Narrowing the Expectations-Reality Gap in Auditing: Implications for Recruiting and Developing the Next Generation of Auditors

Narrowing the Expectations-Reality Gap in Auditing: Implications for Recruiting and Developing the Next Generation of Auditors

Publication Summary

Audit firms across jurisdictions face a persistent and increasingly acute challenge in attracting and retaining early-career audit talent. A commonly cited explanation for this trend is that today’s students and junior professionals are less willing to accept the demanding working conditions traditionally associated with auditing. While workload and work-life balance undoubtedly play an important role, this explanation implicitly assumes that students possess an accurate understanding of what early-career audit work actually entails.

We argue that this assumption is questionable. Drawing on evidence from our recent Accounting Horizons study (Dierynck, Marangoni, Peters, and Weijers 2025), we suggest that an important, but underappreciated, driver of the audit talent shortage is an expectations-reality gap: a systematic mismatch between what students believe the junior auditor role involves and what junior auditors actually experience in practice. Understanding this gap is critical for audit practice. If students base their career decisions on inaccurate or overly pessimistic beliefs about audit work, firms may lose potential entrants before recruitment efforts can meaningfully engage them. Moreover, misaligned expectations at entry may contribute to early dissatisfaction and turnover, further weakening the talent pipeline.

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Publication Author(s)​

Lobke Weijers
Christian Peters
Claudia Marangoni
Bart Dierynck

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