The Quarter-Close Drill: 25 Checks That Prevent Close Chaos
Run this 25-check quarter-close drill to catch recon gaps, cut-off risk, and missing evidence before your close collapses under pressure.
Run this 25-check quarter-close drill to catch recon gaps, cut-off risk, and missing evidence before your close collapses under pressure.
The Quarter-Close Drill (What it is)
A Quarter-Close Drill is a fast pre-close scan that tells you, in 20 minutes, whether your close will be calm — or whether it will explode into rework, late nights, and missing evidence.
Most close failures come from three root causes :
Ownership is unclear (people assume someone else did it)
Reconciliations break (mystery balances grow)
Evidence is missing (panic before sign-off)
This drill catches those early.
How to run the drill (20 minutes)
Print or open your checklist.
Answer each check as PASS / FAIL / N/A.
Any FAIL becomes a task with an owner + due date.
Run it 3 times:
T-7 days before quarter close (first pass)
Day 2 of close (second pass)
Before final sign-off (final confirmation)
The 25 checks (grouped)
A) Ownership & accountability (5)
Every close-critical task has a named Owner.
Every close-critical task has a named Reviewer.
Deadlines are visible (calendar or tracker), not “in someone’s head”.
Dependencies are explicit (Task A must finish before Task B).
An escalation rule exists (what happens if a critical task is late).
Why this matters: close chaos is usually not technical—it’s missing accountability.
B) Reconciliations & High-Risk Accounts (8)
Top 10 high-risk accounts are identified (cash, AR, revenue, interco, accruals).
Each high-risk account has a recon deadline earlier than the rest.
Recon includes: opening balance + movements + closing balance.
Material variances have an explanation (short, factual).
Supporting documents are attached (not “will send later”).
Recon is reviewed and signed off (not just prepared).
Aged items have a plan (no indefinite carry).
Manual journals affecting high-risk accounts are reviewed.
Why this matters: broken recons create “mystery balances” that kill close speed.
C) Cut-off & Completeness (6)
Revenue cut-off is checked (timing, shipment/service, recognition).
Expense cut-off is checked (accrual completeness).
Intercompany cut-off is checked (match, eliminate, explain differences).
Key estimates have a documented basis (assumptions, method).
One-off transactions are flagged and reviewed (unusual items).
Management adjustments are approved with evidence.
Why this matters: The cut-off is where quarter-close audits focus.
D) Evidence & Sign-Off Readiness (6)
Every critical recon/journal has evidence attached.
Evidence naming is consistent (easy to find later).
Evidence is stored in a shared system, not personal inboxes.
Review sign-off is recorded (who approved, when).
Final close pack has a clear “complete” mark (no ambiguity).
You can trace any number to: recon → evidence → approval within minutes.
Why this matters: “audit-ready” means evidence is organised, not “available somewhere”.
What To Do If You Fail 5+ Checks
If 5 or more checks fail, your close risk is high. Do this immediately :
Create a “Close Stabilisation” list: Top 5 failures only
Assign each one to an owner + deadline in the next 48 hours
Re-run the drill after Day 2
Next Step (CTA)
If you want the complete system (samples, tiers and deployment-ready structure):