ACCA essentially is a program or a professional certification/accreditation process to produce industry-standard competent and successful finance professional.

The process of ACCA for non-related is that they need to go through Foundation of ACCA. This to gives primer to the user regarding the essence of ACCA and it’s body of knowledge.

After Foundations in Accountancy Qualifications, the next is applying for The ACCA Qualification, which mainly focuses on Applied Knowledge (as in ) and Applied Skills, which then after that would Strategic Professional Exams, and once all is passed, next is to be PER.

Foundation: https://www.accaglobal.com/my/en/qualifications/glance/foundation-level/course-details.html

Once you become ACCA members, you can then start getting into Certificate (other other like Data Analytics etc). Also to move further you can get this University of London MSc in Professional Accountancy

In order to achieve the ACCA Qualification, students have to:

  • complete a maximum of 13 exams, depending on prior experience and qualifications
  • complete an Ethics and Professional Skills module
  • evidence three years of practical work experience within a relevant role.

This means that students can complete the ACCA Qualification in a minimum of three years.

Another way you can improve your ACCA qualification is to get this too: https://www.london.ac.uk/study/courses/undergraduate/bsc-professional-accountancy

Total:

Are you aware of ACCA courses?

From Foundation to Applied Knowledge and Skills to Strategic Professional?

For Foundation the one I’ll be taking is:

Level 2: (FA1, MA1), Level 3: (FA2, MA2), Level 4: (FBT, FFA, FMA), Level 4 CAT: (FAU, FFM).

Then Proceeding to ACCA:

LW, PM, TX, FR, AA, FM, SBR, SBL, AFM, APM