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Capital

‘Capital’ is a shorthand for ‘factors driving business finance and economic climates’, which is one of the three legs of triad mental model of business expertise. If you don’t know what that is, read this page first.

Broadly speaking, the Capital leg of the business expertise triad covers things like: P&L style thinking, capital allocation, capital structure and the relationship businesses have with capital markets. It also has to do with the ‘capital cycle’ (more broadly known as the market cycle).

It is this Capital aspect of expertise in business that Warren Buffett was referring to when he said “I am a better investor because I am a businessman, and a better businessman because I am an investor.”

Series, Guides and Cases

There is really one big series here:

  • The Expertise of Capital in Business — which describes all the various aspects of capital expertise in the context of business, and explains why, on a long enough timescale, good businesspeople must eventually act like good investors.

And three large concept sequences in the Commoncog Case Library that are relevant to this topic:

  • Capital Allocation — which contains cases of business leaders and companies with remarkable capital allocation skills.
  • The

‘Capital’ is a shorthand for ‘factors driving business finance and economic climates’, which is one of the three legs of triad mental model of business expertise. If you don’t know what that is, read this page first.

Broadly speaking, the Capital leg of the business expertise triad covers things like: P&L style thinking, capital allocation, capital structure and the relationship businesses have with capital markets. It also has to do with the ‘capital cycle’ (more broadly known as the market cycle).

It is this Capital aspect of expertise in business that Warren Buffett was referring to when he said “I am a better investor because I am a businessman, and a better businessman because I am an investor.”

Series, Guides and Cases

There is really one big series here:

  • The Expertise of Capital in Business — which describes all the various aspects of capital expertise in the context of business, and explains why, on a long enough timescale, good businesspeople must eventually act like good investors.

And three large concept sequences in the Commoncog Case Library that are relevant to this topic:

  • Capital Allocation — which contains cases of business leaders and companies with remarkable capital allocation skills.
  • The Capital Cycle — which contains cases of businesses navigating various capital cycles well or otherwise.
  • Capital Expertise — which is tied most closely to The Expertise of Capital in Business series above and includes cases of businesspeople doing fancy things with the capital side of the triad.

Here are other articles on the topic:

This topic overview was last updated .

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Articles //  Page 4

Feature image for Fundraising Without Investors

Fundraising Without Investors

Two personal stories of capital expertise 'in the small' — or why financing creativity can be just as important to smaller businesses, as it is in larger, more sophisticated ones.

 Members only
Feature image for The Skill of Capital

The Skill of Capital

What, exactly, is the skill of capital? What does it consist of? How do you recognise it? We walk through three stories, and then talk about the shape of the skill in practice.

Feature image for Dell's Capital Expertise

Dell's Capital Expertise

We trace Michael Dell's skill at the art of capital in business, and use it to examine how skill at capital allows you to make moves that aren't available to a novice business operator.

Feature image for Changing My Mind on Capital

Changing My Mind on Capital

Refactoring a network of beliefs built on a largely under-examined worldview.

 Members only
Feature image for The Games People Play With Cash Flow

The Games People Play With Cash Flow

One way that first principles thinking fails is when you build your analysis up from a deficient set of base principles. Everything is correct and true, but you still end up mistaken. Here's how that looks like in practice.

Feature image for Watch The Cash Flow

Watch The Cash Flow

Why cash flow is a good lens to use as we watch the current recession unfolding in real time. Written with the employee in mind.

Feature image for What The CEO Wants You To Know

What The CEO Wants You To Know

Ram Charan's 2001 book on business principles is probably the best concise introduction to how a business works.

Feature image for Chinese Businessmen: Cash Flow Is King

Chinese Businessmen: Cash Flow Is King

What free cash flow has to do with growth, and why Chinese businessmen in the South East Asian diaspora obsessed over it.