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About Kesamurlon

Budgeting skills,
taught carefully

Kesamurlon has been running structured financial seminars since 2016, focused on one thing: helping people understand where their money goes and how to make better decisions with it.

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Kesamurlon seminar participants working through budgeting concepts

What
we do

Kesamurlon runs in-depth seminars on personal and household budgeting — structured sessions where participants work through real financial scenarios, not hypothetical exercises.

Participants reviewing budget spreadsheets during a seminar session

Budgeting is a skill that requires practice in context. Understanding the difference between fixed and variable expenses, or knowing when to revise a spending plan mid-month, only comes from working through actual numbers. Seminars give participants the space to do that alongside others facing similar challenges.

The platform operates across Canada, which means participants from different provinces attend the same sessions. A household in Edmonton tracks groceries differently than one in rural Nova Scotia. Instructors account for those differences in how examples are framed.

8+ yrs Running seminars
12+ Seminar formats
Canada-wide Participant reach

Structure behind every seminar

Sessions follow a clear sequence so participants always know where they are in the material.

01

Concept framing

Each session opens with a concrete problem — an irregular income month, an unexpected expense, a savings shortfall. The concept gets explained through that specific case, not in the abstract.

02

Guided analysis

Participants review sample budgets with real errors in them — wrong category allocations, missing line items, overlooked fixed costs. Finding and correcting those errors is the actual learning mechanism.

03

Group discussion

Discussion follows analysis. Participants compare how they approached the same problem. Different answers often reflect different household realities, and those differences generate useful conversation.

Instructor facilitating a budgeting discussion with online seminar participants

What participants leave with

At the end of each seminar, participants have a working budget template adjusted to their own income structure, a list of categories they were previously undercounting, and a clearer picture of where adjustments are most likely to stick.

No tool does this automatically. The seminar format exists because the decisions involved require judgment, and judgment improves with practice and feedback — not just with better spreadsheets.

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People behind
the seminars

Each instructor brings a specific background — accounting, financial counselling, household economics — and applies it directly to seminar content.

Brigitte Lefèvre, Lead Curriculum Designer at Kesamurlon

Brigitte Lefèvre

Lead Curriculum Designer

Brigitte spent a decade working with community financial literacy programmes before joining Kesamurlon. She designs the case studies used in seminars and reviews them after each cohort to keep examples grounded in current costs.

Tariq Ouellet, Senior Seminar Instructor at Kesamurlon

Tariq Ouellet

Senior Seminar Instructor

Tariq leads the interactive sessions and runs the discussion segments. His background is in household financial counselling, and he's particularly focused on budgeting for variable-income households and irregular pay cycles.

Kesamurlon seminar operations team

Participant Support

Operations Team

The operations team handles scheduling, regional access, and technical support across time zones. Participants from any province can reach someone directly before, during, or after a seminar.

Questions about our seminars or team?

Contact us