Tampa Bay firm offers private in-house Corporate Seminars on SOX and Corporate Governance
Released on: February 17, 2008, 2:57 pm
Press Release Author: JT Grenough
Industry:
Press Release Summary: Taylor Forensics and its founder, JT Grenough, offer half-day Corporate Governance Seminars
Press Release Body: TAYLOR FORENSICS 138 107th Ave. # 163 Treasure Island, FL 33706 Email: TaylorForensics@aol.com Tel (727) 403-9559 Presents a Seminar on Corporate Governance
BULLETPROOFING YOUR CORPORATION AGAINST CIVIL & CRIMINAL LIABILITY AND STREAMLINING CONTROLS UNDER SARBANES-OXLEY
If you are a public company facing compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley or a private company facing the mounting costs of Internal Audit compliance, this seminar is for you.
This seminar is available in Clearwater, Tampa Bay, Sarasota, Bradenton and St. Petersburg, Florida.
Author JT Grenough discusses the essentials of 2007 Strategic Planning for senior management, CFOs, Controllers and Directors of private and publicly-held corporations. Topics covered include:
Officer & Director Liability Setting Up and Streamlining an Internal Audit Department Reducing Costs with Baselining and Compensating Controls Enron: A Case Study in Retrospect The Future of Sarbanes-Oxley & PCAOB Proper and Cost-Effective Process & Company Control Documentation COBIT & COSO - Anti-Fraud Controls Effects of Sarbanes on Mergers & Capital Markets Offshore Alternatives
The speaker has handled five Sarbanes-Oxley consulting assignments for public corporations and has recently been published by the Institute of Internal Auditors, ISACA and the Sarbanes-Oxley Compliance Journal. One-half day seminars are structured, and the participants will receive a CD-ROM of an HTML file which enables extensive forensic, internal audit and Sarbanes research to occur. Signed group study participation letters are included. Taylor Forensics is a Corporate Governance & Risk Management Consultancy Firm to public and privately-held companies.
This seminar is at a cost of $ 750.
For a description of JT Grenough's book, please see: