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Complete guide to understanding and writing financial reports with clear communication
Accompanying the hugely successful How to Read a Financial Report, How to Write a Financial Report is your non-specialist and jargon-simplified guide to the art of writing a financial report and effectively communicating critical financial information and operating results to your target audience. This book also covers utilizing different KPIs and types of reports and statements to convey a cohesive quantitative story to everyone reading your report, even if they aren't experts in accounting and finance.
This book pays special attention to the "big three" financial statements, the differences between internal and external financial information/reports, and confidentiality factors, disclosure levels, and risk elements when deciding which information to include. This book also discusses important elements in financial reports, including:
With everything readers need to write, analyze, and communicate financial accounting reports, How to Write a Financial Report earns a well-deserved spot on the bookshelves of investors, lenders, business leaders, analysts, and managers seeking to improve their writing and comprehension skills, along with investors seeking to better understand where financial information comes from and how it is presented.
Over the past 30+ years, Tage C. Tracy has operated a financial consulting firm focused on offering CFO/executive-level support and planning services to private companies on a fractional basis, working primarily with startups, rapid growth companies, strategic exits and acquisitions, and turnarounds and challenged environments.
List of Exhibits vii
Preface xi
Part One-Financial Report Writing Basics - What You Absolutely Must Know! 1
1 Communicate or Die! 3
2 Target Audience "E" - External Users 15
3 Target Audience "I" - Internal Consumers 27
4 Introducing CART - To Start, the Big "C," Completeness 37
5 Embracing CART - Accuracy, Reliability, and Timeliness, the Best of Friends 49
Part Two-Financial Statements - The Economic Heartbeat of a Company 61
6 Understanding the Income Statement 63
7 Trusting the Balance Sheet 73
8 Relying on the Statement of Cash Flows 85
9 Connecting the Financial Statement Dots 97
10 The Significance of Financial Forecasts 107
Part Three-The Types and Targets of Financial Reports 123
11 The Role of Accounting 125
12 Preparing Financial Reports from Company Financial Statements - External Users 137
13 Preparing Financial Reports from Company Financial Statements - Internal Consumers 151
14 Preparing Financial Reports from Company Financial Information 165
15 Revisiting Our Example Company with a Slight Twist 179
About the Author 197
Index 199
Let me be as frank and blunt as possible to start this book, keeping in mind that the following statement is coming from an accounting and financial professional that has spent the better part of his entire career, almost 40 years, primarily "crunching numbers" (for lack of a better term) and on occasion, writing a book or two.
Writing a financial report cannot be achieved unless you can effectively communicate. Period!
When I mean communicate, I mean it in the broadest sense possible as communication skills extend far beyond what a typical financial or accounting professional may view as representing essential communication skills such as simply stating that 2 plus 2 equals four. What you will quickly learn from this book is that in order to effectively communicate, you must be able to speak, listen, observe, write, read, calculate, educate, lead, interpret, analyze, and direct, all equally well, and be able to package and present your financial report and deliver it via a story to your target audience in a format that they can understand, trust, and believe.
As you work through this book, a primary goal will be to find the proper balance between helping you (in the role of producing a financial report) understand how to prepare best in class financial reports as well as assisting you (in the role of student attempting to learn more about financial reports and financial statements) to expand and improve your knowledge of accounting and financial concepts and topics.
To start, I'll warn you that I tend to emphasize using acronyms to remember key concepts, so out of the gate keep in mind the acronym FIK, which stands for fundamentals, interest, and knowledge. That is, you must have the proper fundamentals to write and communicate (e.g., can you structure a sentence?), have an appropriate level of passion and interest in the subject matter (nothing more painful than reading content that the author has limited interest in), and have advanced knowledge in the subject matter (to ensure your target audience understands the financial report and the conclusions you're drawing).
To help you navigate the book, I have prepared this simple summary of the book's structure that covers the how, who, what, where, and why of preparing financial reports:
Finally, I would like to mention that throughout this book, I sometimes will use the phrases of financial information and financial reports interchangeably. To be clear, financial information really represents the source accounting and financial data that needs to be communicated in a financial report. Or thinking of it differently, you cannot produce a reliable financial report without having quality financial information and vice versa; having quality financial information unto itself does not mean a business will have access to a reliable financial report. Both are highly connected and are dependent on one another, but it is important to not confuse these two concepts as one does not automatically produce the other.
To master the art of preparing the most effective financial reports, you will gain a new appreciation of just how important developing communication skills is and why, in all the books I've written by myself and/or in partnership with my late father, five critical concepts should be kept in mind at all times:
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