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Financial Management Essentials
Rating: 4.4 out of 5(26 ratings)
457 students

Financial Management Essentials

Short Financial Training Program designed to equip non-finance professionals with the essential skills.
Last updated 1/2026
English

What you'll learn

  • You will learn how to go beyond simple revenue numbers to decode business performance
  • You will also learn how to distinguish between fixed and variable costs
  • You will also learn how to distinguish between capital expenditures (capex) and operational expenditures (opex)
  • You will understand the income statement and its elements
  • You will decode the balance sheet and why they prepare it

Course content

5 sections9 lectures34m total length
  • Introduction1:37

    Introduction to the Financial Management Essentials Course for Non-Finance Professionals.

  • Learning Objectives3:13

    The structure and five core learning outcomes of the "Finance for Non-Finance" course. These outcomes are designed to help professionals make more informed strategic decisions.

Requirements

  • No experience is required. You just need the willingness to learn and to link things together.

Description

The course is structured to bridge the language gap between technical metrics (like latency, F1 scores, or mean time to failure) and financial metrics used by leadership (like ROI and the bottom line). The instructor, Muhammad, has a unique background, having spent over 10 years as a dedicated finance professional (CMA certified, completed CFA level two) and now working as a data and analytics manager, allowing him to understand both the financial details and the technical side of development.

The overall course aims to provide five core outcomes:

1. Decode business performance.

2. Understand the difference between Finance and Accounting

3. Understand what revenue is

4. Understand what cost is

5. Understand Capex and Opex

6. Understand Variable and Fixed Costs

7. Understand the income statement

8. Understand Balance Sheet

The Income Statement (Profit and Loss Statement)

The Income Statement is the company’s report card showing its performance over a specific period, detailing whether the business is making money. It flows from top to bottom:

1. Revenue (Top Line): Total income from core business activities.

2. Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): Direct, purely variable costs of producing the goods or services that were sold (e.g., raw materials, direct labor, shipping).

3. Gross Profit: Revenue minus COGS. This metric measures the profit purely from the production side of the business and shows production efficiency.

4. Operating Expenses (OPEX): Generally fixed costs required to sell the product and keep the lights on, including salaries for corporate teams, rent, marketing, and R&D.

5. Net Profit (Net Income/Bottom Line): The total profit remaining after paying all expenses, taxes, and interest. It is calculated as Gross Profit minus Operating Expenses (plus/minus non-operating items).


The Balance Sheet

The Balance Sheet is the formal, structured report of the Assets, Liabilities, and Equity at a specific moment in time. It must always balance according to the accounting equation.

The components are broken down based on time:

• Assets:

◦ Current Assets: Resources expected to be converted to cash within one year (e.g., cash, accounts receivable, inventory).

◦ Fixed/Non-Current Assets: Long-term engines of the business, often resulting from Capex decisions (e.g., equipment, buildings).

• Liabilities:

◦ Current Liabilities: Bills coming due within one year (e.g., accounts payable, short-term loans).

◦ Long-Term Liabilities: Debts paid off over many years (e.g., mortgages, equipment loans).

• Equity: The owner's stake, consisting of Initial Capital (money founders put in) and Retained Earnings (profit the company made and reinvested)


“This course contains the use of artificial intelligence.”

Who this course is for:

  • New Business owner from non-finance background
  • Junior or Senior employee (Software developer, Software engineer, IT engineer)
  • Junior or Senior Data Scientists
  • Junior or Senior and moving to Managerial level (All fields)
  • Electrical or Mechanical Engineer
  • Sales, Marketing or Admin