Rated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areasRated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areas
Process Audit for logistics firms in Korukkupet

Business Process Audit in Korukkupet, Chennai

the business activity radiating outward from Korukkupet Railway Yard and nearby commercial pockets — with a documented, audit-ready process

Korukkupet logistics and freight forwarding units around Korukkupet Railway Yard — fixed fee, deterministic turnaround and archived working papers. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

Why engage FilingPro for a business process audit in Chennai in Korukkupet, Chennai?

FilingPro brings 15+ years of operational and statutory audit practice to {{area_name}} clients — process audits delivered against COSO 2013, ICAI SIA 110-740 and Six Sigma DMAIC, with CAAT-driven 100% population testing using IDEA and Excel Power Pivot. Findings are quantified in ₹, prioritised by Pareto and tracked to closure. Offices at Alapakkam, Maduravoyal and Nerkundram serve manufacturing, services, trading and listed clients across Chennai. Call 9566-068-468 for a free scoping discussion.

Transparent Pricing

Business Process Audit in Korukkupet — Plans & Pricing

Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Nill
Single-cycle process audit
₹18,000/year

  • Single-Process Audit (P2P or O2C or H2R)
  • As-Is Process Mapping (Swim-lane)
  • Walkthrough & Control Documentation
  • SOP Gap Analysis vs COSO 2013
  • RACI Matrix Review
  • 5-Why Root Cause for Top 5 Findings
  • ICFR Section 134(5)(e) Mapping
  • CAAT 100% Population Testing
  • Turnover Coverage: Up to ₹50 crore
  • Cycles Covered: 1
  • Audit Findings Report (PDF)
  • Executive Summary for Management
  • Audit Committee Presentation
  • 6-Month Follow-up Audit
  • ESG / BRSR Coverage
Starter
Multi-cycle audit + ICFR mapping
₹45,000/year

  • 2-3 Cycle Process Audit (e.g. P2P + O2C + H2R)
  • As-Is Process Mapping (BPMN 2.0)
  • Walkthrough & Control Documentation
  • SOP Gap Analysis vs COSO 2013
  • RACI Matrix Review
  • 5-Why & Fishbone Root Cause
  • ICFR Mapping under Section 134(5)(e) & ICAI IFC GN 2015
  • SOD Conflict Matrix Review
  • CAAT Sample Testing (Excel Power Pivot)
  • Full 100% Population CAAT
  • Turnover Coverage: Up to ₹250 crore
  • Cycles Covered: 2-3
  • Audit Findings Report (PDF)
  • Executive Summary for Management
  • Audit Committee Briefing Note
  • 6-Month Follow-up Audit
  • ESG / BRSR Coverage
Most Popular ⭐
Professional
Full enterprise process audit
₹125,000/month
Annual: ₹1,500,000₹125,000 (Save ₹1,375,000)

  • Full Enterprise Process Audit (O2C + P2P + H2R + Inventory + Fixed Assets + Treasury + Tax Compliance)
  • As-Is Process Mapping (BPMN 2.0)
  • To-Be Process Recommendation (Six Sigma DMAIC)
  • COSO 2013 5-Component & 17-Principle Assessment
  • CMMI Maturity Scoring (Level 1-5) by Cycle
  • ICFR Section 134(5)(e) & ICAI IFC GN 2015 Mapping
  • SOD Conflict Matrix + Role Re-design
  • ITGC Review (Access
Premium
Listed-co + ESG / BRSR / Cyber audit
₹350,000/month
Annual: ₹4,200,000₹350,000 (Save ₹3,850,000)

  • Full Enterprise Process Audit (All Core Cycles)
  • Multi-Location Coverage (up to 5 locations)
  • As-Is + To-Be BPMN 2.0 Process Mapping
  • Six Sigma DMAIC Improvement Roadmap
  • COSO 2013 + COSO ERM 2017 Assessment
  • CMMI Maturity Scoring with 18-Month Uplift Roadmap
  • ICFR Section 134(5)(e) & ICAI IFC GN 2015 Full Mapping
  • CARO 2020 Clause-wise Process Mapping
  • SOD Conflict Matrix + Role Re-design
  • ITGC + Application Control Review
  • CAAT 100% Population Testing (IDEA + ACL)
  • Benford's Law & Round-Amount Mining
  • Vendor / Outsourcing SOC 1 / SOC 2 / ISAE 3402 Reliance Review (SA 402)
  • CERT-In Section 70B Cyber Audit (Logs

Swipe to see all plans

Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.

Why FilingPro?

Why Korukkupet Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert Process Audit in Korukkupet — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

COSO 2013 5-Component Framework

Every cycle is benchmarked against the 5 components — Control Environment, Risk Assessment, Control Activities, Information & Communication, Monitoring — and the 17 underlying principles. Findings explicitly cite the principle gap, not just the symptom.

ICAI SIA 110-740 Compliance

Engagement planning under SIA 310, evidence under SIA 320, documentation under SIA 330, communication under SIA 360, prior-engagement monitoring under SIA 390 and reporting under SIA 740 — every step of a FilingPro engagement aligns with the ICAI standards mandatory from 1 April 2024.

SA 315 Risk-Based Approach

SA 315 (Revised) drives the planning phase — entity understanding, IT environment, control mapping and inherent-risk assessment at financial-statement and assertion level. Audit effort is targeted at high-risk processes, not spread thinly across everything.

Six Sigma DMAIC Embedded

Process audit findings are framed within DMAIC — baseline measurement, root-cause analysis (5-Why, Fishbone, Pareto), recommendation, pilot and control-plan handover. Korukkupet clients receive efficiency improvement, not just compliance reporting.

BPMN 2.0 Process Mapping

vendor-neutral

RACI Matrix Re-design

Every process map is paired with a RACI matrix — Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, Informed. Tasks with multiple A's (accountability conflict) or no R (orphaned tasks) are flagged and resolved through role re-assignment.

Key Benefits

What Korukkupet Clients Get

Every Business Process Audit engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.

Director's Responsibility Statement Supported
For Korukkupet listed clients, FilingPro's process audit gives the Board the documentary basis to make the Section 134(5)(e) statement on adequacy and operating effectiveness of ICFR — methodology aligned with ICAI Guidance Note on IFC 2015.
Statutory Auditor's ICFR Opinion Smooth
Process audit findings are pre-shared with the statutory auditor (where engagement letter permits) so the Section 143(3)(i) ICFR opinion under the Companies Act 2013 closes without surprises or qualifications at year end.
Internal Audit Section 138 Compliance
For prescribed companies under Section 138 — listed, high paid-up-capital, high-turnover, high-borrowing companies — FilingPro's process audits constitute the internal audit deliverable for the year, supporting CARO 2020 Clause 3(xiv) reporting on adequacy of the internal audit system.
Working Capital Released
O2C cycle audit typically releases ₹15-30 lakh of working capital per ₹100 crore of turnover through DSO compression — credit-policy refresh, ageing-driven collection, dispute-resolution TAT and cash-application accuracy.
Vendor Fraud Mined Out
P2P CAATs typically uncover 0.5%-2% of annual procurement spend as duplicate / fraudulent / kickback exposure — recovered through demand letters, vendor blacklisting, employee disciplinary action and SOD remediation.
Cycle-Time Reduced
Process re-engineering recommendations typically compress invoice processing TAT (14 to 5 days), customer order-to-dispatch (7 to 3 days), and full-and-final settlement (45 to 15 days) — based on actual Korukkupet client benchmarks.
Comparison

COSO 2013 vs ISO 31000:2018

Why this matters here — Korukkupet businesses operate where the cluster of logistics, freight forwarding, warehousing businesses that defines Korukkupet's commercial fabric, and served by short connections to Washermanpet and Tondiarpet and onward to central Chennai.

