Philippa Duckworth

Philippa Duckworth

Director - Head of Audit and Financial Reporting

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If your audit ends with a report, you’ve missed the point

There’s a moment most business owners recognise at the end of an audit. The back and forth stops, the final questions are answered, and the report is signed off, often bringing with it a sense of relief that it’s all done for another year.

Then the business moves on.

But when you step back and look at it properly, very little actually changes. The report is filed away, the team refocuses on day-to-day priorities, and the audit becomes something that simply happened rather than something that genuinely helped.

That’s where the issue sits. Because if an audit doesn’t lead to better decisions, clearer insight or meaningful improvements, it hasn’t done enough.

What most audits deliver and why that’s not enough

At a basic level, most audits do exactly what they are designed to do. They confirm that the numbers are accurate, ensure the business remains compliant, and result in a signed set of accounts that stakeholders can rely on.

All of that matters.

But it is also just the baseline, and for most business owners it’s not what they are really looking for. You’re not running a business to produce a clean set of accounts. You’re running it to grow, to improve performance, and to make better decisions over time.

That requires more than confirmation.

What business owners actually need

When you speak to business owners, what they are really looking for is clarity. They want to understand how the business is performing beneath the surface, where things are working as they should and where they are not, and what they should be paying closer attention to.

They want to know where the risks sit, what might cause issues further down the line, and where improvements can be made.

Because without that, even accurate numbers have limited value. They tell you what has happened, but they don’t help you decide what to do next.

What a good audit should feel like

A good audit should not feel like a process you go through once a year and then move on from. It should feel like a structured opportunity to properly understand your business, giving you the space to step back, look at things objectively and gain a clearer view of what is really going on.

That applies not just to the numbers themselves, but to how the business operates more broadly.

When audit is approached in that way, the value becomes much more tangible.

Confidence in the numbers, not just accuracy

It is one thing to know your numbers are technically correct, but something very different to trust them enough to make decisions without hesitation. A good audit gives you that confidence, allowing you to rely on the information in front of you knowing it reflects what is actually happening in the business.

When that confidence is there, decisions become easier to make and far more decisive, because they are grounded in information you trust.

Clarity on performance

Most businesses have access to their numbers, but far fewer truly understand what those numbers are telling them. A good audit helps bridge that gap by providing clarity on why certain areas are performing well and why others are not, highlighting where margins are under pressure and where performance is stronger than expected.

Without that level of understanding, it becomes difficult to know where to focus your time and energy, and even harder to prioritise effectively as the business grows.

Clarity on performance

Most businesses have access to their numbers, but far fewer truly understand what those numbers are telling them. A good audit helps bridge that gap by providing clarity on why certain areas are performing well and why others are not, highlighting where margins are under pressure and where performance is stronger than expected.

Without that level of understanding, it becomes difficult to know where to focus your time and energy, and even harder to prioritise effectively as the business grows.

A clearer view of risk

Every business carries some level of risk, but not all of it is immediately visible. Often, it sits quietly in the background within processes that rely too heavily on individuals, systems that have not kept pace with growth, or controls that were never designed for the business at its current scale.

A good audit brings those risks into focus early, when they are still manageable and can be addressed before they develop into something more serious.

Practical improvements, not just observations

This is where many audits fall short. They identify issues, but stop short of helping the business understand what to do next.

What business owners actually need is direction. Where should we focus? What should we change? What will make the biggest difference?

A valuable audit should leave you with clear, practical steps that improve how the business operates, whether that is tightening controls, refining processes or improving how information is reported and used.

What that looks like in practice

When an audit is done properly, the outcome is not just a report, but a business that runs more effectively. That might mean clearer financial reporting that genuinely supports decision making, more efficient processes that remove unnecessary friction, or better structures that allow the business to scale with confidence.

It may also mean identifying and addressing risks early, before they begin to impact performance.

These are not theoretical benefits. They are the kinds of changes that make a business easier to run, more predictable and ultimately more resilient.

The difference is in the approach

Most firms are capable of delivering a technically correct audit. The difference comes down to how they approach the process.

In some cases, audits are reactive, focused on completion and built around a checklist, with limited communication and very little context provided along the way. The end result is a report, but not much else.

In others, the process is planned properly from the outset, built around understanding how the business operates and supported by clear, ongoing communication. The focus is not just on completing the audit, but on what the business actually gains from it.

At Wilson Partners, that means taking the time to understand each client properly, rather than applying a standardised approach. Looking beyond the numbers to how the business operates, where the risks sit and what is likely to matter as it grows.

It also means bringing sector experience into the process, so the insights are relevant, not generic. And where businesses operate across borders, ensuring the audit reflects the full picture by working closely with overseas teams and different regulatory frameworks.

Most importantly, it means connecting the audit back to the bigger picture. Not just identifying issues, but helping businesses understand what to do next and where to focus.

That is where the real value sits.

Raising the bar

Many businesses accept a limited audit experience because it is what they have always known, assuming that once the report is signed, the job is done.
But as businesses grow, that assumption becomes increasingly costly. The larger and more complex the business becomes, the more important it is to have clear, reliable insight rather than simply accurate numbers.

An audit should not just be something you complete each year. It should be something that improves how your business runs, giving you clarity on performance, confidence in your numbers and a clear understanding of where to focus next.

If it is not doing that, it is worth asking why.

Because the real value of an audit is not in the report.

It is in what changes afterwards.

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