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    Home»Success»Leadership & Growth»How One Finance Officer Strengthened His Credibility and Influence in Public Financial Management
    Leadership & Growth

    How One Finance Officer Strengthened His Credibility and Influence in Public Financial Management

    FinancialAdviser.phFebruary 27, 20265 Mins Read
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    For Christian Amahan, earning the Certified Financial Management Professional (CFMP®) designation was not about adding letters after his name. It was a response to a gap he felt early in his career—one that experience alone could not fill.

    Working in a State Universities and Colleges (SUC) environment, Amahan regularly dealt with decisions involving public funds, externally funded research projects, and procurement processes. These were not routine accounting matters. Each decision carried political, legal, and operational consequences. While he had hands-on experience handling DOST-PCIEERD–funded projects, reconciling cash advances, and responding to Commission on Audit (COA) queries, he recognized a recurring challenge: technical accuracy was often not enough.

    “I realized that experience alone wasn’t sufficient,” Amahan explains. “I needed a structured, recognized credential that validated not just my technical knowledge, but also my judgment.”

    Bridging compliance and strategic finance

    One of Amahan’s strongest motivations for pursuing CFMP® was his desire to bridge two worlds that rarely meet comfortably in government institutions. On one side was strict compliance—government accounting under the Government Accounting Manual (GAM) and COA issuances. On the other was strategic financial management—planning, risk assessment, and performance measurement.

    The CFMP® appealed to him because it went beyond bookkeeping. The certification emphasized decision-making, trade-offs, and forward-looking financial thinking—skills often underdeveloped in rule-driven environments.

    He also saw the certification as a leadership signal. Within the Finance and Management Services (FMS) team, Amahan wanted to demonstrate that professional growth was still possible, even amid relentless deadlines and audit pressures.

    Preparing while the fiscal clock never stops

    Preparing for the CFMP® was, by his own account, a juggling act. Amahan began by mapping the CFMP® syllabus against real problems he handled daily—budget execution, cost allocation for projects, performance indicators, and internal controls. This approach helped him prioritize immediately relevant topics while allocating more time to conceptual areas such as risk management and corporate finance frameworks.

    His study strategy rested on three pillars: structured reading, applied practice, and peer discussion. Short but consistent study sessions—typically 45 to 60 minutes before or after work—became his routine. Practice exams and case studies played a central role, as CFMP® assessments focus on judgment rather than memorization.

    Crucially, he applied what he learned in real time. He volunteered for tasks that allowed him to use newly learned concepts, such as drafting certifications for externally funded projects and consolidating obligation and liquidation reports. This immediate application made the learning stick.

    Time management was the hardest challenge. Budget calls, disbursement schedules, and COA inspections did not pause for exam preparation. Amahan learned to value incremental progress and, when necessary, negotiated realistic study windows with supervisors by framing the certification as an asset to the unit.

    Equally challenging was the mindset shift. Government accounting rewards conservative, rule-based thinking. CFMP® required comfort with ambiguity and justified trade-offs. Learning to support recommendations using both regulatory compliance and sound financial reasoning proved to be one of the most valuable outcomes of the process.

    Credibility that translates into influence

    The benefits of earning the CFMP® became apparent over time. Professionally, Amahan noticed a marked increase in credibility. Budget proposals and financial recommendations were received with greater confidence, particularly when dealing with complex project liquidations and audit-sensitive matters.

    The credential also expanded the scope of his assignments. He was invited to participate in strategic initiatives, including revising internal control procedures, drafting practical SOPs for project cash advances, and leading efforts to improve obligation rates against allocations. These were roles that required trust as much as technical skill.

    Beyond task assignments, the CFMP® changed how Amahan approached his work. He became more comfortable challenging weak proposals and addressing control gaps constructively. The certification also sharpened his learning discipline, prompting regular professional reading and reflective practice.

    Perhaps most meaningfully, the credential positioned him as a mentor. Junior staff began seeking his advice on processes, certifications, and career paths—an outcome he describes as deeply rewarding.

    Opening doors beyond the university

    In environments where COA findings carry real consequences, professional designations serve as shorthand for competence. After earning the CFMP®, Amahan was entrusted with drafting and presenting financial certifications for clusters of externally funded research projects. Because his recommendations aligned regulatory interpretation with sound financial principles, disbursement decisions moved faster and audit queries decreased.

    The credential also supported leadership opportunities. He led a task force tasked with raising the university’s obligation rate, setting measurable targets and refining accountability processes. The initiative delivered tangible improvements in processing time and reduced outstanding obligations.

    Externally, CFMP® opened doors to sectoral workshops, interagency technical working groups, and potential secondment opportunities. These experiences broadened his perspective and reinforced the value of strategic financial thinking in the public sector.

    Advice for professionals considering CFMP®

    Amahan offers three practical pieces of advice to finance professionals considering the CFMP®: plan realistically, study in context, and focus on end-use.

    He emphasizes aligning study plans with the fiscal rhythms of one’s workplace, using small, consistent study blocks, and setting achievable milestones. He encourages candidates—especially those in SUCs—to connect CFMP® concepts directly to GAM and COA issuances they encounter daily.

    Most importantly, he advises treating the certification as a tool, not a trophy. “Think about how you want to use it—whether as a technical leader, a planner, or an adviser on funded projects—and let that goal guide your preparation.”

    For Amahan, the CFMP® delivered clearer judgment, stronger influence, and a wider professional network. In a system where accountability matters, those outcomes have proven well worth the effort.

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