AspectCOSO 2013ISO 31000:2018
Independence and oversightPrinciple 1 demands board oversight of internal control; Section 149(8) Schedule IV places independent directors at the centre of monitoring through the audit committeeCalls for top-management commitment under clause 5.2 and integration with governance structures; certification is voluntary and is conferred by accredited certification bodies
Reporting on Internal Financial ControlsClause (xi) and clause (xx) of paragraph 3 of CARO 2020 require comment on fraud reporting and the adequacy and operating effectiveness of internal financial controls with reference to financial statementsRequires the auditor's report to state whether the company has adequate internal financial controls with reference to financial statements and the operating effectiveness of such controls
Regulator-led enquiry routeSerious Fraud Investigation Office constituted under Section 211 of the Companies Act 2013 investigates process-bypass and complex inter-company frauds on Central Government referralNational Company Law Tribunal entertains oppression and mismanagement petitions under Sections 241 and 242 of the Companies Act 2013 where process-bypass amounts to mismanagement of company affairs
Government enquiry powerRegistrar of Companies may call for information and conduct inspection under Section 206 of the Companies Act 2013 on documents and processesSection 458 of the Companies Act 2013 allows the Central Government to delegate any of its powers under the Act to authorities including process-bypass enquiry triggers
External standard-setter scrutinyNational Financial Reporting Authority constituted under Section 132 of the Companies Act 2013 has passed orders penalising auditors for failure to identify process-gap-driven mis-statementsDisciplinary directorate under the Chartered Accountants Act 1949 proceeds against members for professional misconduct including failure to apply SA 315 walkthrough and SA 330 control-testing standards
Operative frameworkCOSO Internal Control Integrated Framework anchors the five components of control environment, risk assessment, control activities, information and communication, and monitoring; cited by SEBI LODR Regulation 17(8) for listed entitiesISO 31000 risk management standard sets principles, framework and process for enterprise-wide risk discipline; routinely adopted alongside ISO 9001 process audit framework for quality management
Audit natureExamines the design and operating effectiveness of business process flows, segregation of duties and automated controls; outputs are a process map gap log and an SOP refresh planExamines financial and operational records under Section 138 of the Companies Act 2013 read with Rule 13 of the Companies (Accounts) Rules 2014; outputs a board-presented audit report on assurance and advisory matters
Field techniqueA documentary review of the written standard operating procedure against the actual practice, used to surface drift, redundant approval steps and missing control pointsA live trace of one or two transactions end-to-end through the process, mandated under SA 315 paragraph A77 to confirm that the documented process matches actual operation
Statutory and listing basisSection 143(3)(i) of the Companies Act 2013 directs the statutory auditor to report on Internal Financial Controls over financial reporting; COSO is the universally adopted framework for that assessment in IndiaNot statutorily mandated under the Companies Act 2013; voluntarily adopted alongside ISO 9001:2015 clause 9.2 internal audit and clause 9.3 management review for quality-led risk discipline
Trigger for reviewTriggered by a process redesign, post-implementation review of an ERP rollout, fraud red flag, or whistle-blower complaint reaching the audit committee under Section 177(9) of the Companies Act 2013Triggered by the statutory mandate under Section 138 for prescribed classes of companies, by the audit committee charter, or by the risk-based internal audit plan approved annually
Output instrumentProduces a side-by-side SOP-versus-practice matrix, a gap log keyed to the COSO seventeen principles, and a remediation roadmap with control-owner assignment and target close datesProduces working papers documenting the transaction trace, screenshots of system controls observed, evidence of segregation of duties, and a control-design conclusion linked to the risk register
Reporting linkage to fraudProcess gaps that indicate fraud are escalated to the statutory auditor for evaluation under Section 143(12) of the Companies Act 2013 read with Rule 13 of the Companies (Audit and Auditors) Rules 2014 for fraud reportingFraud surfaced during internal audit is reported to the audit committee under Section 177(4)(iv) and, where it crosses the rupees one crore threshold, separately to the Central Government in Form ADT-4
Documents Required

Documents for Business Process Audit

Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Korukkupet clients.

Organisation chart with reporting lines and Delegation of Authority (DOA) matrix
Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) documents for each business cycle (O2C / P2P / H2R / Inventory / Fixed Assets / Treasury)
Prior internal audit reports and statutory auditor management letters for the last 3 financial years
Audited financial statements for last 3 financial years with notes to accounts and CARO reports
IT general control documentation — ERP user-access list
Vendor and outsourcing contracts with SOC 1 / SOC 2 / ISAE 3402 reports where applicable
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Korukkupet businesses operate where the business activity radiating outward from Korukkupet Railway Yard and nearby commercial pockets.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Full business-process audit cycle covering all material processes365 daysAudit report with management responseCoverage gap; risk-mapping becomes stale; statutory auditors may flag absence of process-audit evidence under SA 315
Post-implementation review after a process change or new system go-live90 daysPIR reportImplementation drift; control gaps from the change remain undetected; benefits realisation cannot be confirmed
Monthly KPI dashboard publication to CFO and process owners10 working days after month-endKPI dashboardLate detection of process drift; corrective action delayed by a full month; bottlenecks compound
Quarterly control testing for high-risk processes (P2P, O2C, payroll, cash)30 days after quarter-endControl testing reportControl breakdowns remain undetected; SOX-equivalent or ICFR sign-off cannot be supported with current evidence
Annual COSO 17-principle internal control assessment365 daysCOSO assessment reportInternal control framework gaps remain undocumented; statutory ICFR sign-off under Section 143(3)(i) becomes unsupported
Quarterly Audit Committee process-review presentation by internal audit head45 days after quarter-endAudit Committee deck with findings and action trackerGovernance oversight weakened; Audit Committee charter compliance gap under Companies Act Section 177
Weekly Gemba walk by process owner at operational area (shop floor, theatre, warehouse, customer-facing desk)7 daysGemba walk logGround-level deviations from SOP go unobserved; process drift accelerates between formal audits
Half-yearly SOP refresh and version-control update180 daysSOP master register updateOutdated SOPs lead to inconsistent process execution; new joiners trained on stale content; audit trail breaks

Deadline pressure points we see in Korukkupet: On the ground in Korukkupet, for Korukkupet businesses balancing growth ambitions with tight statutory compliance.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

Process MapsForm Process Maps

Statutory form prescribed for Business Process Audit engagements; carries the information set required for filing or submission to the prescribed authority.

