How to Read a P&L Like a CEO, Not an Accountant
You receive an email from your bookkeeper. An attachment sits there, labeled with the month and the year. You open the document. Your eyes skip past the top line. They skip past the detailed expenses. You look directly at the bottom right corner. If the number shines in black, you breathe a heavy sigh of relief. If the number glares in red, your chest tightens with immediate anxiety. You close the document and go back to work. You treat your financial statement like a report card. You view it as a final grade on your performance for the previous thirty days.