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Aaron Dossett's avatar

Fish, without disagreeing with anything you said I would make explicit a nuance about the balance sheet. It is indeed a snapshot of the present and some of the balance sheet components like the balance of a bank account are nothing more than that. Some balance sheet components also express a belief about the future (grounded in facts that can pass an audit) such as the value of intangible assets and inventory. For inventory it's a belief that it will be sold at more than it's carrying cost. For intangible assets like goodwill related to acquisitions it's a belief that the acquisition was worth more than you paid for it.

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Mike Kilbane's avatar

Fish, 100% agree with you on the importance of speaking finance. I also endorse your point that becoming conversant and knowledgeable in this doesn't require the investment of an MBA. Due to the my own circumstances, when I was transitioning from the military into consulting, I couldn't afford to take two years to immerse myself in getting the official degree, but I could commit to going through dozens of books on operations, financial statements, business finance, and other financial topics. I also invested in taking key members of the finance team out for lunch or a drink to get some tutoring and clarifications on topics that didn't fully make sense to me. I always found them eager and willing to share the nuance and details when asked. It's one thing to learn it from a book, it's another to actually sit down with a 10-Q or P&L and walk through it with someone in finance. Connecting financial concepts with business reality was a great learning experience. In addition to learning about what the numbers mean, I found the most valuable knowledge was getting a better understanding of how finance thought and what their priorities were.

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