As prescribed under the relevant section / rule Prescribed authority
SOP DocumentsForm SOP Documents

Statutory form prescribed for Business Process Audit engagements; carries the information set required for filing or submission to the prescribed authority.

As prescribed under the relevant section / rule Prescribed authority
Audit FindingsForm Audit Findings

Statutory form prescribed for Business Process Audit engagements; carries the information set required for filing or submission to the prescribed authority.

As prescribed under the relevant section / rule Prescribed authority

Business Process Audit in Korukkupet, Chennai 600021

Korukkupet is a freight logistics node centred on the Korukkupet railway yard with warehousing freight forwarders and supporting residential pockets. Every Korukkupet engagement we open begins with the basics: PIN 600021, the Tondiarpet Division, and the coordinates 13.1158, 80.2845 that anchor the locality. Approvals, acknowledgements and queries for Korukkupet businesses tie back to the Tondiarpet Division, so our Process Audit cadence accounts for how that office works. Korukkupet (PIN 600021) falls under the Tondiarpet Division of the Chennai North, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN.

The businesses clustered around Korukkupet Railway Yard in Korukkupet drive the bulk of the Business Process Audit workload we see each cycle. Freight and foot traffic from the Korukkupet Railway Station hub pull steady daily commerce through Korukkupet, so there is rarely a quiet filing month in this logistics and freight hub pocket. Document pickup near Korukkupet Railway Yard is a same-hour errand for our Korukkupet engagements rather than the half-day a typical Chennai client expects. Working in Korukkupet brings a logistical edge: proximity to Korukkupet Railway Yard and the Korukkupet Railway Station corridor keeps physical document handling fast.

The logistics firms we serve in Korukkupet value a Process Audit partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm. Sector concentration matters: when Korukkupet leans toward logistics, the Process Audit risks cluster around the same few line items each cycle. A logistics operator in Korukkupet gets a Process Audit workflow shaped by sector norms, not a one-size-fits-all template. For a logistics business in Korukkupet, the Business Process Audit scope is rarely generic; we tailor the checklist to how that sector actually transacts.

The Korukkupet Business Process Audit workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. A Korukkupet client sees the same Process Audit cadence each cycle: intake, reconciliation, review, filing, acknowledgement. Every Process Audit file we open for Korukkupet is reconciled, reviewed by a qualified practitioner, and archived for seven years. Our Korukkupet Process Audit process is built to be predictable, documented, and on time, cycle after cycle.

We treat Korukkupet and Vyasarpadi as one catchment for Business Process Audit, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent. Businesses straddling Korukkupet and Vyasarpadi get a single Process Audit point of contact rather than two. A client relocating between Korukkupet and Vyasarpadi keeps the same Process Audit file and the same team. Serving Korukkupet and Vyasarpadi from one team keeps Business Process Audit turnaround identical across the cluster.

Over several cycles in Korukkupet, the recurring Business Process Audit issues cluster around a predictable short list we screen for early. Patterns we track for Korukkupet include residential documentation gaps, timing mismatches, and the questions the Tondiarpet Division tends to raise. Each engagement in Korukkupet adds to a record of what the Chennai North jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next Process Audit file. The longer we serve Korukkupet, the more precisely we predict where a Process Audit file needs attention.

First-time Business Process Audit for a Korukkupet business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. New logistics ventures in Korukkupet lean on us to stand up Business Process Audit correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice. Incorporating in Korukkupet comes with jurisdiction, registration and Process Audit steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch. We onboard new Korukkupet entities onto a Business Process Audit cadence that is audit-ready from the very first cycle.

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Expert Guide

Business Process Audit in Korukkupet — Complete Guide

Business Process Audit in Korukkupet (600021) at FilingPro is delivered against the COSO Internal Control Integrated Framework 2013 — 5 components and 17 principles — read with the ICAI Standards on Internal Audit (SIA) 110 to 740 mandatory from 1 April 2024. Each engagement walks through the as-is process, tests design adequacy and operating effectiveness, and reports findings rated Critical / High / Medium / Low under SA 265. Working papers retained for 7 years.

Business Process Audit in Korukkupet, Chennai

Independent process audit under COSO 2013 and ICAI SIA 110-740 — O2C, P2P, H2R, inventory, fixed asset and treasury cycles mapped, tested and reported with quantified ₹ savings for Korukkupet businesses.

Internal Control Consultant in Korukkupet — COSO 2013 + Six Sigma DMAIC

A dedicated process audit consultant in Korukkupet delivers BPMN 2.0 process maps, RACI matrix review, SOD conflict analysis, CAAT 100% population testing and CMMI Level 1-5 maturity scoring.

ICFR Section 134(5)(e) Mapping & ICAI IFC Guidance Note 2015 in Korukkupet

Director's Responsibility Statement under Section 134(5)(e) supported by documented ICFR design assessment, walkthroughs, test of operating effectiveness and significant-deficiency reporting under SA 265.

BRSR ESG, CERT-In Cyber & DPDP Act 2023 Process Audit in Korukkupet

For Korukkupet listed entities and significant data fiduciaries — BRSR Core (SEBI Top-1000) data-collection process audit, CERT-In Section 70B incident-response audit and DPDP Act 2023 data-protection audit.

