
The Team You Have Versus the Team You Need
Every article in this series has described capabilities that Internal Audit must develop: strategic insight, data analytics, continuous monitoring, dynamic risk assessment, integrated assurance, AI-powered tools. Every one of these capabilities ultimately depends on the same foundation: people. The most sophisticated technology is worthless without professionals who can use it. The most elegant methodology is meaningless without auditors who can execute it. The most brilliant strategy is irrelevant without a team that can deliver it.
And here lies the profession’s most urgent challenge. The Internal Audit team of yesterday – composed primarily of accountants with audit methodology training – is fundamentally insufficient for the demands of tomorrow. The function that aspires to IAVANTAGE™ Level 3 and above needs professionals who combine deep business acumen with technological fluency, analytical capability with communication skill, methodological rigour with creative problem-solving, and domain expertise with strategic perspective.
This article addresses the talent dimension that underpins every pillar of the IAVANTAGE™ Framework. We will examine the competency gaps that constrain most audit functions, propose a practical talent model for the modern audit team, and provide strategies for recruiting, developing, and retaining the professionals your function needs.
| “The single greatest determinant of whether an Internal Audit function will achieve its potential is not its technology, its methodology, or its budget. It is the quality, diversity, and motivation of its people. Everything else is a multiplier. People are the base.” — Dawgen Global |
The Widening Skills Gap: Five Critical Deficiencies
Based on our talent assessments across the Caribbean and Latin American markets, Dawgen Global has identified five critical skills deficiencies that constrain the majority of Internal Audit functions:
- Data Analytics and Technology Skills. Fewer than fifteen percent of audit professionals in our regional assessments possess intermediate or advanced data analytics capabilities. The majority can use spreadsheets competently but cannot write SQL queries, build data visualisation dashboards, apply statistical analysis techniques, or evaluate AI tool outputs. This single deficiency is the most significant barrier to technology-enabled auditing.
- Business Acumen and Strategic Thinking. Many auditors understand controls but do not understand the businesses those controls serve. They can evaluate whether a procurement approval was properly authorised but cannot assess whether the procurement strategy makes commercial sense. They can test revenue recognition accounting but cannot evaluate whether the pricing strategy is sound. Without business acumen, audit findings remain procedural rather than strategic.
- Communication and Stakeholder Engagement. The ability to communicate complex risk information clearly, concisely, and persuasively to non-technical audiences is critically underdeveloped in most audit teams. Reports are written for auditors, not for business leaders. Presentations are structured around methodology, not impact. Conversations are defensive rather than collaborative.
- Emerging Risk Domain Expertise. Cybersecurity, ESG, AI governance, climate risk, digital transformation – these are the risk domains that Boards care about most, yet they are the domains where Internal Audit capability is thinnest. Most audit teams lack even one professional with deep expertise in any of these areas.
- Advisory and Consulting Mindset. Traditional audit training produces professionals who are excellent at identifying what is wrong but less skilled at helping management make it right. The advisory capability that Level 3+ functions require – the ability to provide constructive, practical, forward-looking guidance – demands a different mindset from the compliance-checking orientation that dominates most audit team cultures.
The IAVANTAGE™ Talent Model: Four Capability Profiles

Rather than trying to build a team where every auditor possesses every skill, the IAVANTAGE™ Talent Model defines four distinct capability profiles that together provide the complete range of competencies a high-performing audit function requires. The CAE’s task is to ensure the right mix of profiles on the team.
| THE ANALYST | THE ADVISOR | THE SPECIALIST | THE INNOVATOR | |
| Core Strength | Data extraction, analytics, visualisation, technology. | Business understanding, stakeholder relationships, communication. | Deep domain expertise in a specific risk area (cyber, ESG, regulatory). | Creative problem-solving, process improvement, methodology design. |
| Key Skills | SQL, Python/R, data viz tools, statistical analysis, AI literacy. | Executive communication, facilitation, advisory, negotiation, empathy. | Certifications in domain (CISA, CISSP, ESG). Technical depth. | Design thinking, innovation methods, change management, agile practices. |
| Engagement Role | Builds analytics, runs data tests, creates dashboards, evaluates tech. | Leads stakeholder engagement, presents findings, provides advisory. | Provides subject matter depth on specialised audit engagements. | Designs new approaches, pilots emerging tools, drives methodology evolution. |
| Career Path | Analytics Lead → Data & Technology Manager → CAE (Tech Track). | Engagement Lead → Senior Manager → CAE (Traditional Track). | SME → Domain Lead → CRO / CISO (Lateral progression). | Innovation Lead → Methodology Director → CAE (Innovation Track). |
| Ideal Mix (Team of 8) | 2 Analysts | 3 Advisors | 1–2 Specialists | 1 Innovator |
The critical insight is that diversity of capability is more valuable than uniformity of competence. A team of eight generalists will underperform a team of two analysts, three advisors, two specialists, and one innovator – even if the generalists are individually excellent. The modern risk environment demands specialised capabilities that no single professional can embody.
