Controls That Protect Financial Reporting Integrity
SOC 1 is an independent audit report that evaluates whether an organization’s controls affecting customer financial reporting are properly designed and operating effectively.
It is governed by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
SOC 1 matters because it answers a specific, high-stakes question:
Do your systems and processes create risk for your customers’ financial statements?
If your organization:
Processes financial transactions
Handles payroll, billing, or revenue systems
Provides services used in financial reporting
Is asked by customers’ auditors about “SOC 1”
This report is often mandatory.
SOC 1 is not a cybersecurity certification and not a general security report.
It is a financial control assurance report that evaluates controls related to:
Accuracy
Completeness
Authorization
Timeliness
Integrity of financial data
There are two report types:
SOC 1 Type I – control design at a point in time
SOC 1 Type II – control operation over a period of time
Think of it this way:
SOC 1 proves your operations won’t break someone else’s books.
SOC 1 applies to service organizations whose systems impact customers’ financial reporting, including:
Payroll processors
Payment processors
Billing and invoicing platforms
Claims processing services
Loan servicing providers
Fund administrators
Outsourced accounting or finance platforms
If your customer’s auditor asks questions about your controls, SOC 1 is the language they speak.
SOC 1 focuses on systems that impact financial reporting, including:
Transaction processing systems
Billing and revenue platforms
Payroll and benefits systems
Financial data interfaces and integrations
Access controls over financial systems
Change management affecting financial logic
Backup and recovery for financial data
If a system can change a number on a financial statement, it is in scope.
SOC 1 is often confused with SOC 2 — but they serve different purposes.
Common relationships include:
SOC 2 (security and availability controls)
ISO 27001 (security management system)
NIST SP 800-53 (technical controls)
COBIT (IT governance)
SOX (public company financial controls)
The difference:
SOC 1 is about financial reporting risk, not general cybersecurity.
Security still matters — but only where it protects financial integrity.
Ignore accounting jargon.
Focus on controls that protect financial accuracy.
Restricted access to financial systems
Role-based permissions
Timely provisioning and deprovisioning
Controlled changes to financial logic
Testing and approval before deployment
Rollback procedures
Validation of inputs and outputs
Reconciliation processes
Error handling and correction
Authorization checks
Completeness and accuracy checks
Transaction logging
Protection of financial data
Recovery testing
Continuity planning
Defined responsibilities
Policies aligned to reality
Evidence of control operation
SOC 1 is about predictability and trust in numbers.
SOC 1 failures often result in:
Customer audit findings
Delayed financial close cycles
Increased audit scrutiny
Lost or stalled deals
Loss of trust with finance teams
The biggest risk is becoming a weak link in someone else’s financial controls.
SOC 1 feels difficult when:
Processes are informal
Changes aren’t tracked
Access is loosely managed
Technically, most SOC 1 controls are simple.
Operationally, they must be consistent and provable.
Our Cyber Risk Assessment & Compliance Gap Analysis supports SOC 1 readiness by focusing on financial system controls, access, and evidence.
You receive:
Administrative, technical, and physical safeguards affecting financial systems, access, change management, and data integrity.
Clear explanation of SOC 1 readiness gaps and prioritized remediation.
Execution-ready roadmap with owners, milestones, and tracking.
Scenarios focused on financial system failures, access misuse, and data integrity issues.
Focused on systems and users with access to financial environments.
One-page overview suitable for customers, auditors, and finance leaders.
You don’t start with auditors.
You start with financial workflows.
Know:
Ensure:
Every change that affects numbers must be:
Reconciliations.
Checks.
Logs.
Exception handling.
SOC 1 evidence should come from daily operations — not last-minute scrambling.
SOC 1 isn’t about security theater.
It’s about:
Accurate processing
Controlled change
Limited access
Reliable evidence
That’s exactly what our assessment is designed to deliver.
Talk to an Executive Advisor Today