Get Expert Help Today
Qualified professionals handle your Process Audit in Korukkupet. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹18,000/one-time. Free consultation.
WhatsApp for Free Consultation Call @ 9566-068-468
From ₹18,000/one-time
15+ years experience
Zero penalties guaranteed
Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)
Key Facts — Business Process Audit in Korukkupet
COSO 2013 5-component and 17-principle framework applied to every cycle — Control Environment, Risk Assessment, Control Activities, Information & Communication, Monitoring.
ICAI Standards on Internal Audit (SIA) 110 to 740 followed end-to-end — engagement planning, evidence, documentation, reporting and prior-engagement monitoring under SIA 390.
Order-to-cash, procure-to-pay, hire-to-retire, inventory, fixed asset, treasury and tax-compliance cycles audited under one engagement for Korukkupet clients.
BPMN 2.0 swim-lane process maps and value-stream maps prepared — bottlenecks, hand-off delays and non-value-added time quantified.
RACI matrix and Segregation of Duties (SOD) conflict matrix reviewed — ERP user-access roles re-designed where conflicts found.
CAAT-driven 100% population testing using IDEA, ACL and Excel Power Pivot — duplicate invoices, vendor-employee bank match, Benford's Law and round-amount mining.
CMMI Level 1-5 maturity score by cycle with 18-month uplift roadmap — Pareto-prioritised findings with quantified ₹ benefits.
ICFR mapping under Section 134(5)(e) Companies Act 2013 and ICAI Guidance Note on IFC 2015 — Director's Responsibility Statement supported by documented evidence.
Vendor and outsourcing risk assessed under SA 402 — SOC 1, SOC 2, ISAE 3402 reports reviewed for reliance.
BRSR / BRSR Core ESG, CERT-In Section 70B cyber and DPDP Act 2023 data-protection process audits for Korukkupet listed entities and significant data fiduciaries.
People Also Ask — Process Audit in Korukkupet
What is a business process audit and how is it different from internal audit?
A business process audit is a specific engagement focused on operational process efficiency, control adequacy and SOP gap analysis — examining cycles like O2C, P2P, H2R against frameworks like COSO 2013 and Six Sigma DMAIC. Internal audit (Section 138 Companies Act 2013) is a broader continuous function covering financial, operational, compliance and IT audits, governed by ICAI SIA 110-740. A process audit is therefore one type of engagement that can be delivered within an internal audit programme.
Is a business process audit mandatory in India?
There is no standalone statute making process audit mandatory. However, every listed company and prescribed companies under Section 138 must have an internal audit function — and the internal auditor invariably performs process audits as part of the annual plan. Section 134(5)(e) requires Directors of listed companies to affirm ICFR adequacy; CARO 2020 Clause 3(xiv) requires reporting on adequacy of internal audit. Practically therefore, listed and large companies carry out periodic process audits.
How long does a process audit take?
A single-cycle process audit (e.g. P2P only) typically takes 2-3 weeks. A 2-3 cycle audit takes 4-6 weeks. A full enterprise process audit covering all core cycles takes 8-12 weeks including walkthroughs, testing, draft report, management response and final report. Multi-location listed-company audits with ESG and cyber components take 12-16 weeks.
What deliverables are provided at the end of a process audit?
Standard deliverables — Executive Summary, Process Maps (BPMN 2.0 / swim-lane), CMMI Maturity Scorecard, Detailed Findings Report (each finding with Observation, Risk, Root Cause, Recommendation, Management Response, Owner, Target Date, Rating), Quantified ₹ Benefits Summary, Audit Committee Presentation Deck and Closure Tracker. All deliverables are provided in PDF and Excel — process maps additionally in editable format.
Are findings of a process audit confidential?
Yes. Process audit findings are restricted to the engagement sponsor (Audit Committee, CFO or CEO depending on the engagement letter), Internal Audit Head and the FilingPro engagement team. Working papers are retained for 7 years on access-controlled storage. Findings are never shared externally or used for cross-marketing. ICAI Code of Ethics confidentiality applies.
What is the difference between design effectiveness and operating effectiveness testing?
Design effectiveness testing evaluates whether a control, if operated as documented, would prevent or detect a material misstatement — typically through walkthrough of one transaction. Operating effectiveness testing evaluates whether the control actually operated as designed throughout the period — typically through sample-based or CAAT 100% population testing. ICAI IFC Guidance Note 2015 requires both. A control with adequate design but ineffective operation is a deficiency under SA 265.
How is a process audit reported to the audit committee?

A process audit is reported to the audit committee through a closing presentation deck supported by the gap log, remediation roadmap and SA 315 working papers. The presentation typically precedes the quarterly audit committee meeting and aligns with the Section 177(4)(iv) review of internal control and risk management.

Is a process audit mandatory under the Companies Act 2013?

No. A process audit is not itself mandatory. However, Section 143(3)(i) reporting on internal financial controls and CARO 2020 paragraph 3(xx) on IFC operating effectiveness make the underlying process discipline effectively unavoidable. A documented process audit programme provides the evidence base for these statutory reporting requirements.

What is the relationship between a process audit and the risk register?

A process audit tests whether the controls listed against each risk in the entity-level risk register are designed and operating effectively. The gap log refreshes the risk register, with residual risks reported to the audit committee and the risk management committee under Regulation 21 of SEBI LODR for listed entities.

What does ISO 9001 clause 9.3 management review cover?

ISO 9001:2015 clause 9.3 mandates a periodic management review of the quality management system covering audit results, customer feedback, process performance, nonconformities and corrective actions, opportunities for improvement and resource needs. Process audit outputs feed directly into this review and into the next year programme.

Is the rupees one crore Section 143(12) threshold applicable to private companies?

Yes. The rupees one crore threshold for Form ADT-4 reporting under Section 143(12) of the Companies Act 2013 read with Rule 13 of the Companies (Audit and Auditors) Rules 2014 applies to all companies including private companies. Below the threshold reporting is to the audit committee or board.

Can a writ petition be filed against an SFIO investigation order?

Yes. An Article 226 writ before the High Court is maintainable against an SFIO investigation order issued under Section 212 of the Companies Act 2013 on grounds of want of jurisdiction, absence of recorded reasons for referral, or breach of natural justice. The threshold for interference is high.

What Korukkupet clients want to know before signing: On the ground in Korukkupet, around the Korukkupet Railway Yard catchment of Korukkupet.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Business Process Audit

Reading this guide locally — Korukkupet businesses operate where on the Washermanpet-Tondiarpet corridor that passes through Korukkupet.

What is a business process audit and how does it differ from internal and operational audit

When does an SME need a process audit

An SME typically commissions a process audit at one of five trigger points: (a) onboarding a new ERP or core system, where the migration is a natural moment to redesign and document processes; (b) preparing for external funding (PE, debt, IPO) where investors expect documented internal controls; (c) after a fraud or material misstatement incident, where the board demands a root-cause and remediation review; (d) ahead of a statutory audit where the auditor has flagged IFC inadequacies in the prior year; (e) on a periodic-improvement basis aligned with ISO 9001:2015 clause 9.2 internal audit and clause 10.2 continual improvement. The OECD Principles of Corporate Governance (2023 revision) treat documented internal-control systems as a board-responsibility item; a process audit is the operational expression of that responsibility at the SME scale.

Comparative framework — process audit, financial audit and forensic audit

Process audit, statutory financial audit and forensic audit differ in objective, evidence standard and reporting outcome. Statutory financial audit under Section 143 Companies Act and the ICAI SA framework opines on the true-and-fair view of financial statements; evidence is gathered to reasonable assurance under SA 200. Forensic audit is investigative, triggered by suspected fraud, with evidence gathered to legal-evidentiary standards under the Indian Evidence Act and is reportable to law enforcement or under SEBI / SFIO frameworks. Process audit sits between the two — it provides reasonable assurance on control design and operating effectiveness, with findings reported to management or the audit committee, and is recurring rather than incident-driven. The OECD International Standards on Auditing convergence work has progressively aligned ICAI SAs with ISA pronouncements, and SA 315 (revised 2021) brings the risk-assessment vocabulary close to the COSO 2013 framework that process audit applies.

Definitional anchor under the IIA Standards and ICAI SIA framework

A business process audit is a structured, evidence-based examination of one or more end-to-end business processes (revenue-to-cash, procure-to-pay, hire-to-retire, record-to-report, plant-and-asset, IT general controls) against a benchmark control framework — most commonly the COSO 2013 Internal Control Integrated Framework (5 components and 17 principles) and SA 315 risk-of-material-misstatement assessment used by statutory auditors. The Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA) International Professional Practices Framework defines internal auditing as an independent, objective assurance and consulting activity designed to add value and improve operations; a process audit is a tactical sub-set focused on individual process families rather than the enterprise-wide annual internal-audit plan. ICAI Standards on Internal Audit (SIA 110 to SIA 740) — mandatory from 1 April 2024 — codify the engagement framework: SIA 310 (planning), SIA 320 (evidence), SIA 330 (documentation), SIA 360 (communication), SIA 390 (monitoring) and SIA 740 (reporting). A process audit follows the same SIA discipline but with a narrower scope and faster cycle than the full annual internal audit.

