Learn to Read Business Numbers That Actually Matter
Financial statements aren't mysterious. You just need someone to explain them without the jargon. Our program teaches working professionals and entrepreneurs how to analyze company finances using real-world data from Thai businesses—so you can make better decisions.
        Why Most People Struggle With Financial Analysis
Here's the thing—most training programs dump accounting formulas on you without context. They expect you to memorize ratios but never explain what they mean in practice.
We take a different path. Instead of starting with theory, we begin with actual business scenarios. You'll work with income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow reports from real companies operating in Thailand. Then we show you what to look for.
- Recognize red flags in financial statements before they become problems
 - Compare companies in the same industry using metrics that reveal real performance
 - Understand where cash actually goes and why profit doesn't always mean liquid funds
 - Build confidence reading annual reports without getting lost in footnotes
 
          Our students learn by analyzing real financial data, not hypothetical textbook examples. You'll work with actual reports from both public and private companies.
Three Skills You'll Actually Use
We don't teach everything. Just the analysis techniques that make a difference when you're evaluating investments, vendors, or your own business performance.
Statement Reading
Learn to read the three core financial statements quickly. We focus on what actually tells you about business health and skip the noise.
Ratio Analysis
Calculate and interpret the ratios that matter for liquidity, profitability, and efficiency. You'll know which ratios to use when and why.
Comparative Review
Compare companies within industries and track performance over time. This is where patterns emerge and smart decisions happen.
What You'll Actually Learn
Our autumn 2025 program runs eight weeks. Each module builds on practical skills—no fluff, no complicated theory you'll never use.
Income Statement Deep Dive
Revenue recognition, cost structures, operating margins. You'll learn what gross profit really tells you and why EBITDA isn't always helpful. We'll examine how seasonal businesses show different patterns and what expense ratios reveal about management decisions.
By the end of week two, you'll spot inconsistencies in revenue reporting and understand when companies are stretching their numbers.
                
                "I used to skip the income statement and just look at bottom line profit. Now I understand why that was a mistake. The program showed me how to read between the lines."
Small Business Owner, Bangkok
Balance Sheet Fundamentals
Assets, liabilities, equity—and what they actually mean for company stability. We focus on working capital, debt structure, and asset quality. You'll learn why two companies with identical profit can have completely different financial health.
We spend extra time on inventory analysis and accounts receivable because that's where problems often hide.
                
                "The balance sheet section changed how I evaluate potential suppliers. I can now spot companies that might have cash flow problems before signing long-term contracts."
Procurement Manager, Chiang Mai
Cash Flow Reality Check
This is where everything clicks. The cash flow statement shows you what actually happened with money—not accounting estimates. You'll learn why profitable companies sometimes fail and how to track cash conversion cycles.
We break down operating, investing, and financing activities. Then we show you how to use this information to predict whether a company can sustain its operations or needs external funding soon.
Industry Comparison Methods
Financial ratios mean nothing without context. A 5% margin might be excellent in retail but terrible in software. You'll learn how to benchmark companies against industry standards and understand when outliers signal opportunity or risk.
We use real data from Thai public companies across manufacturing, retail, services, and technology sectors. You'll practice comparing similar businesses and explaining what the differences mean.