A structured weekly journey through the documents your accountant produces, explained in plain language from the ground up.
The course is built around a simple progression. The first week establishes context. Weeks two, three, and four each focus on one financial statement in depth. Week five connects the three statements into a unified reading framework. Week six gives you the practical vocabulary and questions to use with your accountant.
Each week includes explanatory material, annotated document examples, and reading exercises. There are no exams and no grades. The goal is comprehension, not certification.
An introduction to the three core documents. You learn why they exist, who prepares them, what legal and regulatory context surrounds them in Argentina, and what each one is designed to communicate. By the end of week one, you understand the purpose of each document before you look at a single number.
Assets, liabilities, and equity explained without formulas. You learn the standard layout of a balance sheet, what belongs in each section, and what the overall structure reveals about the financial position of a business at a specific point in time. Annotated examples show you how to navigate the document.
Revenue, cost of sales, gross margin, operating expenses, and net result — each line explained in sequence. You learn what each section of the income statement represents, how to read from top to bottom, and what the final result does and does not tell you about the business.
The most misunderstood of the three statements. This week explains the fundamental difference between profit and cash, why that distinction matters for any business, and how to read each of the three sections: operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities.
The real value of financial statements comes from reading them as a connected set. This week shows how a transaction appears across multiple documents, how changes in one statement reflect in another, and how to use all three together to form a coherent reading of a period's activity.
The final week is practical. You receive a vocabulary guide covering the terms most commonly used in accountant-client conversations. You receive a set of question templates organized by document type. You practice applying what you have learned to a complete set of sample statements.
Written and visual explanations for each concept covered in the course. Designed for reading at your own pace, with no time pressure.
Sample financial statements with line-by-line annotations explaining what each item means in plain language. These are the core learning tools of the course.
Structured exercises for each module. You practice reading sample documents with guided questions that reinforce comprehension of each statement type.
A comprehensive reference covering all terminology used in the course and in standard financial statements. Available throughout and after the course.
Prepared question sets organized by document type. Use these in your next meeting with your accountant to ask more informed questions.
All materials are accessible online at your own pace. No fixed schedule, no live sessions required. Work through the content when it suits you.
You are the right candidate for this course if you regularly receive financial statements from an accountant and find them difficult to interpret. No prior accounting knowledge is required or expected.
The course is not appropriate for people seeking financial advice, investment analysis, or professional accounting training. The scope is document literacy only.
If you are a registered SME owner, a business partner, or a manager who needs to understand financial reports, this course addresses that specific need.
Inquire About EnrollmentWe will provide details on how the course is delivered, how to access the materials, and what the enrollment process involves.
Contact Us