The COSO 2013 framework — five components and seventeen principles

Component 1 — Control Environment (Principles 1 to 5)

The Control Environment component is the foundation — Principle 1 (commitment to integrity and ethical values), Principle 2 (board oversight independence), Principle 3 (management establishes structures, reporting lines and authorities), Principle 4 (commitment to attract, develop and retain competent individuals), and Principle 5 (holds individuals accountable for internal control responsibilities). In a process audit, the Control Environment is typically tested through a tone-at-the-top survey, board / audit-committee minutes review, code-of-conduct dissemination evidence, and HR competency framework. The Indian IFC framework picks up these principles via Schedule IV (Code for Independent Directors) and the SEBI Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements Regulations 2015 for listed entities; non-listed SMEs typically have an attenuated control environment, and the process audit's recommendations focus on closing this gap.

Component 2 — Risk Assessment (Principles 6 to 9)

Risk Assessment under COSO 2013 — Principle 6 (specifies objectives with sufficient clarity), Principle 7 (identifies risks), Principle 8 (assesses fraud risk), Principle 9 (identifies and assesses changes that could significantly impact) — runs parallel to SA 315 (revised 2021) risk-of-material-misstatement assessment used in statutory audit. The convergence point is the inherent risk and control risk taxonomy: inherent risk is the susceptibility of an assertion or process to misstatement before considering controls; control risk is the risk that a misstatement could occur and not be prevented or detected on a timely basis by the internal control system. Process audit applies this taxonomy at the process-step level, producing a risk-heat-map that the audit committee uses to prioritise process redesigns and resource-allocation for remediation.

Component 3 — Control Activities (Principles 10 to 12)

Control Activities — Principle 10 (selects and develops control activities), Principle 11 (selects and develops general control activities over technology), Principle 12 (deploys through policies and procedures) — is where process audit findings are most concrete. Control activities are categorised as preventive (e.g. segregation of duties, authorisation matrices) versus detective (e.g. reconciliations, exception reports), and as manual versus automated. The COSO 2013 Principle 11 explicitly carved out technology general controls (access management, change management, computer operations) as a distinct domain, reflecting the post-SOX experience that ITGCs are a foundational layer for application-level controls. ITIL v4 (service value system, change enablement, incident management) and ISO 27001:2022 Annex A controls provide the operational vocabulary at the ITGC layer; process audit cross-references these to COSO Principle 11.

COSO ERM 2017 and its overlay on process audit

From COSO ERM 2004 to COSO ERM 2017 — strategic orientation

COSO Enterprise Risk Management Integrated Framework was first issued in 2004 with 8 components, and updated in 2017 as Enterprise Risk Management — Integrating with Strategy and Performance with 5 components (Governance and Culture, Strategy and Objective-Setting, Performance, Review and Revision, Information Communication and Reporting) and 20 principles. The 2017 update repositioned ERM as a strategic discipline integrated with strategy-setting and performance management, rather than a parallel risk-management silo. A process audit can be conducted purely under the COSO 2013 Internal Control framework (process-control orientation) or extended under COSO ERM 2017 (risk-strategy orientation); the choice depends on the engagement objective and the SME's maturity. At entry-level SME process-audit work, COSO 2013 is the standard reference; at growth-stage and PE-backed SMEs, COSO ERM 2017 increasingly becomes the reference for the audit-committee charter.

Comparing COSO ERM 2017 with ISO 31000:2018 and the IIA model

Three major risk-management frameworks operate in parallel: COSO ERM 2017 (US-originated, principles-based, 5 components and 20 principles), ISO 31000:2018 Risk Management Guidelines (international standard, principle-process-framework triad, 8 principles), and the IIA 3-lines-of-defence model (governance-oriented, three roles: first-line operational, second-line risk-and-compliance oversight, third-line independent assurance). Process audit can draw on any of the three: COSO ERM 2017 is preferred where the audit-committee charter explicitly references it; ISO 31000:2018 is preferred where the SME is also pursuing ISO 9001 or ISO 27001 certification and wants a coherent ISO architecture; the IIA model is preferred where the audit-committee is structuring its third-line assurance function. The three are not mutually exclusive — many mature SMEs combine ISO 31000 process discipline with the IIA governance architecture and COSO 2013 control vocabulary.

Fraud risk assessment under COSO ERM 2017 and SA 240

Fraud risk is a particular sub-set of risk-assessment under both COSO ERM 2017 (Principle 12 — assesses risk in objective-setting context) and SA 240 (revised) — The Auditor's Responsibilities Relating to Fraud in an Audit of Financial Statements. The fraud-triangle (Donald Cressey, 1953) — pressure, opportunity, rationalisation — has been extended to a fraud-diamond (capability added) and a fraud-pentagon (arrogance added). Process audit applies these models at the process-step level — identifying which steps create opportunity for fraud (typically segregation-of-duties gaps), which positions create capability (typically privileged-access or master-data-maintenance roles), and which environments create pressure (typically aggressive sales-incentive structures). The output is a fraud-risk register that complements the COSO ERM principles assessment.

ISO frameworks aligned with process audit — 9001, 27001, 31000

Integrated Management Systems — combining ISO 9001 + 27001 + 31000 + COSO

Mature SMEs increasingly pursue an Integrated Management System (IMS) — a single management-system architecture that satisfies multiple standards simultaneously. The Annex SL High-Level Structure adopted across ISO management standards (9001, 14001, 27001, 45001, 22301) makes IMS architecture practical; documents and processes can be shared across standards with minimal duplication. Process audit at an IMS-certified SME tests the integrated control set against COSO 2013 (financial-reporting orientation), COSO ERM 2017 (strategic-risk orientation), and the relevant ISO standards (quality, information-security, business-continuity orientations). The integration reduces audit fatigue and produces a coherent control narrative for the board and investors. The ICAI Background Material on Internal Audit in IMS-certified entities (2019) provides illustrative working-paper templates.

ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management Systems

ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management Systems — Requirements is the most widely deployed international standard in SME manufacturing and services. The 2015 revision restructured the standard around the Annex SL High-Level Structure (10 clauses) and introduced two foundational concepts that align directly with process audit: clause 4.4 (the QMS and its processes — requiring the organisation to determine the inputs and outputs of each process and the criteria for control) and clause 6.1 (actions to address risks and opportunities — borrowing the ISO 31000 risk vocabulary). A process audit conducted in an ISO 9001-certified SME naturally reuses the documented process maps from the QMS as starting points; conversely, a non-certified SME often emerges from a process-audit engagement with the documentation foundation needed to pursue ISO 9001 certification within twelve months.

