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Essential skills for oil and gas professionals covers the commercial, technical, and strategic foundations that every serious industry professional needs to operate effectively across the sector.
This training course addresses the full scope of the oil and gas business from upstream exploration and production arrangements through to project economics, risk management, and the geopolitics shaping global pricing.
Each day builds on the last, moving from industry structure and fiscal agreements into capital project planning, cost estimation, earned value management, and applied risk analysis.
The training course closes with a capstone case study on the Shale Gas Revolution in the United States grounding everything covered in a real-world context with lasting global significance.
Whether you are building foundational knowledge or consolidating experience across multiple disciplines, this training course delivers structured, applicable industry understanding.
This essential skills for oil and gas professionals training course is designed to give delegates a working command of the commercial, financial, and operational frameworks that drive decision-making across the industry.
By the end of this training course, delegates will be able to:
This essential skills for oil and gas professionals training course is suited to those looking to build or consolidate a cross-functional understanding of the industry — from commercial strategy through to project delivery and risk.
This training course is suitable for:
This essential skills for oil and gas professionals training course is delivered through structured instruction, applied exercises, and a real-world capstone case study giving delegates both the framework and the context to apply their learning immediately.
Delivery methods include:
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Common questions about our training courses
No — this course is designed to be accessible to professionals from both technical and non-technical backgrounds. The content spans commercial, financial, and operational disciplines, making it equally relevant to engineers moving into business roles and commercial professionals who need stronger technical context. The structure builds from fundamentals, so no prior specialist knowledge is assumed.
Day 3 is dedicated entirely to project economics, covering cash flow analysis, time value of money, NPV, IRR, payback period, and discounted cash flow calculation. Earned value management is also covered as a tool for measuring project performance. The financial content is applied to oil and gas contexts throughout, so the relevance is immediate.
The Day 5 case study examines the Shale Gas Revolution in the United States and its impact on global oil and gas markets, pricing, and geopolitics. It is used as a capstone because it brings together commercial, economic, and strategic themes covered across the full five days. Working through a real scenario of this scale gives delegates a practical test of the frameworks they have built throughout the course.
Yes — the course explicitly covers both NOC and IOC structures, including how their fiscal arrangements and contracting strategies differ. The commercial and project economics content applies equally across ownership models. The geopolitical content on Day 5 also addresses how both types of organisation are affected by global pricing dynamics.
Yes — Day 2 covers IOC and NOC structures, fiscal agreements, and contracting strategies in detail. You will gain an understanding of how reward structures are designed and what drives contracting decisions at a strategic level. This is particularly useful for professionals working in or moving toward commercial, legal, or project delivery functions.
Day 4 covers risk management as applied to capital projects — including specifying objectives, identifying uncertainties, and working with both technical and non-technical risks. Delegates complete a risk register review and stakeholder mapping exercise, making the content hands-on rather than purely theoretical. You will leave with a framework that is directly applicable to projects you are involved in.
The course is deliberately cross-disciplinary — covering commercial drivers, project planning, financial evaluation, and risk management in a single structured sequence. Delegates who attend often find they are better able to engage with colleagues across functions because they understand the pressures, language, and decision-making frameworks of adjacent disciplines. This is one of the most consistent outcomes reported by mid-career professionals who attend.
Yes — Day 3 covers what a cost estimate is, what factors influence it, and how earned value management is used to measure and report project performance. You will not leave as a specialist estimator, but you will have sufficient understanding to interrogate estimates, identify risks in cost assumptions, and contribute meaningfully to project economics discussions.