Study Sheet for the Flowcharting Test

OVERALL GUIDELINE: The flowchart should be clear and easy to read.

  1. The flowchart should be drawn from top to bottom and left to right.
  1. When drawing, follow the Sandwich Rule.
  1. Flow lines should be straight and perpendicular. They should have arrows to show the reader where the information is going. Too many lines are hard to follow—a bracket helps to clarify the picture. If two lines cross each other, draw as if one line “jumps” over the other.
  1. A flowchart is an auditing working paper. As such it must have a heading of 3 lines on every page. The first line contains the name of the company being audited. The second line contains the type of working paper. For document flowcharting it would say “Document flowchart for Order Processing, Payroll, Sales, etc” (whatever business process or part of the business process that you are drawing). The third line contains the fiscal year end (FYE) of the company being audited. FYE is also the date of the balance sheet.
  1. Make sure to indicate the department that contains the action being flowcharted. Department names are inserted into headings at the top line of the flowchart (immediately under the 3 line heading). If you know the employee title or position, include that also. In the document flowchart it is extremely important to identify who is doing what, who is responsible. The order in which you place the departments is also important as you want the flowchart to move across the page from left to right. If you put the department names in the wrong order, your flowchart will zig zag down the page.
  1. Time sequencing can be indicated by the way in which you draw the flowchart, or it can be lost if drawn incorrectly. Moving down the column of one department indicates actions that are occurring sequentially in that department. Moving horizontally across the flowchart—between departments—indicates that different procedures in different departments are occurring at the same time. This rule in particular is frequently violated.
  1. Every page of the flowchart must contain your sign off at the top right hand corner. Sign off consists of your initials (handwritten not typed) and date of completion of the work—not the FYE. It is imperative for legal considerations that you sign off each page that you have completed and take responsibility for. No sign off means no accountability.
  1. When to use the manual operation symbol? At first when you are drawing a flowchart it will be unclear what words trigger the use of the manual operation box. Remember that all processing on the document flowchart is manual, meaning procedures that are done by hand. Here are some samples: prepare a document (including the number of copies), compare documents, check, post, review, sign, perform calculations—calculate extensions.
  1. Symbols used in the document flowchart are the:

Document

Make sure that all documents are labeled, that all copies are accounted for, that no copies disappear, change numbers or are lost in the flowchart. All documents must be shown from origination (or source) to termination or final disposition.

File.

The comment symbol can be used with the filing symbol to describe the type of file. Insert A (alphabetic), N (numeric), D (date) or C (chronological) inside the filing symbol to identify the order of the file.

Manual Process

Comment

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The comment symbol can be open on the right or left hand side. If you want to add more words than the comment can hold, you can use notes. Write “See Note A” inside the comment symbol and then place Note A at the bottom of the page.

Input/Output

Unlike CIS folks, accountants use this symbol to draw ledgers, journals, and reports. A document is a single sheet of paper.

Tape (adding machine tape)

Goods

Decision

Place all words inside symbols, except for any notes that you may have at the bottom of the page.

Define any abbreviations at the bottom of the page.

Do not abbreviate the name of the document. Change the name of the document when you think that the original description or label could be enhanced. This gives more information to the reader of your flowchart. For example, when a document is reviewed or approved, it becomes “Approved Invoice” rather than just “Invoice”.

  1. Sending a document does not require a manual operation symbol. Neither does forwarding a document or filing a document. If you account for numerical sequence before filing, then the manual operation symbol would be used to draw “account for sequence”. Accounting for numerical sequence is an important control procedure that is done to establish completeness.
  1. Connectors. Connectors are used when you have run out of space and need to resume drawing on another page–off page connectors—or at another spot on the same page—on page connectors. The connectors must match or be paired with each other using a number, symbol, or letter. The reader follows the symbol to know where the flowchart left and where it returns.

Connectors can also be used to send or receive something to or from a vendor, customer, bank or any external party.