risk factors. For instance, within KPMG Clara, engagement teams can leverage AI to help review meeting minutes and flag possible accounting and fraud risks.
  • Develop substantive testing procedures: Our AI assistant has direct access to our audit methodology, enabling auditors to design appropriate substantive testing procedures to respond to risks quicker.
  • Enhance audit documentation: By working with our AI assistant, team members can quickly summarize, question and consider improvements to engagement-specific audit documentation within KPMG Clara.

And:

KPMG today also unveiled AI and generative AI capabilities that will be deployed in the workflow in the coming months. These include:

  • A growing prompt library that will, over time, include AI-powered agents to assist Audit teams in driving audit quality;
  • Automated quality scoring to generate AI assessments and deliver feedback to Audit teams on actions for quality improvement;
  • Use of AI and machine-learning to automate the review of financial statements, augmenting engagement teams’ assessment that all required disclosures have been made to the capital markets; and
  • Assurance capabilities integrated into the workflow for teams delivering assurance over disclosures, such as emissions disclosures. 

“All of our auditors are trained on how to effectively use AI with a human-in-the-loop mindset to maintain quality, accuracy and professional skepticism,” said Thomas Mackenzie, KPMG U.S. and Global Audit Chief Technology Officer.

We trust this development will help KPMG push its deficiency rate below 25% for the first time since 2011.

KPMG Announces AI Integration into Global Smart Audit Platform, KPMG Clara [KPMG