Numbers are essential tools used in the decision-making process in a
company. Effective management entails the proper use of financial
figures. But a lot of people have a fear of numbers stemming from
unpleasant experiences with them during their school years. In order to
understand and use numbers fear must be overcome first. Understanding
will then follow; you will know what numbers can tell and what they can
not tell. You will know when it is appropriate to use them and when it
is not. You will come to know their limitations. Only at this time
will figures become a useful tool for making decisions and enhancing the
quality of decisions.
Decision-making in a company usually
involves presenting financial figures to several managers, not all of
whom have backgrounds in finance. The objectives of presenting
financial figures to them are to educate and inform them of the
financial performance of the company and convince them of future trends
that must be considered in order to give direction to the company. This
means that the presentation must be clear and comprehensible to the
audience. It is not enough to print out financial statements, hand them
out and discuss them line by line. This will not accomplish
understanding and clarity. Doing away almost completely with figures
and financial terms and steering away from technical discussions is
tempting because it may seem easier and simpler, but neither will it
achieve the goals of educating, informing and convincing the audience.
A
better approach to presenting financial figures is to try to level the
financial understanding of the attendees. He should put himself in
their shoes and think of ways to incorporate financial terms and figures
in his presentation in an easily understandable manner, explaining
along the way the terms that can not be replaced with layman's terms.
To
prepare for the challenge of presenting financial figures, the
presenter must first select the most critical numbers, making sure that
all assumptions or basis for each are explained. Decide also which
financial terms and concepts are needed for the presentation and how
these terms can be explained in layman's terms.
It is a good idea
to develop an outline of your presentation showing the objectives,
critical financial concepts or principles and critical figures. This
will serve as a guide for the flow of your presentation.
The
presentation should start with an explanation of the objectives. Tell
the audience what you wish to accomplish and give them a summary of the
discussion points. Establish clearly the importance of understanding
the critical concepts that you are including in your presentation. Tell
the audience why they need to understand the concepts. To explain the
concepts, you can relate them to some familiar and ordinary situations.
Analogies can be used as a tool to accomplish this. To maintain your
audience's attention throughout the presentation, keep referring back to
your familiar and ordinary situations that you used as examples so that
your audience can keep up with the story that you are trying to tell.
Take short breaks to let the audience absorb the ideas and figures and
encourage them to ask questions.
Presenting Financial Figures
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 10:25 PM