Recruiting the Modern Auditor: Looking Beyond the Profession
One of the most significant strategic shifts a CAE can make is to expand the recruiting aperture beyond traditional audit backgrounds. The best analytics practitioners often come from data science, finance, or engineering backgrounds. The best advisors may come from management consulting, operational management, or business strategy roles. The best specialists may come from IT security, regulatory affairs, or sustainability functions.
This does not mean abandoning audit expertise. Core audit methodology, professional standards, and risk assessment capability remain essential. But these can be taught to talented professionals from other backgrounds more easily than data science or business strategy can be taught to traditional auditors. The CAE who recruits exclusively from the accounting and audit pipeline is limiting the function’s potential.
Practical recruiting strategies include partnering with universities to create Internal Audit internship and graduate programmes that attract analytically minded students, recruiting mid-career professionals from adjacent functions who are seeking new challenges, establishing a “rotation programme” that brings high-potential professionals from other business functions into Internal Audit for twelve to eighteen month assignments, and engaging co-sourcing partners who can provide specialist capabilities on a project basis while internal capability is being built.
| “The best audit teams we work with look nothing like the audit teams of ten years ago. They include former data scientists, ex-consultants, cybersecurity specialists, and process engineers alongside experienced auditors. The diversity of perspective is their greatest strength.” — Dawgen Global |
Developing Your Team: The IAVANTAGE™ Capability Development Framework
Recruiting is only the beginning. Sustained excellence requires a structured approach to professional development that goes beyond mandatory CPE hours and conference attendance. The IAVANTAGE™ Capability Development Framework has four components:
- Individual Development Plans (IDPs). Every team member should have a documented IDP that identifies their current capability profile, their target profile, the specific skills gaps to be closed, and the development activities planned for the next twelve months. IDPs should be reviewed quarterly and updated to reflect progress and changing priorities.
- Structured Learning Pathways. Rather than ad hoc training, establish defined learning pathways for each capability profile. The Analyst pathway might include data analytics certification, Python programming, and data visualisation courses. The Advisor pathway might include executive communication workshops, facilitation training, and business strategy modules. The Specialist pathway would include domain-specific certifications and technical training.
- On-the-Job Development. The most powerful development happens during actual engagements. Pair less experienced team members with mentors on engagements that stretch their capabilities. Assign analytics practitioners to lead the data analysis component of traditional audits. Give advisors the opportunity to present findings to the Audit Committee. Rotate specialists across different engagement types to broaden their perspective.
- External Exposure. High-performing professionals need exposure beyond their own organisation. Encourage and fund participation in professional conferences, industry working groups, peer networking events, and thought leadership activities. The team member who publishes an article, presents at a conference, or contributes to a professional standard is developing skills that directly benefit the function while building the function’s external reputation.
Retaining Top Talent: The Five Factors That Matter Most
Internal Audit faces a persistent retention challenge. The best auditors are attractive to other functions – risk management, consulting, operations, and finance all compete for the same analytical, communicative, strategically minded professionals. The CAE who invests in developing talent only to lose it to other functions has invested in the organisation but not in the audit function.
