1. Financial Statement Review
Businesses must ensure their financial records are complete, accurate, and in compliance with IFRS.
- Purpose: Ensures financial statements reflect the true and fair financial position.
- IFRS Compliance: Companies must follow International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) for consistency.
- Error Detection: Identifies misstatements, missing entries, and inconsistencies before an audit.
2. Audit-Ready Documentation
Businesses must prepare and organize supporting documents for revenue, expenses, fixed assets, loans, payroll, and more.
- Required Documents: Includes invoices, contracts, bank statements, tax filings, and financial reports.
- Organized Filing: Proper documentation ensures smooth audit processes and prevents delays.
- Regulatory Compliance: Businesses must maintain audit-ready records to meet legal requirements.
3. Trial Balance & Ledger Reconciliation
Companies must review and clean up accounts to avoid audit red flags.
- Trial Balance Review: Ensures debits and credits match before financial statements are finalized.
- Ledger Reconciliation: Businesses must compare account balances with supporting records to detect errors.
- Audit Risk Reduction: Proper reconciliation prevents discrepancies that could trigger audit concerns.