July 14, 2021 By Fritz von Bulow 3 min read

At first glance, the world of documentation reviews and risk assessments wouldn’t appear to be the next big hot spot to innovate with the newest and shiniest data and AI tools. But at Citi, Marc Sabino is building a practice he calls audit of the future, where cutting edge machine learning, natural language processing (NLP) and advanced analytics solutions available through IBM Watson DiscoveryIBM Cloud Pak for Data and IBM OpenPages with Watson will forever transform the daily work of the bank’s 2500 auditors.

Internal audit: An innovator’s playground 

Being coined head of innovation for internal audit says it all. Sabino embarked on his mission almost four years ago after a long tenure at Citi spanning well over two decades. Ironically, none of those roles involved auditing, but internal audit housed a surprising wealth of data from across the company. To Sabino, the practice was just the place to use data proactively with more predictive capabilities than ever before seen elsewhere at Citi.

Sabino and his team started to re-imagine the role AI and natural language processing could play in an auditor’s workflow. They thought about how they could use that technology to scale control testing by applying it to much larger data sets than before to uncover themes and insights.

Sabino was also thinking through how to bring machine learning and AI into the full audit lifecycle to find anomalies within business monitoring, then plan and scope audits more effectively using all the fresh findings. He geared up to give auditors superpowers with greater detection capabilities and beefed-up data-driven insights—all within a unified platform that could enhance stakeholder engagement and collaboration.

In his own words 

—Marc Sabino, Head of Innovation of Internal Audit, Citi

Not just nice to have: Building AI into workflows

Citi has one of the largest corporate audit departments in the world. Given the scale and importance of the function, any innovation Sabino introduced would have a high degree of scrutiny because the auditors are also responsible for reporting their activities and outputs to the regulators. Replacing the bank’s standing audit platform would require careful consideration and a high degree of trust in a technology partner. Having become familiar with Watson tools, Sabino approached IBM with three requirements: He wanted a new audit platform injected with advanced analytics and AI; it must be easy to use; and it needed to be the best in the industry.

Learn how to automate and accelerates business processes based on insights from financial documents. Visit: https://www.ibm.com/cloud/ai/ai-document-insights

How IBM  accelerated Citi’s AI journey

In January 2020, IBM led a design thinking workshop that brought together five IBMers and 25 Citibankers. That was enough to both engender trust and set forth a vision. From there, a project emerged to build a solution involving people, processes and platform that could save hundreds of thousands of billable hours. The vision was differentiated enough yet realistic to achieve that Citi selected to move forward with the solution and deployment.

A significant force of IBM technical talent and subject matter expertise was brought onboard to support the project:

Eliminating manual processes and improving data quality

Initially, three projects were spawned that harnessed a broad array of IBM Data and AI solutions available through IBM Cloud Pak for Data and IBM Open Pages with Watson. The first use case gave auditors access to tooling that analyzes the control definitions and scored them based upon the 5 “W”s (Who, what, when, how and why). A second project was designed to help auditors tap into Watson Discovery to save time processing thousands of transcripts between agents and customers monthly. A third use case is now underway to bring IBM Watson® Assistant to the task of assisting auditors with identifying relevant content from within hundreds of pages of audit manuals.

And the list goes on. That’s because IBM has helped create an AI innovation space with Sabino’s team so they can keep innovating using Watson tooling on their new auditing platform. By landing these various short burst proof of concepts, Citi has gained confidence in IBM, not only as a partner for audit transformation, but also as an innovator in AI.

 Watch this demo to see how IBM Open Pages with Watson can facilitate effective controls management.

Address multiple data and AI use cases with a wide array of integrated, cloud-native data and AI services. Visit: ibm.com/products/cloud-pak-for-data/services

Was this article helpful?
YesNo

More from Business transformation

5 steps for implementing change management in your organization

5 min read - Change is inevitable in an organization; especially in the age of digital transformation and emerging technologies, businesses and employees need to adapt. Change management (CM) is a methodology that ensures both leaders and employees are equipped and supported when implementing changes to an organization. The goal of a change management plan, or more accurately an organizational change plan, is to embed processes that have stakeholder buy-in and support the success of both the business and the people involved. In practice,…

4 ways generative AI addresses manufacturing challenges

4 min read - The manufacturing industry is in an unenviable position. Facing a constant onslaught of cost pressures, supply chain volatility and disruptive technologies like 3D printing and IoT. The industry must continually optimize process, improve efficiency, and improve overall equipment effectiveness. At the same time, there is this huge sustainability and energy transition wave. Manufacturers are being called to reduce their carbon footprint, adopt circular economy practices and become more eco-friendly in general. And manufacturers face pressure to constantly innovate while ensuring…

Business process management (BPM) examples

7 min read - Business Process Management (BPM) is a systematic approach to managing and streamlining business processes. BPM is intended to help improve the efficiency of existing processes, with the goal of increasing productivity and overall business performance. BPM is often confused with other seemingly similar initiatives. For example, BPM is smaller in scale than business process reengineering (BPR), which radically overhauls or replaces processes. Conversely, it has a larger scope than task management, which deals with individual tasks, and project management, which…

IBM Newsletters

Get our newsletters and topic updates that deliver the latest thought leadership and insights on emerging trends.
Subscribe now More newsletters