Every month your accountant sends you a report. You nod, file it away, and keep making decisions on instinct. This course changes that — without turning you into an accountant.
We believe financial literacy is a practical skill, not an academic credential. These four principles shape every session.
We work with the actual reports participants receive each month — not invented numbers from a textbook. Learning happens when the material is immediately recognizable.
Accounting language can obscure rather than illuminate. We translate the numbers into the language of operations, decisions, and consequences that managers already understand.
The goal is never to turn a manager into an accountant. The goal is to give managers the specific reading skills they need to make better-informed decisions in their role.
Understanding when something is going wrong — before the crisis arrives — is one of the most valuable skills a manager can develop. We build that awareness deliberately.
Each session builds on the previous one. By the end, you'll be reading a financial report the way a manager should — not the way an accountant does.
Most managers look at the bottom line and stop there. This session reveals why gross profit tells you more about your business health than net profit does.
A business can grow its revenue and still lose ground. This session shows exactly how fixed costs erode margins and what the warning patterns look like.
Financial trouble rarely arrives without warning. This session teaches you to read the early signals that appear in monthly reports — months before a crisis becomes visible.
This program is built for the people who run things day-to-day in Mexican small and mid-sized businesses — and who need to understand the financial picture without becoming finance specialists.
These are not abstract concepts. They are specific reading abilities that apply directly to the reports you already receive.
The format is designed for people who learn by doing — not by listening to lectures about hypothetical companies.
Each participant brings the monthly financial reports they actually receive. The analysis happens on real numbers from real businesses — not invented case studies.
Sessions are structured as guided discussions, not lectures. Participants work through questions together, which accelerates understanding and surfaces insights that solo study doesn't reach.
Three sessions. Each one covers a specific, manageable topic. There is no information overload — only the skills that matter most for managers at the middle level.
The examples, the terminology, the structure of the reports, and the context all reflect how accounting actually works in Mexican small and mid-sized companies.
Three sessions. Your real numbers. A clearer picture of what's actually happening in the business you manage.