Build Financial Analysis Skills From Ground Up

Our six-month program starts September 2025 and walks you through the fundamentals without overwhelming you. We focus on what actually matters when you're looking at company numbers and making sense of market trends.

Schedule Info Session
Financial analysis learning environment

What Guides Our Teaching

We've been teaching financial concepts since 2019. These principles shape how we approach each lesson and work with every student who walks through our doors.

01

Clear Over Complex

Financial jargon exists everywhere. But you won't find us hiding behind fancy terms. When a concept needs three sentences to explain, we use three sentences instead of cramming it into one confusing statement.

02

Real Company Examples

Every module includes actual balance sheets and income statements from companies operating in Thailand and Southeast Asia. You'll work with the same type of data you'd encounter in an entry-level analyst role.

03

Mistakes Are Part of Learning

Our students often misread financial ratios in their first attempts. That's completely normal. We build review sessions specifically for addressing common errors and helping you understand where calculations went sideways.

04

Small Group Focus

Each cohort caps at 14 students. This lets us spend time with individuals who need extra support on cash flow statements or ratio analysis. No one gets lost in the back of a lecture hall.

05

Questions Welcome Anytime

Stopped on a depreciation calculation at 9 PM? Send us a message. We respond within 24 hours during the program and keep a shared question board where students help each other figure things out.

06

Practical Over Theoretical

You'll spend more time analyzing financial statements than memorizing formulas. Theory matters, but we prioritize the skills you'll actually use when reviewing quarterly reports or preparing comparative analysis.

How We Structure The Program

Six months might sound like a long time. But financial analysis has a lot of moving parts. We've organized everything into digestible weekly modules that build on each other.

Siriporn Wachiraphan
Siriporn Wachiraphan
Lead Instructor

Spent eight years at regional investment firms before switching to education in 2021. Still reviews financial statements for fun on weekends.

1

Foundation Building

Weeks 1-8 cover accounting basics and financial statement structure. You'll learn how balance sheets connect to income statements and why cash flow doesn't always match profit. We start with simple examples and gradually add complexity as your comfort level grows.

2

Ratio Analysis Deep Dive

Weeks 9-14 focus on the numbers everyone asks about: liquidity ratios, profitability metrics, efficiency indicators. You'll calculate dozens of ratios using real company data and learn what different results actually mean for business health.

3

Comparative Analysis Practice

Weeks 15-20 involve comparing companies within the same industry. This is where things get interesting because you start seeing patterns and understanding why one retail chain might show better margins than another despite similar revenue.

4

Final Project Work

Weeks 21-24 center on your comprehensive analysis project. You'll pick a publicly traded company, analyze three years of financial data, and present findings to the group. This becomes part of your portfolio when applying for analyst positions.

Common Struggles We Address

Teaching since 2019 means we've seen the same obstacles trip up new students repeatedly. Here's how we help you navigate the tricky parts without getting discouraged.

A

Understanding Cash Flow

The Struggle

Most beginners get confused when profitable companies show negative cash flow. The disconnect between accrual accounting and actual money movement takes time to grasp fully.

Our Approach

We dedicate three full sessions to cash flow statements with side-by-side comparisons. You'll trace individual transactions from income statement to cash flow until the connection becomes second nature.

B

Ratio Interpretation Context

The Struggle

Calculating ratios is straightforward math. But knowing whether a 2.5 current ratio is good or concerning depends on industry norms, company size, and business model specifics.

Our Approach

Every ratio lesson includes benchmark data from at least five companies in the same sector. You'll build reference sheets showing typical ranges and learn which factors push numbers higher or lower.

C

Spotting Red Flags

The Struggle

Financial statements can hide problems in footnotes or unusual line items. New analysts often miss warning signs because they focus only on headline numbers without digging deeper.

Our Approach

We dedicate two modules to detective work using real cases where companies faced financial trouble. You'll learn what unusual patterns look like and develop instincts for when something needs more investigation.

D

Building Analysis Confidence

The Struggle

Many students know how to run calculations but hesitate to draw conclusions or make judgments about company performance. The fear of being wrong keeps them from developing analytical voices.

Our Approach

Starting week 10, every student presents mini-analyses to the group weekly. We create a supportive environment where different interpretations get discussed openly and you learn that reasonable people can reach different conclusions from the same data.

Patcharee Sirichai

Patcharee Sirichai

Program Coordinator & Student Success Manager

Joined our team in 2023 after working in corporate training. Checks in with every student monthly to address concerns before they become obstacles. Former students often credit her for keeping them motivated during difficult modules.