What's the difference between understanding words and understanding language?
You can know that 'revenue' means money coming in and 'costs' means money going out. But if someone says 'Our gross margin compressed 300 basis points due to product mix shift,' and you have no idea what that means or why it matters, you don't speak business. You just know some business words.
Case interviews test whether you can think about business problems like a business person thinks about them—not like an outsider translating dictionary definitions.
Imagine trying to discuss chess strategy without knowing what 'fork,' 'pin,' 'tempo,' or 'zugzwang' mean. You could describe the concepts ('when one piece attacks two pieces at once'), but you'd sound clumsy and think slowly. Chess players use the vocabulary because it lets them think faster and more precisely.
Business is the same. When you understand margin, EBITDA, customer acquisition cost, churn rate, working capital—not just as definitions, but as concepts that shape decisions—you can think about problems at the right level of sophistication.
In the next 32 minutes, I'll teach you the business fundamentals you need to solve case interviews. Not a finance degree—just the core concepts that drive how companies make money, spend money, and make strategic choices. This is the foundation that lets you have business conversations instead of just performing arithmetic.