Audit Planning
Fieldwork
Documentation
Team Effectiveness
Risk
100

What should auditors think about when planning onsite visits?

Weather, site access, and how the site actually operates.

100

What attitude should auditors have during fieldwork?

Stay open-minded and flexible.

100

Why is proper documentation critical to audit conclusions?

It supports traceability, defensibility, and audit reliability.

100

What practice strengthens audit quality during risk assessment discussions?

Encouraging everyone to share and challenge ideas.

100

What risk occurs when testing is different across sites but not documented?

Inconsistent quality oversight and increased operational risk.

200

What helps keep audit work moving when a team member is away?

Clear handover notes about completed work and open items.

200

What should auditors do if actual practices don’t match procedures?

Ask for supporting documents or document the explanation.

200

What documentation issue limited traceability of jet fuel testing results?

Missing or unlinked BOL numbers and test results.

200

Why should team members challenge impact and risk ratings?

To avoid bias and missed risks.

200

What lesson was learned from undocumented density variance handling?

Unclear escalation leads to traceability and quality risks

300

Why should auditors recheck samples if more testing is needed?

To make sure the samples are still appropriate and enough are tested.

300

Why shouldn’t auditors rely only on what people say?

Explanations may not accurately reflect actual practices or controls in place.

300

What lesson was learned from inconsistent or missing test records?

Undocumented testing increases risk of undetected quality issues.

300

What did the team learn about relying on one person’s judgment?

Team input leads to stronger and more defensible decisions

300

Why is documenting retests and corrective actions critical?

To support and defend fuel quality decisions.

400

What should auditors do if their original samples can’t be used?

Ask the business for additional samples.

400

What was learned from different testing practices at SJR and HHT?

Differences need to be documented because they increase risk.

400

Why should escalation rules be clearly written in procedures?

So people know when and how to escalate issues.

400

How can handover notes support team effectiveness beyond vacation coverage?

Handover notes supports continuity, clarity, and efficient onboarding for others

400

What broader risk is created by incomplete driver training records?

Drivers may not perform procedures correctly.

500

What planning practice helps avoid rework and safety issues?

Planning audits around real operating and site conditions.

500

What should auditors do if they discover systems not mentioned before (like BLISS)?

Revisit the audit scope and testing approach.

500

What documentation practice helps defend decisions during disputes or regulatory reviews?

Complete, accurate, and consistent recording of testing, variances, and approvals

500

What team behavior helps uncover control gaps that may otherwise be missed?

Actively questioning, validating, and corroborating information

500

What overarching lesson ties together documentation gaps, training issues, and testing inconsistencies?

Strong controls need consistent execution and documentation.