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Courses/Finance/Budgeting & Financial Forecasting

Improving Financial Projections with Probability Analysis

Move beyond guesswork and build more accurate financial projections by leveraging the power of probability analysis.

Created byRob Stephens
4.9
(157 reviews)
BeginnerUpdated Mar 14, 2025
Improving Financial Projections with Probability Analysis

What You'll Learn

check_circleRecall how to calculate the expected value.
check_circleRecognize decision tools.
check_circleIdentify ways to reduce risk.
check_circleRecall the definitions of possibility and probability.
check_circleIdentify key aspects of distribution curves and flying bar charts.
check_circleRecognize methods and tools for probabilistic modeling.

About This Course

This course provides a practical framework for incorporating probability analysis into your financial projections, equipping you with the tools and techniques to make more informed and robust financial forecasts. By incorporating probability analysis into your financial projections, you can better understand and manage risk, make more informed decisions, and improve the accuracy of your financial forecasts. This course equips you with the knowledge and tools to confidently navigate the complexities of uncertainty in the financial world.

This is a combination of two mini-courses that show how using probability analysis can improve financial decisions and projections.

Part 1: Decision Optimization by Maximizing Expected Value.

Expected value (EV) analysis is a powerful way to distill a massive array of possibilities into a few numbers, which helps clarify the most profitable course of action. EV uses a simple calculation based on potential outcomes and their probability. The first lesson walks you through the calculation and points out limits to it. We then look at influence diagrams, which are a good way to get a high-level view of the key factors in an expected value decision.

Next, we look at decision trees. Decision trees show the sequence of decisions and uncertainties. Every path through the tree is a scenario for which we can calculate an EV. The tree shows a range of outcomes, their probabilities, and the value of those outcomes. This helps us assess and clearly communicate both the EV and risk. We can better help evaluate the odds and magnitude of gaining – or losing – money.

Part 2: Better Forecasting by Projecting Ranges of Outcomes.

Accounting is the language of business. Statistics is the language of uncertainty and risk. Financial analysts and decision-makers must speak both accounting and statistics; otherwise, we ignore uncertainty and risk. 

This is a very high-level overview of probabilistic analysis. I'll focus more on concepts than calculations. My hope is that these concepts improve your company's understanding and measurement of uncertainty so that you can make better decisions.

In most forecasts and budgets, great effort is spent on determining the "right input number" or a few "right numbers" for the projection model. The assumption is that if we get the right inputs, we'll get the right output. In stochastic analysis, the model inputs are a range of numbers with assumptions about how those numbers are distributed throughout that range. Projections that provide ranges of outcomes and probabilities of those outcomes give us a much more complete picture of an uncertain and risky future.

The first lesson explores the benefits of probabilistic analysis. The second lesson briefly covers a few basic statistics concepts. We'll then look at S-curves and flying bars. These are ways to display a range of data. Next is an overview of Monte Carlo simulation. We'll then explore the implementation process for simulation analysis.

 

Your Instructor

Rob Stephens
Rob Stephens

Founder of CFO Perspective

menu_book32 courses
star4,787 reviews

Rob Stephens is the Founder of CFO Perspective, which provides continuing education courses for CPAs and financial management courses for business advisors and staff. He has been quoted in Forbes, U.S. News and World Report, Bloomberg Businessweek, and many other news sources. He is also the author of Key Performance Indicators and KPI Dashboards. Rob has a 30-year career that includes serving as a CFO, Director of Operations, and SVP of Finance. Rob is an adjunct instructor for the MBA program at Gonzaga University. Rob holds a Masters of Science in Personal Financial Planning and a Graduate Certificate in Financial Therapy from Kansas State University. He received a B.A. in Business Administration from the University of Washington.

Credit Information

Do these courses count toward my professional development requirements?

This portal is provided as a training and development resource for City of Markham employees. Every course is delivered by a qualified subject matter expert or learning organization, is quantifiable in hours, and is verifiable — you receive a documented certificate of completion for every course you finish, stored on LearnFormula indefinitely.

If you hold a professional designation (for example in engineering, accounting, human resources, or law), courses may be counted as professionally relevant, verifiable learning activities toward your continuing professional development. Individual practitioners are responsible for confirming that an activity meets the requirements of their professional body. For questions about the City of Markham's training and development policies, please speak with your people leader or Human Resources.

What Students Are Saying

4.9
Student's Choice
157 reviews

Frequently Asked Questions

We are a registered provider with 327+ associations and regulatory bodies worldwide. We operate across 29 global markets including Canada, the US, Australia, and the UK. Every course page clearly displays its specific accreditations. Upon completion, you receive a professional certificate that can be validated online. Our certificates include all necessary accreditation details, credit hours, and completion dates, and are formatted specifically to meet the submission requirements of most global regulatory bodies.