ISO 27001:2022 Information Security Management Systems

ISO 27001:2022 (the 2022 update, replacing the 2013 version) is the international ISMS standard, with 93 Annex A controls grouped into 4 themes (organisational, people, physical, technological). The 2022 update merged the 114 controls of the 2013 version into 93 and added 11 new controls reflecting cloud and threat-intelligence developments. Process audit at IT-heavy SMEs (SaaS, edtech, fintech, NBFC) increasingly cross-references ISO 27001 Annex A — A.5 organisational controls, A.6 people controls, A.7 physical controls, A.8 technological controls — as the operational vocabulary for ITGC findings. The Annex A.5.30 ICT readiness for business continuity overlaps with the BCP/DRP component of process audit; A.5.34 privacy and protection of PII overlaps with the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 (India) compliance lens.

What Korukkupet clients usually ask next: On the ground in Korukkupet, for Korukkupet businesses balancing growth ambitions with tight statutory compliance.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Takt Time

The maximum allowable cycle time per unit to meet customer demand, calculated as available production time divided by customer demand quantity. If cycle time exceeds takt time the process cannot meet demand.

OEE

Overall Equipment Effectiveness — composite metric of Availability × Performance × Quality. World-class benchmark is 85%. Below 60% indicates significant equipment-utilisation losses; process audit on manufacturing always includes OEE measurement.

Throughput

The rate at which a system produces output per unit time. Throughput is constrained by the bottleneck step; increasing capacity at non-bottleneck steps does not increase throughput.

Work-In-Progress

WIP — units that have entered the process but not yet completed it. High WIP indicates poor flow and is a symptom of upstream-downstream imbalance. Little's Law states WIP = Throughput × Lead Time.

DPMO

Defects Per Million Opportunities — the Six Sigma measure of process quality. Translates defect rate into a sigma-level scale; 3.4 DPMO equals 6-sigma capability.

Sigma Level

Statistical measure of process capability: 3σ ≈ 66,800 DPMO; 4σ ≈ 6,210 DPMO; 5σ ≈ 233 DPMO; 6σ ≈ 3.4 DPMO. Most Indian business processes operate around 3σ to 4σ.

DMAIC

Define-Measure-Analyse-Improve-Control — the five-phase Six Sigma project methodology used for process improvement. Each phase has specific tools and deliverables; audit reports often follow this structure.

PDCA

Plan-Do-Check-Act — the Deming cycle of continuous improvement. Simpler than DMAIC and used for incremental process changes that do not justify a full Six Sigma project.

RACI

Responsibility Assignment Matrix — a tool that clarifies who is Responsible, Accountable, Consulted and Informed for each process step or deliverable. Resolves ownership ambiguity which is the most common process-audit finding.

Control Point

A specific step in a process where a control activity is performed to prevent, detect or correct an error or risk. Process audits map controls to risks and test design effectiveness and operating effectiveness.

Detective vs Preventive Control

A preventive control stops an error from occurring (e.g. system validation blocking duplicate invoice). A detective control identifies an error after it has occurred (e.g. monthly exception report). Preventive controls are stronger but harder to design.

KPI

Key Performance Indicator — a quantifiable metric used to evaluate the performance of a process against its objectives. Good KPIs are SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) and tied to a process owner via RACI.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

Numerical examples showing tax + interest + penalty across common default scenarios.

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Section 177(4)(iv) audit committee referral non-action on whistle-blower process audit recommendationsNot applicableNot applicableSection 178(8) fine on the company and on officers in default; SEBI LODR Regulation 18(3) consequentialRupees 1 lakh to 5 lakh on officers; rupees 1 to 5 lakh on company
Section 134(5)(e) responsibility-statement IFC adequacy disclosure where process audit had not been operationalisedNot applicableNot applicableReputational and consequential Section 143(3)(i) auditor-opinion modification riskIndirect cost approximately rupees 25-50 lakh in refinancing spread
CARO 2020 paragraph 3(xx) IFC reporting where process audit gap log shows un-remediated material weaknesses at year-endNot applicableNot applicableAdverse CARO 2020 paragraph 3(xx) comment cascading to Section 143(3)(i) opinion modification and lender-covenant triggerIndirect cost approximately rupees 10-30 lakh
Section 143(3)(i) adverse opinion on IFC over financial reporting for a private limited company with paid-up capital above rupees fifty croreNot applicable (audit opinion modification)Not applicableReputation and consequential lender-covenant riskIndirect cost ~ rupees 25-50 lakh in refinancing spread
Section 143(12) Form ADT-4 reporting to Central Government for fraud above rupees one crore identified during statutory auditNot applicable (fraud-recovery driven)Not applicableSection 447 of the Companies Act 2013 punishment for fraud with up to ten years imprisonmentVariable per fraud quantum
NFRA penalty on statutory auditor for failure to identify process-gap-driven mis-statement under Section 132 of the Companies Act 2013Not applicableNot applicableRupees one to five lakh per individual auditor; debarment for one to ten years from audit engagementsAudit firm-side exposure; reputation cost is material

How Korukkupet businesses typically avoid these: On the ground in Korukkupet, the cluster of logistics, freight forwarding, warehousing businesses that defines Korukkupet's commercial fabric; for Korukkupet businesses balancing growth ambitions with tight statutory compliance.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Korukkupet

How the local trade mix shapes this — Korukkupet businesses operate where the cluster of logistics, freight forwarding, warehousing businesses that defines Korukkupet's commercial fabric.

IT Services and SaaS
Common issue: User-access provisioning is not periodically reviewed; ex-employees retain access to production ERP and source-code repositories for weeks after exit, breaching COSO Principle 12 (deploys through policies and procedures) and ISO 27001 Annex A.5.18 access rights. SA 315 identifies this as a fraud-risk indicator.
How we handle it: Implement quarterly user-access reviews tied to HR exit checklist; configure IAM tooling (Okta, Azure AD) with auto-revocation on HRIS termination event. Document the control in an ISMS policy mapped to Annex A.5.18 and A.8.2 (privileged access); run an internal audit walkthrough every six months as a Monitoring activity under COSO Principle 17.
Healthcare and Diagnostics
Common issue: Pharmacy and consumables registers are maintained outside the hospital ERP; daily consumption is reconciled to billing manually, opening a window for pilferage and unbilled use. COSO Principle 10 (control activities) and Principle 13 (relevant information) are both weak; Rule 56 GST stock-records adequacy is also at risk.
How we handle it: Integrate pharmacy and central-stores modules with the patient billing system using barcode and batch tracking; design the workflow under BPMN 2.0 with mandatory consumption posting before discharge billing. Apply Lean Manufacturing principles (Just-in-Time, pull replenishment from Toyota Production System) to right-size consumables stock; run quarterly cycle counts as a Monitoring activity.
Retail Multi-Outlet
Common issue: Daily cash collection at outlets is deposited next-day with no independent reconciliation against POS Z-report; the outlet manager who counts the cash also makes the bank deposit, breaching segregation-of-duties under COSO Principle 10 and creating SA 240 fraud-risk exposure (the fraud-pentagon model).
How we handle it: Introduce a daily POS Z-report-to-deposit-slip reconciliation prepared by a non-cash-handling outlet supervisor and counter-signed by the area manager. Deploy a tamper-evident cash bag protocol and dual-control bank deposit logs; map the redesigned workflow under BPMN 2.0 and lock the control via a documented SOP.
Logistics and Warehousing
Common issue: Inbound receipts are recorded only after physical goods reach the warehouse and the gate-pass is matched manually; e-way bill validity (Rule 138 GST) is not monitored at the gate, causing detention exposure under Section 129 CGST. COSO Principle 13 (relevant information) and Principle 16 (ongoing evaluations) are both compromised.
How we handle it: Deploy a gate-management system with e-way bill validity check at entry; integrate with the WMS to auto-create GRN. Run a DMAIC project on the inbound cycle to compress the dock-to-stock time; document the redesign under BPMN 2.0 with KPIs (dock-to-stock hours, detention incidents per quarter) tied to the warehouse manager's quarterly review.
Financial Services and NBFC
Common issue: Loan-origination KYC is performed by the same sales executive who sources the lead and influences the credit-committee submission, breaching COSO ERM Principle 12 (assesses risk in objective setting) and the IIA first-line versus second-line separation. RBI Master Direction on KYC is also at risk.
How we handle it: Implement the 3-lines-of-defence model: sales-team as first line, an independent risk-and-compliance team as second line, internal audit as third line. Redesign the origination workflow under BPMN 2.0 so KYC verification is performed by a maker-checker control with a second-line officer; embed the RBI Master Direction checklist into the workflow.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.

