Planning in an Uncertain World
2.00 Credits
Member Price $79
Non-Member Price $109
Overview
We all make predictions in our personal and professional lives. We base our decisions to marry, buy a house, launch a new product or hire staff on expectations about the future. In the past few years, research into improving predictions has advanced. We will look at this research and current best practices in forecasting to help us prepare better budgets and projections.
Highlights
- Why great predictions are not intuitive but the result of critical thinking, gathering information and updating predictions when needed
- How to separate correlation from causation
- How to recognize and overcome bias
- Who is Thomas Bayes and why he matters
Prerequisites
Some budgeting and forecasting experience
Designed For
CFOs, Controllers, Budget Managers and other professionals who work on budgets and forecasts
Objectives
- Better understand factors which can cause predictions to be wrong
Preparation
None
Leader(s):
Leader Bios
John Levy, Executive Education, Inc.
John F. Levy, MBA, CPA, is the CEO of Board Advisory, a consulting firm that assists public companies, or companies aspiring to be public, with corporate governance, compliance, financial reporting and financial strategies. He has served as CFO of both public and private companies. John currently serves on the Board of Directors of four public companies, including as Chairman of one company and lead director of another. He is a graduate of the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania.
Non-Member Price $109
Member Price $79