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Build expertise with flexible, online learning for professionals

The changing world of business calls for leaders who continually evolve to meet new challenges. Gies Professional Credentials offer flexible, highly relevant learning opportunities that empower you to expand your impact and achieve your goals. Our online learning continuum is intentionally designed to give you control over your point of entry, your path, and your pace.

Online Courses, Certificates, and Badges

Whether you want to upskill, reskill, or just explore a course that interests you, our expertise in online learning ensures that whatever path you choose will be engaging, highly relevant, and flexible, to fit your busy life and professional goals. You can even stack credits toward a specialized certificate or Gies Online graduate degree, if you choose. 

Graduate Certificates

Graduate Certificates

Graduate certificates are available in Accounting Data Analytics, Accounting Foundations, CPA PathwaysDigital Marketing, and Strategic Leadership and Management. These 12-credit hour online programs deliver immediately applicable business know-how.

Skills iCademies

Skills iCademies

Skills iCadmies are a collection of 15-20 short micro-courses focused on specific skill development. iCademies are currently available in Business Analytics and Leadership Skills.

Earn CPE Credits

CPE Credits

CPAs who are licensed in Illinois and any states who have reciprocal agreements are eligible to earn CPE credits with our courses.


Google Career Certificates

To advance our mission of delivering life-changing access to business education, Gies has partnered with Google to prepare learners in the Google Career Certificate programs with critical business skills.

The Professional Success Skills specialization from Gies can be bundled with any Google Career Certificate to earn a dual badge of completion from Google and Gies Business. This noncredit specialization will prepare you with critical business skills like leadership, teamwork, and strategic thinking.

The Financial Analysis - Skills for Success specialization was built to complement Google's Data Analytics Career Certificate. This noncredit specialization will help you develop an analytical mindset in the areas of finance, accounting, and financial statement analysis. 

Enterprise Partnership Programs

Our Enterprise Partners program offers employers the opportunity to advance their workforce through customized online and on-site educational experiences. For employees, the program helps accelerate their careers. For employers, it advances the organization. We invite you to partner with us to access customized, high-quality, and engaging content to cultivate your employees’ business skills. From information about the fundamentals of business to disruptive technologies, we provide the global workforce access to the highest quality, stackable, in-demand content.

"Developing the program with Gies as the partner was a very strong message of how serious we were about [internal promotion]."

Dr. James C. Leonard
MD President, Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
The Carle Foundation

Gies News and Events

How information disclosure affects decision making

Sep 22, 2020, 08:40 by Aaron Bennett
Gies Instructor of Accountancy Jalal Sani researches real effects of disclosure, information acquisition and disclosure, organization of firms, and financial reporting quality. His research has been published in the Journal of Accounting and Economics.

Passive investments like stock market index funds are becoming increasingly popular with today’s busy investors. But with so much money flowing into these unique funds, there’s been an unexpected result. Increasingly, a small number of investment firms are gaining a large stake in a number of competing companies. In the financial sector alone, the Big Three investment powerhouses — Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street — own 18% of Bank of America, 19% of JPMorgan Chase and 20% of Citigroup. With so many industries experiencing this dramatic change in ownership, Gies College of Business professor Jalal Sani wanted to know one thing — how does common ownership impact the release of financial information that companies normally keep close to their vests?

“I’m generally interested in understanding the economics of these disclosures,” said Sani, who co-authored a study looking into this rising corporate trend. Their research focused on situations where investors simultaneously held a stake larger than 5% in at least two firms in the same industry.

To make their analysis, they looked at a number of voluntary disclosures that aren’t required by law. In this case, they found that common ownership significantly increased two of these disclosures — management earnings and capital expenditure forecasts. They also found that the relationship between common ownership and disclosure was greater in industries where the proportion of commonly owned companies was higher. While the full effects of this growing corporate trend may not be known for some time, their findings suggest that common ownership could offer benefits for investors, including greater transparency of the financial health and practices of major companies.

If more information is helpful in investing, it’s essential in management, where CEOs are often tasked with managing large teams and substantial operations. In a separate study, Sani found a link between richer information environments and the delegation of decision-making within companies. One reason, said Sani, is that richer information helps CEOs better evaluate and motivate the lower-level managers to whom decisions are delegated. Sani, who will be teaching decision making for accountancy at Gies, says that’s relevant to the class he’ll be leading.

The course covers the design of management accounting systems that are essential to business operations. “The idea is that these systems should provide managers with information that helps them in planning, controlling operations, making key decisions, and evaluating employees.” In this case, it’s not about the quantity of information that CEOs receive, explains Sani; it’s about providing them with the right information they need to make informed operational and strategic decisions.

Sani says he was drawn to Gies by the supportive and collaborative faculty he met at the school, and he’s excited both to work with, and learn from, his colleagues as he continues his research. He’s also looking forward to his time in front of the classroom, as he helps shape the next generation of business leaders. “As a student I learned from excellent professors and mentors who advised me, encouraged me, and supported me,” said Sani, who earned his PhD in business administration at Penn State’s Smeal College of Business. “I saw the value of having an inspiring professor, so I hope to be one.”