Course Details

Irish auditors are under growing regulatory scrutiny, with IAASA’s firm monitoring reports consistently flagging the same recurring deficiencies — from risk assessment under ISA 315 (Revised) to superficial responses to fraud risk and inadequate challenge of management’s estimates. The revised ISA 240 and ISA 540 have raised the bar considerably, and boilerplate documentation is no longer going to cut it. This webinar takes a frank look at what the inspectors are finding, what the revised standards now require, and how to build audit files that genuinely reflect the professional scepticism expected of you.


Lindsay Webber will cover the following topics during this webinar:

  • IAASA audit quality findings — recurring deficiencies and what “good” looks like
  • ISA 315 (Revised) — risk assessment, group audits, and going concern weaknesses
  • ISA 240 (Revised) — fraud risk assessment, journals testing, and unpredictability requirements
  • ISA 540 (Revised) — the three audit approaches and challenging management’s assumptions
  • Documenting professional scepticism across estimates, provisions, and fair value


By attending this session, you will have a clearer picture of the standards IAASA is applying to Irish audit files, and the practical steps needed to strengthen your approach to fraud risk, estimates, and risk assessment documentation.


This session will be of particular interest to auditors.


Course Level: Intermediate

CPD Course Speaker

OmniPro Strategic Solutions

Lindsay Webber

As a head of Strategic Solutions at OmniPro, Lindsay’s focus is on helping practices achieve on-going best practice compliance, providing in-house training and technical assistance in audit and financial reporting.

Lindsay is a member of the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants and Chartered Accountants Ireland. She trained with KPMG in Johannesburg and specialised in external audit of financial services companies. She then spent six years lecturing audit and financial reporting to under-grad and post-grad students at Rhodes University in South Africa before moving to Ireland and returning to practice in a small, and then a medium sized firm where she was an audit manager. She is passionate about combining her academic and practice backgrounds to provide technical information in a useful and practical way.

Outside of her accounting qualifications Lindsay holds a PGDiploma in Higher Education from Rhodes University, an MBA from Trinity College Dublin and a Diploma in Forensic Accounting from Chartered Accountants Ireland.