Why this exists
I spent years scaling a learning initiative across a Big Four firm, reaching over 10,000 members across the UK, the Americas, the Middle East and Europe. Doing that taught me something most subject experts never have to learn. Knowing a topic well and getting thousands of people to actually retain it are two completely different skills.
Most qualification prep is built for one job: get you through the exam. That matters. If you're studying for a professional qualification, passing is the whole point, and nothing here pretends otherwise. But passing and understanding aren't the same achievement, and most material only aims at the first one.
Qudrane is built to do both. Every course is structured so the concepts genuinely cement, so what you've learned doesn't evaporate the day after the exam, but stays with you and shows up in how you actually think and work afterwards. That's the same standard I held material to at scale, across every region, with over 10,000 learners: it isn't enough that people sit through it, they have to actually retain and use it.
This is a small, independent operation, not a training arm of a larger firm. Our first course, CISI's Risk in Financial Services, reflects deep experience in that specific subject. But the approach behind it isn't really about risk. It's about how learning is built so it sticks. That's why future courses won't necessarily stay in financial services. Programme delivery, AI, and other subjects are all on the roadmap, built the same way: properly, for genuine understanding, not just exam recall.
See the course this came from.
CISI Risk in Financial Services, the first course built this way.
View course