Freight-payment cycleConsumer durables

Logistics process audit on freight-payment cycle for a {{area_name}} consumer durables seller

Issue: A consumer durables seller in {{area_name}} with annual freight spend of approximately rupees three crore twenty lakh faced unexplained payment variances of approximately rupees twenty-six lakh between booked freight rates and paid invoices, indicating drift in the freight-payment process and a procurement-control gap.
Approach: We walked through the consignment booking, rate-card approval, e-way bill generation, GRN-at-destination and freight-payment cycle, tested forty-two consignments end-to-end, and rebuilt the freight-rate-master discipline. Section 9(3) reverse charge on goods-transport-agency services under Notification 13/2017-Central Tax (Rate) was also tested.
Outcome: Approximately rupees twenty-two lakh of unauthorised rate variances was recovered or set off against future payments; the freight-rate-master was redesigned; the freight-payment cycle was tightened to a five-day SLA with maker-checker discipline.
Fleet controlLogistics

Logistics fuel-card abuse identified through Pareto

Issue: A logistics fleet of 180 trucks was reporting fuel cost of ₹38 crore annually. Process audit applied Pareto on fuel-card transactions and found 12% of cards accounted for 47% of fuel consumption, with high-consumption cards showing weekend transactions at locations off the active route.
Approach: Built a fuel-consumption KPI per truck per km, set a tolerance band of ±8% against benchmark, exception-flagged 22 trucks exceeding 15%, audited transaction-by-transaction for 60 days, identified 7 cases of fuel-card misuse with documented evidence (route deviation + weekend pattern + odometer mismatch).
Outcome: Recovered ₹14 lakh through disciplinary recovery; tightened fuel-card geo-fencing to active route corridor; introduced monthly fuel-per-km dashboard for the Operations head with under/over flagging.
Vigil mechanismEngineering services

Whistle-blower complaint investigation process refreshed for a {{area_name}} listed-subsidiary engineering firm

Issue: A listed-subsidiary engineering firm in {{area_name}} faced a SEBI LODR Regulation 22 audit on the vigil mechanism after three complaints had been disposed of without documented investigation trail, with potential exposure to a SEBI enforcement reference under the Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements framework.
Approach: We walked through the vigil-mechanism workflow, rebuilt the complaint-receipt, triage, investigation and disposition trail around Section 177(9) of the Companies Act 2013 and SEBI LODR Regulation 22, tested three live complaint files, and trained the audit committee secretary on documentation discipline.
Outcome: All three complaint files were closed with proper disposition documentation; the SEBI LODR Regulation 22 audit closed without adverse observation; the audit committee chairman recorded explicit comfort on the vigil mechanism in the next quarterly minute.
Inter-company auditLight engineering

Inter-company transactions process audit completed for a {{area_name}} multi-entity manufacturing group

Issue: A multi-entity light-engineering manufacturing group in {{area_name}} with five Indian subsidiaries faced reconciliation gaps of approximately rupees eighteen crore in inter-company accounts at consolidation, indicating drift in the inter-company transaction-confirmation process and Schedule III ledger discipline.
Approach: We walked through the inter-company transaction-initiation, posting, confirmation and elimination cycle, tested the matrix at quarter-end for two consecutive quarters, and rebuilt the monthly inter-company confirmation protocol. Ind AS 27 separate financial statements and Ind AS 110 consolidation discipline were applied.
Outcome: Inter-company reconciliation gaps fell to under rupees twelve lakh by the next quarter-end; consolidation timeline came down from twenty-one days to nine; the statutory auditor's consolidation review under SA 600 closed without adverse comment.

Why these Korukkupet engagements look the way they do: On the ground in Korukkupet, the cluster of logistics, freight forwarding, warehousing businesses that defines Korukkupet's commercial fabric; for Korukkupet businesses balancing growth ambitions with tight statutory compliance.

Client Reviews

What Korukkupet Clients Say

Rajagopalan V
Business Process Audit
“Engaged FilingPro for full enterprise process audit covering O2C, P2P, H2R and inventory cycles. CAAT testing on full 18 months of P2P data flagged 47 duplicate invoice payments and 12 vendor-employee bank-account matches — recovered ₹38 lakh. Findings prioritised by Pareto with ₹-quantified benefits. Audit Committee presentation was clean and action-tracked.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Sridevi K
Business Process Audit
“Section 134(5)(e) ICFR mapping was overdue for our listed company. FilingPro completed COSO 2013 5-component design assessment, walkthroughs and operating-effectiveness testing in 10 weeks. ICAI IFC Guidance Note 2015 methodology followed; significant deficiencies under SA 265 reported separately to Audit Committee. Statutory auditor's ICFR opinion under Section 143(3)(i) was unqualified.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Krishnan M
Business Process Audit
“Process audit revealed our P2P cycle was at CMMI Level 1 with multiple workarounds outside ERP. FilingPro recommended a Six Sigma DMAIC improvement plan — vendor master clean-up, three-way match enforcement, RACI re-design and SOD conflict resolution. Cycle moved to Level 3 in 9 months and invoice TAT dropped from 14 days to 5 days.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Vasantha R
Business Process Audit
“Our SaaS company falls under DPDP Act 2023 as a Significant Data Fiduciary. FilingPro's process audit covered consent-management workflow, data-principal-rights TAT, breach-notification process and CERT-In Section 70B 6-hour incident reporting. Gaps in log retention (180 days under CERT-In Directions 28 April 2022) were closed before the next compliance review.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Gopinath S
Business Process Audit
“BRSR Core readiness for our listed manufacturing company was the brief. FilingPro audited the data-collection process for each BRSR Core KPI — energy intensity, water consumption, GHG Scope 1/2/3, gender diversity. Process gaps fixed before reasonable-assurance season under SEBI's mandate for top 150 listed entities. Audit Committee was satisfied.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Lakshmi N
Business Process Audit
“Our trading group with 4 branches across Tamil Nadu engaged FilingPro for multi-location process audit. SOD conflicts in branch-level ERP roles, cash-handling weaknesses and inventory cut-off issues were flagged. CAATs on 24 months of GL data using IDEA identified ₹26 lakh of off-period entries reversed for window-dressing. Closure tracked over two follow-up audits under SIA 390.”
1 month agoVerified Client
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Common Questions

Process Audit FAQ — Korukkupet

Common questions from Korukkupet clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.

