Module 2 · Balance Sheet

What is a Balance Sheet?

See what your company owns, what it owes, and what's left for owners — all at a single point in time. Interactive training with AI coaching.

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A balance sheet is a financial snapshot of a company at a specific moment in time. It answers one fundamental question: what does this company own, and how did it pay for it? Everything on the left side (assets) must equal everything on the right side (liabilities plus equity) — that's why it's called a balance sheet.

The Balance Sheet Equation

The entire balance sheet rests on one equation: Assets = Liabilities + Equity. Assets are what the company controls — cash, inventory, equipment, accounts receivable. Liabilities are what the company owes to others — loans, accounts payable, deferred revenue. Equity is the difference — what belongs to the owners after all debts are paid.

Current vs. Long-Term Items

Assets and liabilities are each split into current (due within 12 months) and long-term categories. Current assets like cash and receivables tell you about short-term liquidity — can the company pay its bills this month? Long-term assets like property and equipment tell you about the company's productive capacity over years.

What the Balance Sheet Reveals

A company can be profitable on the income statement but still be in financial trouble if it has too much debt or too little cash. The balance sheet reveals this. Ratios like the current ratio (current assets ÷ current liabilities) and debt-to-equity tell the real story of financial health that the income statement alone can't show.

This training module walks you through a real balance sheet section by section, with AI coaching that explains what each number means for business decisions — no accounting degree required.

Learning Outcomes
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Understand the Balance Sheet Equation

Grasp why Assets = Liabilities + Equity and what happens when one side changes.

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Read Assets and Liabilities

Distinguish current from long-term items and understand what each category signals.

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Interpret Owner Equity

Understand what equity represents and how it changes over time as the business operates.

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Assess Financial Health

Use basic ratios like current ratio and debt-to-equity to evaluate company stability.

Frequently Asked Questions
Why is it called a balance sheet?
Because the two sides must always balance: total assets always equal total liabilities plus total equity. This equality is enforced by double-entry accounting — every transaction affects at least two accounts.
What is the difference between a balance sheet and an income statement?
The income statement shows what happened over a period of time (revenue and expenses). The balance sheet shows where things stand at a single point in time (what the company owns and owes). They connect through net income, which flows from the income statement into retained earnings on the balance sheet.
What is equity on a balance sheet?
Equity represents the owners' stake in the company — what would remain if the company sold all its assets and paid off all its debts. It includes paid-in capital (money invested by owners) and retained earnings (accumulated profits not paid out as dividends).
Is this module suitable for employees without a finance background?
Yes — that's exactly who it's built for. The interactive training explains every term in plain language with real examples, and the AI coach answers questions as you work through the material.
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