Data Analysis for Corporate Finance
Building financial models using SQL, Python, and MS PowerBI
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1.0 • 1 Rating
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Have you ever tried to learn to code or to use advanced visualization tools? If so, I am sure you know how daunting it is to learn by yourself.
Generally, tools and books follow an encyclopedism approach, i.e., books attempt to teach every feature about a coding language or tool. This implies hundreds, if not thousands of pages simply to tackle a single topic, whether SQL, Python, MS Excel, MS PowerBI, you name it. The journey from zero to hero to become proficient using numerical and visualization tools to take your career to the next level becomes an ordeal that requires years and thousands of pages just to begin putting the pieces of the puzzle together. However, the reality is that you do not need to learn absolutely every available feature to use those tools and deliver a superior project.
Rather than teaching you about the forest, I will discuss specific trees. Why? Because once you become familiar and confident nurturing a few trees, growing a forest becomes a simple process of planting new trees. This book provides the fundamental blocks so that you can learn about financial data science and take these tools and start using them tomorrow. The scope of the selected tools will empower you to see a considerable improvement in your financial modeling skills.
The book is designed to provide corporate finance professionals the ability to start immediately using advance tools for concrete real-world tasks.
Therefore, this book is all about functionalism. It is about providing you with tools that will put you to work and dramatically change the way you analyze data. Once you see the benefits, it will become natural to keep expanding your domain knowledge, leveraging today's endless available educational resources.
Customer Reviews
Worst Book ever don’t waste your money
If I could rate this book any lower I would. Firstly, it’s not optimized for reading on your tablet as the examples are blurry making it impossible to follow. Secondly, this isn’t meant for people trying to learn how to use the various programmes mentioned here ie Python, SQL etc as there’s no guide on how to navigate these installations. This takes up 90% of your time trying to figure these out. Lastly the author moves from one programme to the next randomly. For instance in the beginning of the book you are asked to download Jupyter then when he gets to the meat of how to actually apply his crash course in the various programmes he’s explained he then moves to VS code. As a beginner I ended up just buying Udemy courses on the subject instead. Worst purchase ever. Don’t waste your money