Find Your Perfect Financial Learning Path

Not sure which course fits your situation? Our quick assessment helps match you with the right program based on your current knowledge and goals.

Explore All Programs

Which Course is Right for You?

Answer a few questions and get personalized recommendations for upcoming courses starting in autumn 2025.

Quick Assessment

What's your current relationship with budgeting?
Which financial topic interests you most?
How much time can you dedicate weekly?

Your Recommended Courses

Foundation Finance Control
Perfect for beginners. Covers budgeting basics, expense tracking, and building your first emergency fund. Starts March 2025.
Advanced Budget Strategies
For those with basic budgeting experience who want to optimize their approach and tackle specific financial goals. Begins April 2025.
Debt Management Mastery
Comprehensive program covering debt consolidation, payment strategies, and prevention methods. Starting May 2025.
Financial planning workspace with charts and calculator

Last year, we noticed something interesting. People kept asking us the same question after finishing our introductory workshops: "What should I learn next?"

It made sense. Everyone starts their financial journey from a different place. Some folks have been budgeting for years but want to tackle investment planning. Others are complete beginners who feel overwhelmed by the basics.

That's why we redesigned our entire course sequence. Instead of one-size-fits-all programs, we created focused learning paths that build on each other naturally.

Our autumn 2025 lineup reflects what we've learned from working with over 800 Australians in the past three years. Each course tackles specific challenges we see people facing at different stages of their financial journey.

Take Sarah from Brisbane, for example. She joined our Foundation course in early 2024 with barely any savings. By the end of the year, she'd built a three-month emergency fund and was ready for our Investment Basics program. Now she's considering our Advanced Planning course for 2025.

That progression isn't unusual. We designed these courses to work together, so you can build knowledge and confidence step by step rather than trying to learn everything at once.

Portrait of financial instructor Kieran Pemberton
Kieran Pemberton
Lead Instructor

I've been teaching financial literacy for eight years, and I've seen what happens when people try to rush through complex topics. They get frustrated and give up. Our new course structure gives people time to really understand each concept before moving on.

What I love about our upcoming programs is how practical they are. We don't just talk about budgeting theory. Students leave with actual budgets they've built and tested. They have spreadsheets set up, bank accounts organized, and concrete next steps planned out.

Students working on financial planning exercises in classroom setting

Small class sizes (max 12 students) ensure everyone gets individual attention and can ask questions freely.