Course list

Nonprofit organizations may not be in business to make money, but they must still pay close attention to their finances to achieve their mission. Nonprofits, like all organizations, need to have enough money to pay salaries, run programs, purchase goods, or pay debts. Often nonprofits come under fire when they don't have a good financial balance, have too much cash, have high expenses, or are not putting the right amount of money toward programs serving their mission. Tracking the financial health of a nonprofit is not only the responsibility of the chief financial officer but also of its administrators, board members, directors, and key program staff.  It's the responsibility of the entire organization to engage in the process and secure the organization's ongoing financial health.  

In this course, Professor Grasso draws on a wealth of first-hand experience with nonprofit management to give you a guided tour through the structure and interpretation of typical nonprofit financial statements. Professor Grasso will walk you through reading and interpreting financial statements including an income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement. Using financial ratios, he will show you how to analyze the health of an organization by analyzing its cash reserves, debt burden, and expenses. You will practice calculating 10 different ratios and interpreting their results. And Professor Grasso will provide you with guidance on how to adjust your organization's strategy based on those results. 

As you move through the course, carefully-crafted tools and activities will guide you in applying what you learn about financial assessment and management to the specifics of your own nonprofit organization. 

  • Apr 29, 2026
  • May 27, 2026
  • Jun 24, 2026
  • Jul 22, 2026
  • Aug 19, 2026
  • Sep 16, 2026
  • Oct 14, 2026

Today, with increasing competition, it's more important than ever that nonprofits create realistic and manageable budgets. Budgets that draw on both the unique history of the organization and funding sources willing to support them in meeting their mission. However, this alone is not enough. Your organization's budgets and planning must be designed to handle variance based on market changes. Increasingly, nonprofits need to think about their competition, how to compete, or even how to partner with outside groups to become more successful.

In this course, Professor Joseph Grasso walks you through the budgeting process. He covers the main elements of a budget and the different types of budgets. You'll then see how Porter's Five Forces and other analytical frameworks can be used to make budgeting and financing decisions.

As you move through the course, tools geared toward use on the job and carefully crafted activities will help you apply budgeting, debt management, and cash flow concepts and principles to your own nonprofit situation. 

  • May 13, 2026
  • Jun 10, 2026
  • Jul 8, 2026
  • Aug 5, 2026
  • Sep 2, 2026
  • Sep 30, 2026
  • Oct 28, 2026

Often when you think of nonprofits, you don't think about revenue generation. But nonprofits, not unlike for-profits, need to generate a certain amount of revenue to run their organizations. Often that revenue generation happens through fundraising efforts. However, there are many other options. 
 
It's important to remember that nonprofits are mission-driven organizations. While they do need to stay mission focused, they also need to bring in money to achieve their missions. This course will cover the basics of fundraising, lobbying, grant writing, working with community and family foundations, and using social networking, marketing, and branding, all in efforts to bring in more revenue. Professor Grasso will share models of fundraising, approaches to other funding, and strategies for organizational communication.

  • May 27, 2026
  • Jun 24, 2026
  • Jul 22, 2026
  • Aug 19, 2026
  • Sep 16, 2026
  • Oct 14, 2026
  • Nov 11, 2026

Whether you're starting a new nonprofit or leading a well-established one, it's important to have refined and planned strategic governance. Organizations follow a lifecycle pattern that is predictable. But some organizations fail, while others thrive. Often the deciding factor is their governance structure and members. 
 
In this course Professor Grasso, a seasoned nonprofit leader and board member, will share insights into governance at all stages of an organization's life cycle. You'll have a chance to examine the creation of a board and governance structure, evaluate the mix of an active board, and refine the management of an organization using RAPID decision making. You'll also explore avoiding and leading through organizational decline and even rebirth into a stronger and better nonprofit.

  • Apr 15, 2026
  • May 13, 2026
  • Jun 10, 2026
  • Jul 8, 2026
  • Aug 5, 2026
  • Sep 2, 2026
  • Sep 30, 2026

eCornell Online Workshops are live, interactive 3-hour learning experiences led by Cornell faculty experts. These premium short-format sessions focus on AI topics and are designed for busy professionals who want to gain immediately applicable skills and strategic perspectives. Workshops include faculty presentations, breakout discussions, and guided hands-on practice.

The AI Workshops All-Access Pass provides you with unlimited participation for 6 months from your date of purchase. Whether you choose to attend one workshop per month, or several per week, the All-Access Pass will allow you to customize your AI journey and stay on top of the latest AI trends.

