Introduction
This seminar brings together some of the most important areas of management, leadership, and financial management: Mastering People Management & Team Leadership Skills, and Financial Analysis, Planning, and Control. It will help business professionals:
- Stand back from the detail of their everyday specialism and appreciate the bigger picture required of management roles
- Apply effective people management skills confidently
- Use the financial techniques of planning and control
- Improve performance from the use of the tools of financial analysis
- Preparation financial projection models to determine the financing needs of the business
This seminar is a combination of Oxford Advanced Finance Leaders Programme
MODULE I - Mastering People Management & Team Leadership Skills
MODULE II - Financial Analysis, Planning & Control
Each module is structured and can be taken as a stand-alone course; however, delegates will maximize their benefits by taking Module 1 and 2 back-to-back as a two-week seminar.
Course Objectives of Oxford Advanced Finance Leaders Programme
By the end of this seminar delegates will be able to:
- Understanding your role as manager and leader
- Establishing clear objectives and standards of performance for your team
- Managing your workload using effective prioritization, delegation and information management techniques
- Maximizing your influencing skills
- Developing and leveraging the capabilities of team members
Training Methodology of Oxford Advanced Finance Leaders Programme
The management and leadership elements of the seminar use a range of approaches to learning, including experiential group activities, individual exercises, mini case studies, role-plays and syndicate discussions.
The financial elements of the seminar include numerous practical examples and real-life illustrations. The training methodology combines presentations, discussions, team exercises, and case studies. The emphasis is on gaining the theoretical knowledge and practical application of all the topics covered.
Organizational Impact of Oxford Advanced Finance Leaders Programme
- Managers who have shared and practiced different ways of performing the key leadership functions offer increased self-awareness, flexibility and confidence.
- Able to stand back from the everyday detail and focus on longer-term organizational needs secure in the knowledge that their team is competent and motivated to deal with operational tasks.
- An increase in the ability of their managers to understand and analyze the key financial statements
- Anticipate the financial factors that form the basis of strategic decision-making, which should ultimately result in better planning, and improved company performance.
- All the topics in this seminar are considered in the context of the maximization of shareholder wealth, which is the primary objective of all commercial organizations.
Personal Impact of Oxford Advanced Finance Leaders Programme
- Delegates will be exposed to a range of different approaches to leadership and management practice, allowing them to select those most suitable for their situation and personal style.
- Delegates will have the chance to experiment with key techniques before applying them in the workplace will help build the confidence to move beyond traditional assumptions about the ‘right’ way to manage.
- Delegates will have the opportunity to broaden their financial knowledge to enable them to develop and manage the financial aspects of their role more effectively and improve performance
- Delegates will acquire the ability, when involved in decisions about investment, operations, or financing, to choose the most appropriate tools from the wide variety of financial techniques available to provide quantitative analysis.
- Delegates should leave the seminar with a better understanding of the financial tools and techniques that support an organization’s planning and control, with regard to their own departments or business units, as well as their companies.
Course Outlines of Oxford Advanced Finance Leaders Programme
Module I
Mastering People Management & Team Leadership
Day 1:
Understanding Your Role
- Leader or manager?
- Self-perception
- Beyond the job description: finding out what your organization requires of you
- Balancing conflicting stakeholder demands
- Understanding the nature of change
- A model for implementing change
Day2:
Personal Effectiveness, Time Management, and Delegation
- Understanding yourself and your organizational environment
- Outcome orientation
- Setting personal and team objectives
- Managing performance
- Finding and using time effectively
- A model for effective delegation
Day 3:
Communication, Influence & Conflict Management
- Channels of communication
- Effective listening skills
- Emotions and rapport
- Persuasion and negotiation: the keys to personal influence
- Managing conflict assertively
Day 4:
Team Building, People Management, and Motivation
- How high-performing teams work?
- Identifying team roles
- Teams in practice: teambuilding exercise
- Motivation and reward
- Building and sharing a vision
- Different approaches to leadership
Day 5:
Enhancing Team Performance through Coaching and Development
- How did people learn?
- Coaching for personal and team growth
- Feedback skills
- Development planning
- Next steps
Module II
Financial Analysis, Planning and Control
Day 6:
The Challenge of Financial Economic Decision-Making
- The practice of financial-economic analysis
- Corporate value and shareholder value
- A dynamic perspective of business Benchmarking your own strategic position/competitor analysis
- The agency problem and corporate governance
- What information and data to use?
- The nature of financial statements
- The context of financial analysis and decision-making
Day 7:
Assessment of Business Performance
- Ratio analysis and business performance
- Management’s point of view
- Owners’ point of view
- Lenders’ point of view
- Ratios as a system – pyramids of ratios
- Integration of financial performance analysis – the Dupont system
- Economic value added (EVA)
- Predicting financial distress
Day8:
Projection of Financial Requirements
- Interrelationship of financial projections
- Operating budgets
- Standard costing and variance analysis
- Cash forecasts and cash budgets
- Sensitivity analysis
- Dynamics and growth of the business system
- Operating leverage
- Financial growth plans
- Financial modeling
Day 9:
Analysis of Investment Decisions
- Applying time-adjusted measures
- Net present value (NPV) and internal rate of return (IRR)
- Strategic perspective
- EVA and NPV
- Refinements of investment analysis
- Equivalent annual cost (EAC)
- Modified internal rate of return (MIRR)
- Sensitivity analysis, scenario analysis, simulation, and NPV break-even
- Dealing with risk and changing circumstances
Day 10:
Valuation and Business Performance
- Managing for shareholder value
- Shareholder value creation in perspective
- Evolution of value-based methodologies
- Creating value in restructuring and combinations
- Financial strategy in acquisitions
- Business valuation
- Business restructuring and reorganizations
- Management buyouts (MBOs) and management buy-ins (MBIs)
About Paris
Lying on the River Seine, Paris is commonly referred to as the city for lovers, but it's actually a fantastic place for anyone to visit and explore. It's full of history, art, literature and amazing architecture for starters, but is also well known as being home to high fashion, which makes it a popular shopping destination. Visitors to the French Capital will find both high-end designer stores and quirky boutiques. The attractions of Paris range for art museums to shopping to simply taking a walk and soaking up the atmosphere. To top it all off, Paris has plenty of superb food and drink, in case there weren't already enough reasons to travel to Paris.
Things to do and places to visit in Paris
Anyone who travels to Paris is in for a treat, as it is a beautiful city full of atmosphere. Many of Paris' attractions are world-famous, but it's also a city where you can find hidden gems. Taking a flight to Paris for a short visit is really like visiting a number of different cities, as all of its neighbourhoods, or arrondissements, have their own distinct character. Examples include the medieval Latin Quarter and the bohemian Marais. Each and every one is worth exploring.
Great things to do in Paris include:
- Checking out the views from the top of the Eiffel Tower.
- Seeing renowned masterpieces, including the Mona Lisa in the Louvre.
- Taking a tour of the impressive, albeit slightly creepy, Paris Catacombs.
- Marvelling at the beautiful Notre Dame Cathedral.
- Browsing the designer stores around the Champs-Elysees.
- Munching snails in one of the city's haute cuisine eateries.
- Visiting the graves of luminaries including Oscar Wilde and Jim Morrison at Pere Lachaise Cemetery.
- Admiring the imposing Arc de Triomphe.
- Wandering around the boutiques of the Marais district.
- Watching the famous Paris St-Germain football team play.
- Taking in the Impressionist art at the Musee D'Orsay.
- Watching the world go by from a cafe terrace.
- Visiting the distinctive Centre Georges Pompidou.