EXTENDING THE ACCOUNTING BRAND TO PRIVACY SERVICES
Marilyn Greenstein James
E. Hunton |
| ABSTRACT: The primary purposes of this study are to identify and validate a list of necessary skills required to ensure good data privacy protection for organizations, recognize potential privacy service providers, compare the perceived skill levels of potential providers, and test the impact of an educational brochure developed by the AICPA designed to communicate how and why members of the accounting profession are qualified to conduct privacy engagements. A total of 82 corporate managers representing 27 companies participated in a randomized between-subjects experiment where they responded to skill-related items either before or after reading the privacy brochure. Factor
analysis of 17 skill items revealed four factors: technical, legal, control/assurance
and strategic. The following potential service providers were identified:
law firms, CPA firms (both Big-5 and non-Big-5), security consultants
and eBusiness consultants. Study findings suggest that all four of the
skill constructs are necessary in providing good data privacy protection.
Before reading the brochure, the highest construct index means (potential
providers) were as follows: technical (eBusiness consultants), legal (law
firms), control/assurance (CPA firms and security consultants), and strategic
(security consultants). After reading the brochure, CPA firms moved significantly
higher on technical, legal and strategic skills; additionally, CPA firms
were ranked among the highest service providers in all areas except legal
skills, where law firms continued to predominate. |