Financial Statement Analysis Program
Most businesses fail because owners misread their numbers. We spent five years working with companies across Southeast Asia, and the pattern was obvious—poor cash flow visibility led to preventable crises. This program teaches you how to catch those warning signs before they become disasters.
View 2025 ScheduleOur Teaching Philosophy
We don't believe in textbook definitions. When someone's sitting across from their accountant feeling lost, generic formulas don't help. Our approach starts with actual financial statements—the messy, real-world kind—and breaks them down step by step.
Every module uses anonymized cases from Thai SMEs. You'll see how a manufacturer in Rayong nearly collapsed from inventory buildup, or how a Bangkok retailer discovered their profit margins were fiction. These aren't theoretical exercises. They're scenarios our instructors encountered while consulting.
By the end, you won't just memorize ratios. You'll understand why they matter and when they don't tell the full story.

Who Actually Teaches This

Preecha
Lead Instructor
Spent twelve years as a turnaround consultant before teaching. He's the one who'll explain why debt-to-equity ratios can lie, using stories from companies he helped restructure.

Siriporn
Case Study Coordinator
Former CFO who now curates our case library. She brings in fresh examples every quarter and moderates the group analysis sessions where things get interesting.

Narisa
Workshop Facilitator
Handles the practical workshops where you'll actually calculate ratios and build comparison models. She's patient with spreadsheet confusion—we all start somewhere.
How We Structure Learning
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Case-First Approach
Every session opens with a real company's situation. You'll get their statements, some context, and twenty minutes to form initial thoughts before we discuss as a group.
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Progressive Complexity
Week one covers basic liquidity. By week eight, you're analyzing consolidated statements from companies with subsidiaries. The difficulty ramps up, but each level builds on the previous one.
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Peer Review Sessions
You'll work in small groups to analyze assigned companies, then present findings to the class. Other participants ask questions. It's uncomfortable at first, but that's where the learning happens.
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Tool Agnostic Training
Some folks use Excel, others prefer Google Sheets or specialized software. We teach concepts that work regardless of your tools, though we'll show efficiency tricks for common platforms.
