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    Finance and Accounting for the Nonfinancial Executive
    Columbia Business School

    Finance and Accounting for the Nonfinancial Executive

    Columbia Business School, New York
    HomeFinanceColumbia Business SchoolFinance and Accounting for the Nonfinancial Executive
    5 daysDuration
    in-personFormat
    EnglishLanguage
    FinanceTopic

    Next Available Cohort

    Choose your preferred start date

    Jun 1 - Jun 5, 2026
    5 days · in-person · Instructor-Led · Manhattanville Campus
    Open
    $12,250

    All-inclusive program fee

    About This Program

    In five days of hands-on, interactive sessions, Finance and Accounting for the Nonfinancial Executive provide non-financial executives with a unique opportunity to deepen their expertise in finance and accounting for better management and decision-making capabilities. The program features sessions on the role of accounting, key concepts of managerial and financial accounting, ratio calculation, forecasting and valuation, and shareholder value management. At the end of the finance executive program, participants will have mastered key finance and accounting concepts and understand the relationships among profitability, cash flow, liquidity, solvency, and growth, and identify the red flags in financial statements – highly important in the current volatile financial context. Are You Ready to Take the Next Step?

    Why Columbia Business School?

    Few business schools can claim a campus embedded in one of the world's most consequential cities — and actually mean it. Columbia Business School has built its entire executive education philosophy around New York as a living laboratory: finance, media, technology, healthcare, and policy all intersect within walking distance of campus, and the faculty who teach executives are the same people advising the institutions that drive those industries.

    Your Profile

    • Finance and Accounting for the Nonfinancial Executive is designed for mid- to senior-level nonfinancial executives with five or more years of experience in corporate or divisional roles who seek a deeper understanding of finance and accounting.

    Benefits

    • Understand accounting's role in business and master the language of accounting
    • Learn and apply key concepts of managerial and financial accounting
    • Calculate ratios and develop a sound ratio analysis
    • Develop forecasts and conduct valuation analysis
    • Apply finance and accounting concepts to shareholder value management
    • Identify red flags in financial statements

    What You'll Learn

    • What platform do you use to deliver live online programs? - We use the Zoom platform.
    • Part 1 Introduction to financial accounting
    • Part 1 The economic and institutional setting for financial reporting - What is financial accounting?, Objectives, products and uses of financial accounting, The rule setting process: U.S. and internationally
    • Part 1 Assumptions - Accounting entity, Going concern, Monetary, Periodicity
    • Part 1 Constraints - Estimates, Materiality, Consistency, Conservatism
    • Part 1 Accrual accounting - “This program quickly and efficiently helps you discover, understand and constructively challenge finance and accounting information.” The accounting equation, Asset and liability recognition and measurement, Revenue recognition, Expense recognition, Articulation, Transaction analysis
    • Part 2 Understanding financial statements - Balance sheet, Income statement, Statement of cash flows, Secondary financial statements: comprehensive income and shareholders’ equity
    • Part 2 Accounting quality – implications of - “This program quickly and efficiently helps you discover, understand and constructively challenge finance and accounting information.” Accounting conservatism, Choices, judgements, estimates, and incentives
    • Part 3 Financial planning and analysis
    • Part 3 Managerial Accounting - Costing, Pricing, Budgeting, Variance analysis, Performance measurement
    • Part 3 Integrating financial and managerial accounting
    • Part 3 Mastering net present value (NPV) calculations - “This program quickly and efficiently helps you discover, understand and constructively challenge finance and accounting information.”
    • Part 4 Financial statement analysis
    • Part 4 Reformulating the financial statements (F/S) - Operating versus financing activities, Recurring versus transitory items
    • Part 4 Conducting ratio analysis - “This program quickly and efficiently helps you discover, understand and constructively challenge finance and accounting information.” Profitability, Earnings quality, Solvency, Liquidity, Working capital
    • Part 5 Forecasting and valuation
    • Part 5 Relative valuation - EV/EBITDA
    • Part 5 Forecasting financial statements - Revenue, Key ratios, Free cash flow
    • Part 5 Cost of capital - Cost of debt, Cost of equity, WACC
    • Part 5 Fundamental valuation - “This program quickly and efficiently helps you discover, understand and constructively challenge finance and accounting information.” Models, Implementation

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How to Apply

    1. 1

      Check your eligibility

      Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8–15 years of professional experience.

    2. 2

      Compare programs

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    3. 3

      Contact the school

      Send a message directly to Columbia Business School via Gradia to request a brochure or speak with an admissions advisor.

    4. 4

      Prepare your application

      Gather your CV, reference letters, and any required test scores. Many EMBA programs waive standardised tests for senior candidates.

    5. 5

      Submit your application

      Apply directly through Columbia Business School's official application portal.

      Apply now →