Most business owners do not understand their own numbers.I do not say this to be harsh. I say it because I have sat across the table from hundreds of founders in Qatar and across the Gulf. People running serious businesses, employing dozens of staff, generating millions in revenue, who could not confidently explain the difference between their balance sheet, their profit and loss statement, and their cash flow. Three documents. Three different stories. Most owners read one and assume they have read all three.That assumption is expensive.Your profit and loss tells you whether the business made money over a period. Your balance sheet tells you what the business owns and owes at a moment in time. Your cash flow tells you whether the money actually moved. A business can be profitable on the P and L, healthy on the balance sheet, and still unable to pay salaries next week. Until you can read all three together, and understand what each is telling you, you are flying a plane while watching only one instrument.Here is a smaller test that reveals the same gap. Ask your team the difference between margin and markup. Ninety-five per cent will not be able to answer correctly. A thirty per cent markup is not a thirty per cent margin. The actual margin is closer to twenty-three per cent. Multiply that confusion across thousands of transactions a year and you have a business quietly bleeding profit it thought it was earning. I have seen owners discover this in their fifteenth year of trading. The discovery is not pleasant.Let me share a story.A company doing fifty million riyals in revenue came to me, frustrated that growth had stalled. The team was working harder than ever. The owner was exhausted. The numbers, on the surface, looked impressive. We sat down with the actual financials and the picture became clear within an hour. The business had been chasing revenue for years with no defined profit target. Every decision, whether about pricing, hiring, or new contracts, was measured by whether it added to the top line. The bottom line was an afterthought.The real net profit, once we worked through it properly, was under three per cent. They were running fifty million in revenue to earn what a well-run five-million riyal business should produce. The problem was not the market. The problem was the absence of a profit target driving every decision.This is the trap. When sales are good, owners conclude the strategy is working. When sales are bad, they blame the market. Both conclusions skip the only question that matters. What is the profit, and is it intentional? A business without a profit target is a business hoping for the best. Hope is not a financial strategy.Anyone can chase revenue. It requires energy and ambition, both of which most founders have in abundance. Building revenue with real net profit requires something else entirely. Disciplined planning, clear targets at every level, and the financial literacy to know whether each decision moves you toward those targets or away from them.Money mastery is not optional. It is the difference between a business that owns you and a business you actually own.Open your last quarter's P and L, balance sheet, and cash flow. Can you read all three together and tell the same story? If not, that is the work for this month.Mohammed Shabeeb is the National Director of BNI Qatar and Director–GCC for ActionCOACH Business Coaching. He can be reached on [email protected]