Free finance classroom lesson

Business simulation for finance class

Students compare a baseline with one operating investment, calculate incremental return and simple payback, test a downside case, and defend a recommendation. No account or student information is required.

Quick answer for finance teachers

A business simulation becomes a finance activity when students evaluate whether a decision uses scarce cash well. Have students compare the decision with a baseline, isolate the extra cost and benefit, calculate a simple return measure, examine liquidity and downside risk, and explain which important cash flows the model leaves out.

Start with the Restaurant Profit Simulator and its printable worksheet, or choose another investment question from the matrix below. The goal is a defensible decision, not simply the highest simulated profit.

Investment match

Choose a finance investigation

Browse every simulator and worksheet
SimulationFinance focusInvestment questionWorksheet
RestaurantCapacity, cash, incremental profitDoes an operating upgrade earn enough extra profit for the cash committed?Open
MotelOccupancy, fixed capacity, liquidityShould cash support room quality, promotion, or operating reserves?Open
Fitness studioRecurring revenue, equipment, churnDoes added capacity improve member economics after its cost?Open
Auto repairBay utilization, equipment, riskIs a capacity or quality investment justified by added completed work?Open
BookstoreInventory cash, turnover, eventsWhich use of cash produces a stronger return without excessive slow stock?Open
ChildcareEnrollment, staffing capacity, reservesCan expansion improve operating results while preserving quality and cash?Open

Ready-to-use activity

50-minute finance simulation lesson

Learning goal: students will compare an operating investment with a baseline using incremental cost, incremental return, simple ROI, payback, liquidity, and downside evidence.

  1. Frame the decision — 5 minutes. Define the proposed investment or cash commitment. Clarify the decision date, the measure used as a return proxy, and the rule that all unrelated settings should remain stable.
  2. Predict the cash-flow path — 7 minutes. Students map how the decision could affect capacity, customers or units, revenue, operating costs, profit, and ending cash. They name one risk before seeing results.
  3. Record the baseline — 8 minutes. Students run the current strategy and enter the same financial and operating measures they will use for comparison.
  4. Test the investment case — 10 minutes. Students change one main investment-related choice, run the same period, and record the results. They calculate the incremental result as investment-case result minus baseline result.
  5. Calculate and stress-test — 12 minutes. Students calculate simple ROI and payback with the available model figures, then create a downside case by reducing the expected incremental benefit by 25%. They check whether remaining cash is adequate inside the simulation.
  6. Make the recommendation — 8 minutes. Students recommend invest, revise, wait, or reject. The response must cite two figures, one calculation, one nonfinancial effect, one risk, and one missing real-world cash flow.

Investment evidence record

MeasureBaselineInvestment caseIncremental change
Cash committed to the decision0
Customers, units, or occupied capacity
Revenue
Operating costs
Profit or net earnings
Ending cash or cash balance
Quality, satisfaction, or risk indicator

Calculation box

Simple ROI:
(incremental return ÷ cash committed) × 100

Simple payback:
cash committed ÷ incremental return per period

Downside return:
incremental return × 0.75

Use these as classroom approximations only when the model reports comparable periods. If the cash commitment or timing is unclear, state that the measure cannot be calculated reliably.

Investment recommendation template

Decision: Recommend invest, revise, wait, or reject.

Incremental evidence: State what extra cash was committed and what extra result followed.

Return: Show simple ROI or payback, including units and time period.

Resilience: Explain the downside result and effect on liquidity.

Limits: Name an omitted cash flow, financing issue, tax, timing difference, or risk that could change the real decision.

12-point assessment rubric

  • Comparable evidence — 0–3: records consistent baseline and investment-case measures.
  • Finance calculations — 0–3: shows accurate incremental return, ROI or payback, and downside work.
  • Recommendation — 0–3: connects cash, return, liquidity, and risk to a clear decision.
  • Judgment — 0–3: recognizes a nonfinancial effect, model limitation, and useful next check.

Grade the quality of the analysis, not whether the student chooses to invest.

Shorten, support, or extend

25-minute version

Assign one simulation and one decision. Record baseline and investment-case profit and cash, calculate one return measure, and write a four-sentence recommendation.

More support

Provide the formulas and a partially completed evidence table. Pair a simulation operator with an analyst, and ask students to label every amount with dollars, percentage, or periods.

Extension

Compare two competing uses of the same cash, add best/base/worst cases, discuss opportunity cost, or explain why time value of money could change a multi-period decision.

Keep the finance claims responsible

These simulations simplify cash timing, borrowing, interest, taxes, depreciation, replacement costs, working capital, uncertainty, and the time value of money. A profitable model run is not an investment forecast, and a simple ROI or payback calculation does not establish that a real investment is suitable.

Use the activity to practice comparing alternatives and stating uncertainty. Real decisions require verified data, appropriate discount rates and scenarios, legal and tax review where relevant, and qualified advice when stakes are material. Nothing on this page is financial, investment, tax, or legal advice.

Frequently asked questions

Which simulation works best for a finance class?

Restaurant is an accessible starting point for cash, capacity, and incremental profit. Motel, fitness studio, auto repair, bookstore, and childcare offer different utilization, inventory, recurring-revenue, and reserve questions.

What finance concepts does this lesson cover?

Students practice incremental analysis, simple ROI, simple payback, liquidity, downside scenarios, opportunity cost, and evidence-based recommendations.

How long does the lesson take?

The full baseline, investment case, stress test, and recommendation take about 50 minutes. A focused comparison can fit in 25 minutes.

Do students need accounts or downloads?

No. Normal simulator and worksheet use requires no account, personal information, or download.

Are the simulation results financial advice?

No. They are simplified educational model outputs and should not be used as forecasts or as financial, investment, tax, or legal advice.

Continue the classroom sequence

Use the accounting lesson to reconcile revenue, costs, and profit; the operations management lesson to diagnose capacity; the economics lesson to examine opportunity cost; or the teacher hub for more lesson formats.