
Visual Finance
The One Page Visual Model to Understand Financial Statements and Make Better Business Decisions
by Georgi Tsvetanov
Should I read this?
appears in Business Finance and Accounting.
Visual Finance is a powerful, simple tool that you can learn in a couple of hours, and easily apply to real life. Over the past five years, this model has been used in thousands of "finance for nonfinancial managers" training sessions in more than 30 countries. Now for the first time, it has been finally released in a paperback format. Accounting ...
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Why recommended
appears in Business Finance and Accounting.
Recommendation Signals
Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.
No verified recommendation proof available yet.
Appears In

Not sure if this is the right fit?
Consider A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton G. Malkiel. Recommended by 3 sources.
“An approachable primer that combines market history, investor advice, and a persistent case for low-cost indexing. Early chapters read conversationally and help with basic allocation and retirement-planning choices; the middle of the book shifts into long historical narratives and technical critiques of active management that some readers find repetitive. Practical takeaways include simple rules for 401(k) contributions and why fees matter over decades. Limitations: denser theory stretches and comparatively short, tentative coverage of newer asset types.”
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Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.