Dawgen Global’s research and advisory experience points to five factors that most strongly influence retention in Internal Audit teams:
| FACTOR | WHAT TOP PERFORMERS WANT | WHAT CAEs SHOULD DO |
| Purpose & Meaning | To know their work matters. To see the impact of their contributions on organisational outcomes. | Communicate how each engagement connects to the function’s mission and the organisation’s success. Celebrate wins. Show impact. |
| Growth & Development | Clear career progression. Skill development opportunities. Exposure to challenging, varied work. | Invest in IDPs. Create promotion pathways. Ensure no team member does the same type of work for more than 18 months. |
| Autonomy & Trust | Freedom to approach problems creatively. Trust to manage their work without micromanagement. | Delegate meaningfully. Encourage innovation. Tolerate experimentation. Judge on outcomes, not process compliance. |
| Recognition & Reward | Fair compensation. But beyond money: visible acknowledgement of contributions and achievements. | Advocate for competitive compensation. Recognise achievements publicly. Nominate team members for internal and external awards. |
| Culture & Belonging | A positive, respectful, intellectually stimulating team culture. Colleagues they enjoy working with. | Model the culture you want. Address toxic behaviours immediately. Invest in team building. Create psychological safety. |
The CAE who actively manages all five factors will retain the majority of their top performers. The CAE who focuses only on compensation will lose them – because the best professionals leave for opportunity and purpose, not just for money.
Measuring Talent Health: The Audit Team Dashboard
Just as the function tracks audit plan completion and finding resolution, it should track talent health through a set of leading indicators. Dawgen Global recommends the following metrics be reported to the Audit Committee annually as part of the IAVANTAGE™ Enterprise Excellence pillar:
Capability Coverage: Percentage of the four IAVANTAGE™ capability profiles represented on the team (target: all four represented with at least one FTE).
Certification Rate: Percentage of professional staff holding at least one relevant certification (CIA, CISA, CFE, CISSP) (target: 80%+ for Level 3).
Analytics Capability: Percentage of team with intermediate or advanced data analytics skills (target: 40%+ for Level 3).
Development Investment: Training hours per auditor per year and training spend as percentage of IA budget (target: 60+ hours; 5%+ of budget).
Voluntary Turnover: Annual voluntary departure rate (benchmark: below 15% for a healthy function).
Experience Diversity: Percentage of team with pre-audit experience outside accounting/audit (target: 30%+ for Level 3).
Engagement Score: Annual team engagement and satisfaction survey results (target: top quartile for the organisation).
Build Your Team of the Future
Talent transformation is a multi-year journey. But every journey starts with an honest assessment of where you are today and a clear vision of where you need to be.
| YOUR NEXT STEP
Request Your IAVANTAGE™ Talent Capability Assessment Dawgen Global’s Talent Capability Assessment evaluates your current team across all four IAVANTAGE™ capability profiles, identifies critical skills gaps, benchmarks your talent metrics against regional peers, and delivers a prioritised Talent Development Roadmap. The assessment includes confidential individual capability interviews, a team-level gap analysis, and a presentation-ready report for the Audit Committee. ↓ REQUEST YOUR TALENT ASSESSMENT ↓ Email: [email protected] | Call: +1 (876) 926-5210 |
| CATCHING UP ON THE SERIES?
Articles 1–8 cover the Expectation Gap, Maturity Model, Seven Pillars, Business Case, Technology, CAE Leadership, Dynamic Planning, and Governance. Read all articles: www.dawgen.global |
Coming Next in the IAVANTAGE™ Series
Article 10: “Emerging Risks, Emerging Opportunities: Internal Audit’s Role in Cyber, ESG, and AI Governance” – A deep exploration of the three risk domains that are reshaping governance and creating the greatest demand for Internal Audit’s navigation capability.
About Dawgen Global
“Embrace BIG FIRM capabilities without the big firm price at Dawgen Global, your committed partner in carving a pathway to continual progress in the vibrant Caribbean region. Our integrated, multidisciplinary approach is finely tuned to address the unique intricacies and lucrative prospects that the region has to offer. Offering a rich array of services, including audit, accounting, tax, IT, HR, risk management, and more, we facilitate smarter and more effective decisions that set the stage for unprecedented triumphs. Let’s collaborate and craft a future where every decision is a steppingstone to greater success. Reach out to explore a partnership that promises not just growth but a future beaming with opportunities and achievements.
Email: [email protected]
Visit: Dawgen Global Website
WhatsApp Global Number : +1 555-795-9071
Caribbean Office: +1876-6655926 / 876-9293670/876-9265210
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Join hands with Dawgen Global. Together, let’s venture into a future brimming with opportunities and achievements

