Fraud remains a significant risk for organizations, often leading to financial losses, reputational damage, and regulatory consequences when internal controls are weak or ineffective. For accounting and finance professionals, understanding how fraud occurs—and how strong internal controls help prevent and detect it—is essential to protecting organizational assets and maintaining reliable financial reporting. CPAs frequently play a central role in evaluating control environments, identifying risk factors, and recognizing warning signs that may indicate fraudulent activity.
This course examines the relationship between fraud risk and internal controls, focusing on how organizations design control systems to reduce opportunities for fraud and detect irregularities. Participants explore common fraud schemes such as cash skimming, billing fraud, payroll manipulation, expense reimbursement fraud, and financial statement fraud, while also learning to identify control weaknesses and warning signs such as lack of segregation of duties, missing documentation, and management override of controls.
The course also addresses the growing role of technology in modern internal control environments. Topics include IT general controls, application controls, automation, continuous monitoring, and the use of technology in fraud detection. Participants will also explore control considerations related to cloud-based systems, third-party service providers, and vendor risk management, helping them better evaluate and strengthen internal control systems in today’s increasingly digital financial environment.
Course No. CH011
Format: Online pdf (110 pages). Printed book available.
Instructional Delivery Method: QAS Self-Study
Prerequisites: None
Advance Preparation:None
Level: Intermediate
CPE Credit: 5 hrs.
Field of Study: Accounting: Technical
Course expiration: You have one year from date of purchase to complete the course.
Course Revision Date: March 2026