I spent twelve years making the same reporting mistakes everyone makes. Working at different investment firms across Belgium taught me that most professionals learn reporting through trial and error — which is expensive and time-consuming.
"The difference between good and great investment reporting isn't fancy software or complex models. It's understanding what decision-makers actually need to know."
After reviewing thousands of investment reports, I noticed the same gaps appearing repeatedly. Technical accuracy was rarely the issue. The problems were usually about clarity, context, and presenting information in ways that supported better decision-making.
That's why our curriculum focuses on communication alongside calculation. You'll learn to create reports that actually get read and acted upon, not just filed away.
For our autumn 2025 program, I'm adding new sections based on feedback from recent regulatory changes in Belgian financial reporting requirements. Real-world experience keeps evolving, so our teaching needs to evolve too.