This well researched and excellent presentation is greatly appreciated. This is a how training is supposed to be like because it helps aspiring Auditors understand it's history, why it was developed, the problems it solved and the the problems it created. They can relate the problems to a deviation from the bedrock principle on which it was built which has threatened it's integrity which leads to no confidence. It will help them to value the importance of the profession as a necessary part of economic activities and sustainability by bridging trust. Well done.
I was thinking to myself if my knowledge of romans were wrong lmao. i mean the earliest we know of the romans as city/kingdom/republic is like 400 bc ish
This well researched and excellent presentation is greatly appreciated.
This is a how training is supposed to be like because it helps aspiring Auditors understand it's history, why it was developed, the problems it solved and the the problems it created. They can relate the problems to a deviation from the bedrock principle on which it was built which has threatened it's integrity which leads to no confidence. It will help them to value the importance of the profession as a necessary part of economic activities and sustainability by bridging trust. Well done.
Thank to god that I'm reached to this video❤🥰
Thank you very much. Brilliantly put.
Great video, very informative
Why not start with an audit on your history knowledge about the Roman Empire (27BC) ?
I was thinking to myself if my knowledge of romans were wrong lmao. i mean the earliest we know of the romans as city/kingdom/republic is like 400 bc ish
Where are your sources? Where are you getting this information? I would like to dig deeper into my research
the Roman Emapire 2000 years BEFORE CHRIST??? please check your data.
Where is the source ? Pretty useless without a source
So fucking attractive
So fucking attractive