Visualization in Corporate Finance

corporate finance acumenDownload "Business Visualization: A New Way to Communicate Financial Information," a Business Strategy Series brief by veteran business acumen training experts Robin Helweg-Larsen and Eliza Helweg-Larsen.

Business visualization makes big-picture financial information understandable to everyone, promoting buy-in, credibility, effective decision-making and training. It facilitates competitive analysis, provides a competitive edge, assists in global communication and the identification of trends, and generally increases speed and accuracy of communication.

Takeaways

Business visualization does not replace the use of traditional financial statements, but complements them to give a sense of relationships and priorities. It provides the tangible, concrete representation people need for a conceptual grasp of the big picture as a prerequisite for understanding the meaning inherent in abstract numbers.

Request this brief to see how business visualization facilitates the communication of the financial results for individual companies, as well as for comparing companies and for following a company through time. Please fill the form to request this brief now. Your information is private and we never spam.

About the authors of this guide

Robin Helweg-Larsen, Eliza Helweg-Larsen and their team have guided hundreds of global brands in choosing and using business acumen training solutions to gain a competitive edge. Since 1993, brands such as Bic, Coca-Cola, General Electric, Hewlett Packard, McCormick, and Michelin have put tens of thousands employees through their programs. Fill the form to get their valuable insights today.

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Excerpt

"Historically, financial statements have been presented as columns of numbers. However, there is another way to view financial data that helps financial and non-financial staff understand the data and see new possibilities for corporate growth. When financial data is presented graphically as a 3-D relief map, the use of color, patterns, positional relationships and motion contribute to the ability to see, understand and process information in a different way."