Workshops cover a range of cutting-edge AI topics applicable across industries, hosted by Cornell faculty at the forefront of their fields. Whether you are just getting started with AI, seeking to build your AI skillset, or exploring advanced applications of AI, Workshops will provide you with an action-oriented learning experience for immediate application in your career. Sample Workshops include:

  • Work Smarter with AI Agents: Individual and Team Effectiveness
  • Leading AI Transformation: Bigger Than You Imagine, Harder Than You Expect
  • Using AI at Work: Practical Choices and Better Results
  • Search & Discoverability in the Era of AI
  • Don't Just Prompt AI - Govern it
  • AI-Powered Product Manager
  • Leverage AI and Human Connection to Lead through Uncertainty

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How It Works

Frequently Asked Questions

Nonprofits are under increasing pressure to prove results, compete for funding, and stay resilient through evolving economic conditions. To lead confidently in that environment, you need more than passion for the mission; you must have the ability to interpret financial signals, plan realistically, diversify revenue, and govern with clarity. In the Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate from Cornell’s renowned Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, you will build practical financial and leadership capability across the areas nonprofit leaders touch most often. You’ll learn how to read and interpret nonprofit financial statements, calculate and use key ratios, build and stress-test budgets, manage cash flow, evaluate debt financing, strengthen board governance, and expand revenue through fundraising, grants, and alternative income sources. You will also apply what you learn through structured, multi-part projects and tools that are designed for immediate use in your organization. You learn in a small, facilitated cohort with guided discussions and feedback that help you translate concepts into decisions you can defend to boards, funders, and internal stakeholders. If you want stronger financial decision making, more sustainable funding and planning, and governance practices that help your mission thrive, you should choose Cornell's Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate.
Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate is designed for nonprofit leaders who want to make better decisions. Instead of a purely self-paced experience with generic quizzes, you learn in a facilitated cohort where discussion, feedback, and applied work are central to the experience. Here is what makes the learning model distinct: * Curriculum that is specific to nonprofit organizations, including nonprofit financial statements, liquidity and reserves, restricted and unrestricted funds, board governance, and fundraising realities * Small-cohort learning with an expert facilitator who guides discussions and provides feedback on your project work so you aren’t learning in isolation * Applied, multi-part projects that build your ability to analyze financial health, create workable budgets and cash plans, evaluate debt choices, and strengthen governance and revenue strategy * Practical tools and templates you can reuse, including ratio calculation tools, budgeting and planning frameworks, governance and onboarding resources, and fundraising and grant-planning materials * Live online sessions built into courses to deepen interpretation, share challenges, and discover how peers approach real nonprofit decisions Because the content is designed around how nonprofits actually operate, you leave with a stronger decision-making toolkit you can use with your board, finance committee, development team, and executive leadership. Enrolling in this certificate also provides you with a 6-month All-Access Pass to eCornell's live online AI Workshops, interactive sessions led by world-class Cornell faculty that combine Ivy League insight with practical applications for busy professionals. Each 3-hour Workshop features structured instruction, guided practice, and real tools to build competitive AI capabilities, plus the opportunity to connect with a global cohort of growth-oriented peers. While AI Workshops are optional to earning a certificate, they enhance certificate programs through: * Integrating AI perspectives across most curricula * Responding to emerging AI developments and trends * Offering direct engagement with Cornell faculty at the forefront of AI research
Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate is designed for professionals who influence nonprofit financial sustainability and governance, even if finance is not your formal background. The Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate is a strong fit if you are: * A CEO or executive director who needs more confidence interpreting financial statements, budgets, and financial trade-offs * A nonprofit leader, administrator, or decision-making program staff member who contributes to budgeting, planning, or resource decisions * A new or current board member who wants to strengthen oversight, governance practices, and financial stewardship * A lawyer or advisor serving the nonprofit sector who wants a clearer understanding of nonprofit finance, governance, and revenue structures Because the curriculum starts with foundations and builds into application, it is especially helpful if you want a clear, structured path to strengthen financial leadership in your current organization.
You will complete applied, multi-part projects that mirror the kinds of analysis and planning nonprofit leaders do with boards, finance teams, and development staff. Projects are structured in steps, so you can build from financial fundamentals into strategy and action. Typical projects in Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate include: * Interpreting nonprofit financial statements and classifying assets, liabilities, and net assets * Analyzing an organization’s statement of activities, statement of financial position, and statement of cash flows to identify trends and risks * Determining appropriate accounting treatment for a grant scenario * Calculating and interpreting 10 core financial ratios and using the results to evaluate organizational financial conditions * Assessing budgeting culture and improving the budgeting approach for better alignment with mission and strategy * Rebalancing an operating budget in a scenario-based case and proposing realistic revenue and expense changes * Creating a cash-crisis plan based on cash flow timing, liquidity needs, and reserve strategy * Conducting a bond rating-style debt analysis to evaluate affordability and financial risk * Drafting a gift agreement and assessing readiness, structure, and tactics for a capital campaign * Preparing core sections of a grant application you can reuse for future proposals * Proposing alternative revenue ideas and creating a practical plan to pursue a mission-aligned option * Developing a marketing, branding, and social media plan to support fundraising goals * Evaluating board governance, creating a RAPID decision-making plan, drafting a decline management strategy, and building a stakeholder map for partnerships or alliances Throughout your course experience, you will get guidance from your facilitator and learn from peer discussion, so your work becomes more usable and easier to communicate to stakeholders.
Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate equips you to lead nonprofit financial strategy and governance decisions with greater confidence, structure, and credibility. After completing the Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate, you will have the skills to: * Use accounting statements and financial analysis to assess the financial strength of your organization * Maintain the financial health and equilibrium of an organization through the appropriate use of budgeting, financing, and cash flow management * Obtain financial backing and community support through fundraising and alternative revenue sources * Build, manage, and lead organizational governance through the life cycle of the organization Students commonly describe this program as immediately useful for nonprofit leaders because it provides practical tools, clear frameworks, and structured guidance they can bring straight into their organizations. They report that the projects help them translate real-world experience into more disciplined strategy and governance, using templates and methods for board roles and decision making, stakeholder mapping for partnerships, strategic planning frameworks, fundraising and revenue diversification approaches, and stronger nonprofit finance skills for interpreting statements, cash flow, and ratios. What truly sets eCornell apart is how our programs unlock genuine career transformation. Learners earn promotions to senior positions, enjoy meaningful salary growth, build valuable professional networks, and navigate successful career transitions.
Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate, which consists of 4 short courses, is designed to be completed in 2 months. Each course in this certificate runs for 2 weeks, with a typical weekly time commitment of 5 to 7 hours. In practice, your schedule is designed to be workable alongside a full-time job. Most of the coursework is asynchronous, meaning you can watch videos, complete readings, and work on assignments on your own time within each week of a course. You will also have opportunities to join live online sessions in each course for facilitated discussion and deeper Q&A on the week’s topics.
Students commonly describe Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate as immediately useful for nonprofit leaders who want practical tools, clear frameworks, and structured guidance they can bring straight into their organizations. Many say it helps them translate real-world experience into more disciplined strategy and governance, with projects that connect directly to their current role, whether they are new to the sector or seasoned executives. What students tend to highlight most often includes: * Practical nonprofit governance tools for clarifying board roles and decision making * Stakeholder mapping methods they can use to strengthen partnerships and alliances * Strategic planning frameworks that help organize priorities and sustainability efforts * Fundraising and revenue strategies that link mission, marketing, donor engagement, and diversification * Nonprofit finance skill building, including interpreting financial statements, cash flow, and ratios for leadership decisions * Applied assignments that use the student’s own organization — not hypothetical scenarios — as the primary case * Clear, well-organized modules with short, digestible videos and downloadable resources * A flexible, asynchronous format that fits demanding schedules, with optional live sessions for deeper discussion * Strong facilitator presence, including timely, actionable feedback on projects * A manageable workload that feels rigorous and worthwhile without being overwhelming Across courses, students frequently say they finish with a shared language for governance, strategy, fundraising, and financial stewardship, plus templates and tools they can reuse with their teams, boards, and finance or development committees.
You will learn how to interpret the three primary nonprofit financial statements and translate them into a clear view of organizational health. In Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate, you will practice: * Reading and interpreting a statement of activities, statement of financial position, and statement of cash flows * Distinguishing unrestricted, temporarily restricted, and permanently restricted net assets * Calculating and interpreting key indicators of liquidity, operating performance, and leverage, including a set of 10 core ratios you compute and apply * Using ratio results to identify strengths, risks, and strategic adjustments you may need to discuss with leadership or the board If you have ever been handed financials and wished you could quickly see what matters most, this part of the program is designed to build that confidence and repeatable process.
You will learn how to build and evaluate budgets that reflect mission priorities while staying realistic about revenue volatility, competitive pressure, and the timing of cash. In Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate, you will explore: * Operating versus capital budgets and multiple budgeting methods you can use depending on your organization’s culture and needs * Cash flow cycles, liquidity planning, and how to think about reserves and short-term financing tools * How nonprofit debt works, including common bond types, what bond ratings evaluate, and how to assess whether borrowing is affordable and aligned with the mission * Strategic frameworks you can apply to budgeting decisions, including SWOT analysis and Porter’s Five Forces This combination helps you move from budgeting as an annual exercise to budgeting as a management system for sustainability.
You will learn how to think about nonprofit revenue as a portfolio that includes fundraising and other mission-aligned income sources. In Cornell’s Financial Success for Nonprofits Certificate, you will work on: * Core fundraising principles and donor motivation, including models that help you match tactics to your nonprofit’s context * Gift agreements and stewardship considerations that protect both mission intent and operational clarity * Capital campaign readiness, structure, and launch planning * Key sections of a grant application, with an emphasis on aligning opportunities with mission and capacity * Alternative revenue sources such as earned income ideas and grants, plus practical considerations for revenue contracts * Communication strategies that connect branding, marketing, and social media to fundraising goals You will leave with frameworks and draft materials you can refine and reuse for future fundraising and revenue planning.