With Financial Mastery for Projects, achieve a deeper understanding of the relationship between your organization's financial outcomes and the decisions you make as a portfolio, program, or project manager in this three-day elective course in the Stanford Advanced Project Management curriculum.
Financial Mastery for Projects helps you see projects as investments that enable the execution of your organization's business strategy. You'll get a high-level understanding of financial statements and and how programs and projects create new products, processes, and services that directly affect those statements. You'll gain insight into how a project's products and its performance affect revenue recognition, profitability, and cash flow for the organization as a whole. You'll learn how to analyze the value of programs and projects throughout their life cycles using discounted cash flow and similar analysis. And you'll be prepared to take the necessary actions to improve a project's financial performance.
You'll leave the course understanding the relationships among strategy, finance, and program and project management, and you'll be able to assess alternative options using discounted cash flow analysis and related financial tools. You may not be a finance whiz, but you'll learn enough about financial statements and how programs and projects impact them to know the value they deliver to your organization.
Financial Mastery for Projects can be taken on campus at Stanford University, onsite at your organization, through synchronous live virtual advanced project management courses, or via streaming video in our online Stanford Advanced Project Management program.
As a result of Financial Mastery for Projects, your organization will benefit from:
After attending Financial Mastery for Projects, you will be able to:
This course is designed to benefit non-financial managers, including executives, senior managers, functional managers, program managers, and project managers.
Prerequisites: This course has no prerequisites.
Introduction to the Strategy-Portfolio-Project Continuum
The Strategy-Portfolio-Project Continuum
Relating Programs and Projects to Corporate Finance
Introduction to Financial Statements
Capital Budgeting and Investment Analysis
Project Scenario Analysis
Project Benefits Management (PBM): An Overview
Course Summary
Read more about how to get started with the Stanford Advanced Project Management program for an individual, or bring Financial Mastery for Projects, as well as any of our corporate learning solutions, to your organization. Please contact us today to learn more.