Overcoming Challenges to Moving Cost Recovery Projects Forward

 

by: Richard B. Lanza, CPA, CFE, PMP

There are a number of reasons many firms remain resistant to recovery auditing, but they can generally be grouped into three main categories:

  • Morale/Motivation Issues

  • Business & Procedural Obstacles

  • Financial Impact

Morale/Motivation Issues

When an audit discovers a problem within the department, (i.e., Procurement or Accounts Payable) there can be embarrassment in showing vulnerability, but the alternative is even worse. Maintaining ignorance or pretending the problem doesn’t exist only allows it to fester and worsen over time.

Usually others within the company will see the problem, but not want to intrude on another department’s business, so they will essentially bury their heads in the sand hoping someone else will notice. Compounding this is the fact that managers find it doubly embarrassing to contact vendors, explain the problem to them and ask for refunds.

When an outside auditor comes into a company and finds errors, it tends to shine a spotlight on the company’s shortcomings. For this reason, managers are reluctant to allow audits. The problem with this approach is vendors are then left to their own devices in determining whether or not to voluntarily return erroneous overpayments – and many won’t.

Another related objection to recovery audits is the idea that many employees consider internal controls a private issue, and bringing in an outside auditor not only gives the auditing firm sensitive information, it gives it to them for free. Employees tend to treat control weaknesses the same way most people treat family secrets. It’s preferable to most employees and managers alike to keep the secret – regardless of the cost.

In general, most people fear confrontation and recovery audits confront issues in business processed. When errors are uncovered, processes have to examined and corrected.

Business & Procedural Obstacles

In some cases, there’s a practical reason for resisting audits. For example, with government contracts, federal acquisition regulations dictate that only federal contracting officers deal directly with vendors. Below are some additional, less practical reasons.

CEOs are focused primarily on reaching sales targets and achieving desired growth. To many of them, the mindset is that as long as these benchmarks are met, the bottom line doesn’t really matter. Executives are largely unaware of the specific role staff play in collecting spend analysis and compliance information, and of the key supplier relationships managed by the team. They are also unaware that vendor overpayments are essentially hidden assets that belong to the company, but will not be returned unless vendors are asked. If the focus was placed more on the bottom line from top management, more departmental managers would be willing to “find the savings.” They would find that a few percentage points saved in their total accounts payable spend translates into that same percentage being directly added to the bottom line.  

Companies are always fighting a six-headed hydra, which is biting them every chance it gets. Because of this, staff tend to fight what they can, and focus only on what they see as the top priority. There isn’t time to focus on improvements, but if they did the hydra would have less of a reason to bite. Bringing in an outside firm to conduct an audit is an excellent means of locating and stopping cash leakage. There’s essentially no cost involved because any fees are paid for by cash recovered, and firms are provided with valuable advice on how to stop the leakage from recurring.

Some industries such as wholesale grocers and food & drug distributors are more prone to accounts payable errors, in part because these industries rely on multiple warehouses and PO-issuing sites. The complexity of contract issues during the purchase processes for these organizations may result in missed discount credits, freight and tax issues. While additional controls and technology solutions are a good first step to overcoming the complexity, independent validation by an outside auditor represents a final safety net for cash savings.

Financial Impact

It is far worse for an overpayment to go unrecovered because it is years old than to find it, get it back, and set best practices to move it forward. Use of the free resources that a recovery auditor provides can bring over 100 years of combined experiential knowledge to the table. Aside from the improvements that can come from a skilled audit team, a recovery audit usually costs 30 cents in fees for every dollar collected, which puts 70 cents back in the company’s coffers. The alternative is to continue letting untold dollars to vanish, undetected.

Most departments, especially Accounts Payable, are hamstrung as they are among the last functions to receive budget and resources to repair weaknesses in business processes, automation, or data management. Furthermore, they are generally unable to get the additional staff required to complete the labor intensive process of recovery auditing and vendor collection.

Sometimes the best approach is to get started with a recovery audit and, once savings are detected, produce a cost benefit analysis that such an effort should be completed internally going forward. Many companies decide it is cheaper to pay the fee knowing the job will be done right by a business partner who has a full incentive to get it done.

Moving Forward

For those departments who have not completed a recovery audit of their spend, they should recognize:

  • Every company has errors and it is better to be proactive than to pretend the issues will go away.

  • Internal control best practices should be learned from those that have seen other business processes, not from the ones who created the internal process confusion.

  • By seeing the errors and measuring them, companies have more incentive to prevent them in the future, which leads to cost beneficial funding of improvements.

  • Not acting because of the fear of recovery fees loses the company 70 cents on the dollar every year so it is better to get started as quickly as possible.

Over time and as the business case allows, organizations can expand their internal efforts to identify overpayments before turning to external recovery specialists. By taking this more proactive approach and detecting a greater number of possible overpayments themselves, organizations can keep professional recovery specialists focused on the more complex, sophisticated analyses required for complicated recoveries.

 

Rich Lanza, CFE, CPA/CITP, PMP, and President of Cash Recovery Partners, LLC, helps companies identify their hidden financial assets, mostly by using technology and referring them to specialists. He has two free Web sites: www.findmillions.net, and www.auditsoftware.net. His e-mail address is: rich@richlanza.com.

 

 

 


 

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