ccountants spend too much time moving data from
one financial reporting spreadsheet to another,
leaving less time for analyzing information to
enhance reporting integrity and improve
managements decision making. The extensible
business reporting language (XBRL) can reduce
time spent manually finding and preparing
information and improve data quality through
fully automated information exchanges among
disparate software applications. Once CPAs can
electronically receive, validate and send
standardized information, they can more quickly
analyze and confidently redistribute it to
managers, stakeholders and others for use in
better informed decision making. 
This article describes how
XBRL-enabled data standardization maximizes speed
and accuracy as information moves between one or
more organizations accounting or analytical
software. While these programs may be flexible
and convenient, they often cant detect or
prevent transcription errors that commonly occur
in manual data transfers.
A
PROACTIVE APPROACH
The accounting
profession and those it serves benefit from
standards governing reporting and auditing. It
follows that standardizing information formats
would help CPAs gather, manage and report
information more quickly, efficiently and
accurately.
XBRL: A Structure
for Business Data
This
article continues the JofAs
coverage of how XBRL can help CPAs, their
clients and employers, regulators,
investors and others issue or obtain
complete and accurate business
information usable on any computer
system. |
Consider how much CPAs could
enhance their analysis and recommendations if the
information they need was transferred
automatically from its respective sources into
company spreadsheets without the hands-on
validation and manual transfer accountants and
others commonly perform. Imagine further that
data sources could automatically export new
information to a range of designated spreadsheets
as soon as it was created. In such a scenario,
CPAs routinely would have the latest version of
available data from all sources and thus be able
to expand the scope of their analyses and to
report more frequently for little or no added
cost. Improvements like this are possible with
the help of standardized data formats,
XBRL-compliant software and reengineered
corporate reporting and analytical processes.
XBRL-enabled standardization makes it possible
to use the same data seamlessly on any computer
hardware, operating system or application. This
simplifies the information transfer process, or
supply chain, by making it easier to
automate the procedures that shuttle data among
spreadsheets, databases and publishing programs.
Its easier to design such programs when the
data elements they process are clearly defined in
terms of their meaning, currency, period and
type, and thats exactly what XBRL does.
But such advances wont happen without
active support for the widespread adoption of
XBRL, which CPAs can provide by working to
Understand XBRL.
Accountants should expand their knowledge of XBRL
and other information and Internet standards that
improve reporting processes.
Make XBRL tools more
accessible. CPAs should encourage software
vendors to embed XBRL capabilities as standard
features in their products.
Move XBRL into the
supply chain. CPAs must understand the extent of
human intervention in the data access, validation
and analysis aspects of their clients and
companies reporting processes so they can
make informed recommendations on deploying XBRL
in accounting software and information processing
systems.
TAKE
A CLOSER LOOK
Ask the following questions to
assess your organizations dependence on
manual steps in reporting processes:
How many
spreadsheets are involved in company reporting
processes?
How are changes in
those spreadsheets managed?
How many staff
members are involved in producing company
reports?
Do reports and
analyses appear with sufficient frequency and
contain adequate data?
Are there sufficient
controls over current manual data transfer
processes?
Your answers may reveal that some ostensibly
automated operations actually involve manual
processes with weak controls. Numerous public
companies made such discoveries during
Sarbanes-Oxley compliance examinations, and
similar inefficiencies may also exist in private
entities reporting processes. XBRL-based
standardization can help CPAs serving or employed
by any organization analyze business information
to guide CPAs, investors and
managements decisions.
VOICE
YOUR NEEDS
Developers of all kinds of
software are rapidly revising their products to
support XBRL. CPAs should tell software vendors
exactly what new capabilities are necessary to
make their products more useful. The
professions input will help ensure that
upcoming software versions will facilitate
standards-based streamlining of data throughout
the business reporting supply chain, enhancing
the accuracy, timeliness and usefulness of the
information CPAs provide. 
MIKE WILLIS, CPA, was founding chairman of
XBRL International and is a partner of
PricewaterhouseCoopers. His e-mail address is mike.willis@us.pwc.com.
| RESOURCES |
| XBRL
International Inc. Resources |
The groups Web
site (www.xbrl.org)
provides
An overview of
XBRLs functions and capabilities (www.xbrl.org/whatisxbrl).
Questions frequently
asked about XBRL (www.xbrl.org/faq.aspx).
A technical
information center (www.xbrl.org/technicalinformation).
Details on how to
create an XBRL-compliant financial
statement (www.xbrl.org/specifications).
Description of
XBRL-enabled applications (www.xbrl.org/tools).
Showcase of XBRL in
action (www.xbrl.org/showcase).
Descriptions of the
benefits as well as the issues involved
in adopting XBRL, with sections focusing
on special interests groups (www.xbrl.org/xbrlandbusiness).
An explanation of why
CPAs need to be involved in XBRL, how it
will help those in industry and public
practice, and descriptions of potential
XBRL usesfor example, in financial
statements, tax returns, regulatory
filings, accounting and business reports,
authoritative literature and audit
schedules (www.aicpa.org/innovation/baas/xbrl/homepage.asp).
A Web-based video,
XBRLReal Solutions, Real
Time (www.aicpa.org/video/xbrl).
Prior JofA
articles on XBRL: Finally,
Business Talks the Same Language
(Aug.00, page 24); A Napster
for Financial Data?(Jan.03,
page 66); and Tap Into
XBRLs Power the Easy Way
(May04, page 32).
The World Wide Web
Consortiums site provides
information about the extensible markup
language (XML), of which XBRL is a subset
(www.w3.org/xml).
The 11th XBRL
International Conference will be held in
Boston, April 2529, 2005 (www.xbrl.org/upcomingevents).
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