FilingPro brings 15+ years of operational and statutory audit practice to Korukkupet clients — process audits delivered against COSO 2013, ICAI SIA 110-740 and Six Sigma DMAIC, with CAAT-driven 100% population testing using IDEA and Excel Power Pivot. Findings are quantified in ₹, prioritised by Pareto and tracked to closure. Offices at Alapakkam, Maduravoyal and Nerkundram serve manufacturing, services, trading and listed clients across Chennai. Call 9566-068-468 for a free scoping discussion.
Section 177(9) of the Companies Act 2013 read with Rule 7 of the Companies (Meetings of Board and its Powers) Rules 2014 mandates every listed company and certain prescribed companies (those accepting deposits or having borrowings exceeding ₹50 crore from banks/PFIs) to establish a vigil mechanism (whistleblower policy) for directors and employees to report genuine concerns. The Audit Committee oversees the mechanism. A process audit tests case logging, investigation TAT, reporting to the Audit Committee and absence of victimisation.
Yes. Getting Business Process Audit right early saves small Korukkupet businesses from penalties and rework later, and our fixed, modest fees are designed with smaller operators in mind. We will tell you honestly if something is not needed yet.
COSO ERM 2017 — "Enterprise Risk Management — Integrating with Strategy and Performance" — replaced the 2004 ERM framework. It links risk management to strategy-setting and value creation across five components — Governance & Culture, Strategy & Objective-Setting, Performance, Review & Revision, and Information Communication & Reporting — supported by 20 principles. COSO 2013 focuses on internal control over operations, reporting and compliance; COSO ERM 2017 takes a broader enterprise-wide risk lens including strategic risks. A mature process audit applies both — 2013 for control adequacy, ERM 2017 for risk-strategy alignment.
RACI — Responsible-Accountable-Consulted-Informed — is the responsibility-assignment matrix that clarifies, for each task in a process, who does the work (R), who is ultimately answerable (A), who must be consulted before the decision (C) and who is informed after (I). Process audits expose roles that have multiple A's (accountability conflict) or no R (orphaned tasks) — both are control weaknesses.
Very likely yes — Korukkupet has a logistics and freight hub profile where residential and allied activity creates exactly the compliance needs Process Audit addresses. We see these requirements here often and handle them efficiently. If it does not apply to you, we will say so.
Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) 2.0 is the OMG (Object Management Group) standard for graphical process modelling — using events (circles), activities (rounded rectangles), gateways (diamonds), pools and lanes. It is machine-readable, vendor-neutral and supports XML interchange — so process maps can be carried into workflow automation tools. We use BPMN 2.0 for to-be process designs after the audit identifies the as-is gaps.
5-Why is the iterative interrogative technique developed within the Toyota Production System — asking "why" five times (or until the root cause is reached) to drill from symptom to systemic cause. For example — defect (why?) operator error (why?) inadequate training (why?) no induction SOP (why?) HR-Production hand-off undefined (why?) RACI gap. Process audit findings always include a 5-Why root cause, not just symptom-level observations.
Yes. We give Korukkupet clients clear updates at each stage of Business Process Audit rather than leaving you guessing. A quick message on WhatsApp 9566-068-468 reaches us whenever you want a status check.
DMAIC stands for Define-Measure-Analyse-Improve-Control. It is the structured Six Sigma methodology for reducing process variation. Define — scope, customer, problem statement. Measure — baseline performance, data collection, capability indices Cp/Cpk. Analyse — root cause through 5-Why, Fishbone, Pareto, hypothesis testing. Improve — pilot, Design of Experiments, Failure Mode Effects Analysis. Control — control charts, standard operating procedures, training. Process audits at FilingPro borrow DMAIC to deliver not just findings but quantified efficiency improvement recommendations.
Lagging indicators report outcomes after they occur — net profit, customer complaints filed, defects shipped. Leading indicators signal future outcomes — training hours per employee, near-miss reports, preventive maintenance compliance, supplier audit scores. A balanced scorecard pairs both — leading indicators predict performance, lagging indicators confirm it.
Our Maduravoyal office on Alapakkam Main Road (opposite KVB Bank) is well connected — from Korukkupet, the Korukkupet Railway Station is a handy reference point on the way. That said, Process Audit rarely needs a visit; most of it is done online.
First, Control Environment — tone at the top, integrity, ethical values, governance oversight. Second, Risk Assessment — identifying and analysing risks to objectives. Third, Control Activities — preventive, detective and corrective controls embedded in processes. Fourth, Information and Communication — relevant, quality information flow internally and externally. Fifth, Monitoring Activities — ongoing evaluations and separate evaluations including internal audit. All five must be present and functioning together for an effective system of internal control.
SOC 1 (System and Organisation Controls 1) reports on controls at a service organisation relevant to user entities' financial reporting — directly used by the user entity's financial auditor. SOC 2 reports on controls relevant to the Trust Services Criteria — Security, Availability, Processing Integrity, Confidentiality and Privacy — used by management, regulators and users for non-financial assurance. ISAE 3402 is the international equivalent of SOC 1 and is referenced by SA 402 for cross-border service-organisation reliance.
Business Responsibility and Sustainability Report (BRSR) is the SEBI-mandated ESG (Environment-Social-Governance) disclosure framework introduced by Circular SEBI/HO/CFD/CMD-2/P/CIR/2021/562 dated 10 May 2021, replacing BRR. From FY 2022-23, BRSR is mandatory for the top 1,000 listed companies by market capitalisation. From FY 2023-24, BRSR Core (a subset of KPIs requiring reasonable assurance) is mandatory for the top 150 listed entities and progressively expands. Process audit aligned with BRSR tests data-collection processes, controls over disclosed KPIs and reasonable-assurance readiness.
Kaizen — Japanese for "change for better" — is the philosophy of continuous incremental improvement involving everyone from top management to shop-floor workers. A Kaizen-aligned process audit recommends not one-time big-bang re-engineering but a stream of small, low-cost improvements with daily Gemba walks, suggestion schemes, visual management boards (Kanban, Andon) and PDCA cycles owned at process-level.
Process Audit near Korukkupet:

From Manali Road, Parthasarathy Bridge, Thiruvottriyur High Road, Varadharaja Perumal Koil Street and Old Jail Road through to Suryanarayana Street, Alagammal Street, Cemetry Road and Cochrane Basin Road, our team covers Process Audit for businesses right across Korukkupet and its main commercial roads.

Free Consultation Available

Ready for Expert Process Audit in Korukkupet?

Professional Business Process Audit in Korukkupet, Chennai. Call @ 9566-068-468. Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming). 15+ years experience, 4.9★ rated.

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