How We Started
Back in 2022, I was consulting for mid-sized companies around Ho Chi Minh City. Same story everywhere: finance teams drowning in spreadsheets, struggling to create reports that actually helped leadership make decisions.

The breaking point came during a project where a talented analyst spent three weeks on a quarterly budget report. Beautiful charts, perfect formatting – but it missed the key insights that would've saved the company 200 million VND in unnecessary expenses.
That's when we realized education needed to change. Not more theory about financial ratios, but practical skills for turning messy data into clear business intelligence.
Our Learning Philosophy
Real budget reporting isn't about perfect spreadsheets. It's about understanding what numbers actually tell you and presenting that story clearly to people who need to act on it.
We teach through real scenarios – analyzing actual anonymized data from Vietnamese companies, dealing with incomplete information, working under realistic deadlines.

Students work with the same tools they'll use at work: Excel, Power BI, sometimes even messy CSV files from legacy systems. Because that's what real financial analysis looks like.
Our curriculum changes based on what we see in actual Vietnamese businesses. When new regulations affect reporting requirements, we update our materials within weeks, not semesters.
Results That Matter
We track what happens after graduation. Not just job placement rates, but how our students actually perform in their roles.
Recent feedback from employers shows our graduates typically reduce monthly reporting time by 40-60% while improving accuracy and insight quality.

One graduate at a manufacturing company in Binh Duong created a dashboard that helped identify seasonal cash flow patterns, allowing better inventory planning. Another at a tech startup built budget tracking that spotted cost overruns three weeks earlier than their previous system.
But the feedback that matters most: "I finally understand what my numbers are telling me, and I can explain it to others clearly."