The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners has partnered with Grant Thornton to create an Anti-Fraud Blueprint to help organizations uncover fraudulent activity and avoid financial losses.
The guidance in the
"Fraud impacts organizations of all sizes every day, which sets off a chain reaction that impacts finances, stakeholders and employees," said ACFE president John Gill in a statement. "By giving organizational leadership and anti-fraud experts a clear plan of action, we hope the Anti-Fraud Blueprint becomes the centerpiece around which organizations protect themselves from the potential dangers of fraud today and for years to come."
The blueprint shows how artificial intelligence and machine learning are transforming how fraud risks evolve as these technologies advance at a fast pace. Each section of the blueprint includes components to help users apply the guidance in a structured, practical way. The points of focus bridge the gap between concepts from the blueprint and the 2023 guide, helping anti-fraud professionals build and expand their expertise. There's a list of questions for readers to consider as they work through the blueprint and relate key principles to their own organizations. A checklist offers a review of concepts presented in each section to reinforce the information and detail next steps.
The Anti-Fraud Blueprint also includes an updated version of Grant Thornton's Enterprise Anti-Fraud Maturity Assessment Model to help organizations understand both their current state and their desired future state of anti-fraud capability.
"Organizations today are facing increasingly complex and fast-moving fraud risks, and many are looking for a practical way to move from awareness to action," said Priya Sarjoo, national managing partner of cyber and risk advisory at Grant Thornton, in a statement. "The Anti-Fraud Blueprint helps organizations assess where they are on their fraud risk management journey and provides a clear, structured path to strengthen governance, embed accountability and mature their anti-fraud capabilities over time."
The model brings an effective fraud risk management program to life by illustrating a clear progression of maturity over time, moving from an ad hoc approach, where activities are mostly reactive and informal, through initial and repeatable stages marked by growing structure and consistency. Organizations can then advance to a managed state, characterized by formal governance and performance oversight, and ultimately to a leadership state, where fraud risk management is embedded, proactive and continuously optimized. The five maturity levels provide a practical roadmap for strengthening anti-fraud programs in a deliberate, measurable and sustainable way.




