Assurance Services
Assurance services are independent professional engagements—typically provided by certified or chartered accountants—that improve the reliability, relevance, and usefulness of information used for decision-making. By reducing information risk, assurance services help stakeholders (investors, managers, customers, regulators) make better-informed judgments about an organization’s transactions, systems, controls, and performance.
Why assurance matters
- Reduces information risk by validating that reported information is accurate and complete.
- Increases transparency and credibility with investors, partners, customers, and regulators.
- Helps organizations identify, manage, and monitor risks—especially those arising from third-party relationships and complex systems.
- Supports compliance with regulatory requirements and industry expectations, which can drive demand for assurance engagements.
Standards and regulation
Assurance work is guided by professional standards and industry guidance, for example:
– International Standard on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 3000 for non-audit assurance engagements.
– Practical guidance such as the Assurance Sourcebook from the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW).
Regulatory changes—most notably the Sarbanes–Oxley Act—have increased demand for independent assurance over financial reporting and internal controls.
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Common types of assurance services
Assurance engagements cover a wide range of subjects beyond traditional financial statement audits. Common types include:
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Risk assessment
Evaluates whether an organization has identified its material business risks and established systems and controls to manage them effectively. Useful for board oversight, investors, and risk committees. -
Business performance measurement
Reviews the relevance and reliability of performance metrics (financial and nonfinancial), such as balanced scorecards or KPIs, to confirm they appropriately measure progress toward objectives and support comparisons with peers. -
Information systems reliability
Assesses whether internal IT and information systems produce accurate, timely, and reliable data for operational and financial decision-making. Focuses on system design, controls, and data integrity rather than ad-hoc data correction. -
Electronic commerce and cybersecurity
Examines e‑commerce platforms and related systems for data integrity, security, privacy controls, and transaction reliability to build trust in online operations. -
Third‑party and supply‑chain assurance
Reviews how organizations manage and monitor risks arising from vendors, service providers, and partners, including contract compliance, data handling, and resilience. -
Healthcare performance measurement
Assesses the effectiveness, quality, and accessibility of healthcare services and related performance metrics—particularly important as payment models shift toward outcomes and value-based care.
Examples of assurance work
- Verifying the accuracy of calculations on a financial website or mortgage calculator.
- Providing independent assurance over ESG disclosures, sustainability metrics, or compliance with industry benchmarks.
- Reviewing internal controls around payroll, revenue recognition, cloud services, or patient data handling.
Key takeaways
- Assurance services provide independent verification that improves the quality of information used for decisions.
- They lower information risk and enhance credibility with stakeholders.
- Engagements span financial, operational, IT, regulatory, and performance areas and are governed by professional standards (e.g., ISAE 3000).
- Demand for assurance has grown with regulatory expectations and the complexity of modern business environments.