Build Real Financial Analysis Skills That Matter

Most corporate finance training throws formulas at you and calls it education. We think differently. Our program connects you with working analysts who've actually built financial models that influenced million-dollar decisions.

Explore the Program
Financial analysts collaborating on corporate finance projects

What Working Analysts Actually Need to Know

Forget the textbook theory. These are the capabilities that separate junior analysts from professionals who get promoted.

Financial Modelling

Build three-statement models that actually work under pressure. You'll learn how to structure complex scenarios, not just copy templates from the internet.

Valuation Methods

DCF models are just the start. We cover how to defend your assumptions when the CFO questions your growth projections in front of the board.

Capital Structure

Understand why companies choose debt versus equity financing. Real cases show how these decisions affect everything downstream.

Risk Assessment

Learn to identify risks that matter and skip the ones that don't. Practical frameworks help you communicate exposure to non-financial stakeholders.

Strategic Planning

Connect financial analysis to business strategy. You'll practice translating numbers into recommendations that executives can actually use.

Reporting Skills

Create executive dashboards that get read instead of filed away. Format matters when you're competing for attention with twenty other reports.

Kristian Bergström, lead finance mentor

Kristian Bergström

Lead Finance Mentor

Kristian spent twelve years in corporate finance across mining and infrastructure sectors. He's built financing models for projects worth over two billion dollars and has advised on three major M&A transactions.

What sets him apart is his ability to explain complex financial concepts without drowning you in jargon. He remembers what it's like to feel lost during your first board presentation.

During our October 2025 intake, Kristian will run weekly analysis sessions where you'll work through real company financials and present your findings to the group.

How the Learning Experience Works

The program starts in October 2025 and runs for eighteen weeks. Here's what that journey looks like.

1

Foundation Phase

Weeks 1-4 cover financial statement analysis and basic modelling. You'll rebuild actual company models from scratch to understand how pieces fit together.

2

Valuation Deep Dive

Weeks 5-9 focus on valuation techniques. Each week tackles a different method, then you compare results across approaches using the same target company.

3

Strategic Application

Weeks 10-14 connect financial analysis to business decisions. You'll work on capital structure optimization, M&A scenarios, and investment committee presentations.

4

Capstone Project

Weeks 15-18 involve comprehensive company analysis. You'll research a publicly traded firm, build complete financial models, and present investment recommendations to a panel of practicing analysts.

Learn Alongside Other Aspiring Analysts

Finance work doesn't happen in isolation. Neither should learning it.

Our cohort structure means you'll work with the same group of people throughout the program. You'll review each other's models, challenge assumptions, and figure out problems together.

  • Weekly peer review sessions where you'll critique financial models
  • Shared project channels for asking questions and sharing resources
  • Group presentations that mirror real investment committee dynamics
  • Alumni network access connecting you with past participants now working in the field

Some of our strongest learning happens when someone spots an error in your DCF formula at midnight and explains why it matters.

Group of finance professionals working together on analysis

October 2025 Cohort Opens Soon

We're accepting applications for our next intake starting October 6, 2025. The program runs eighteen weeks with a maximum of twenty-four participants to maintain quality interaction.

If you're currently working in finance and want to build stronger analysis skills, or transitioning from accounting or economics backgrounds, this might work for you.