Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Learn How to Know If Youre Making a Profit

Learn How to Know If You're Making a Profit Learn How to Know If You're Making a Profit Most people and most businesses are in business to make a profit. At the simplest level, profit means making more money than you spend. Many confuse profit with income. As a result, they cant grasp why all their income isnt getting them ahead; why no one wants to invest in their high-sales company; why the bank wont extend their line of credit. In this article, we look at the most basic way to tell if your business is actually making money (a profit), not just recording sales. Profit vs. Income Most people/businesses are very good at tracking their income. Each widget sale is recorded in a book or a spreadsheet somewhere. Each check received from a client for a consulting job is recorded in the checkbook or plugged into the accounting software. Each is totaled frequently. In reality, thats not what you made. Thats not profit. It is income. Its whats coming in. In order to figure profit, you have to subtract what is going out (profit income - costs). Calculating Costs Your business has two basic types of costs (or expenses): fixed costs and variable costs. Fixed costs dont change based on your level of activity. Rent is a good example of a fixed cost. Whether you produce 10 widgets per shift or 15, your rent will stay the same. Variable costs, on the other hand, are directly tied to how many units of saleable goods you produce. If you need $10 of screws to produce 100 widgets, you will need $20 worth of screws to produce 200 widgets. Fixed Costs By and large, fixed costs can be closely estimated at the beginning of the year and projected well for the next 12 months. For instance, you know your rent on the manufacturing building is $10,000 per month. You may know of or expect a rent increase in April to $11,000 per month. As a result, your fixed cost for rent will be $129,000 for the year (3 months at $10,000 plus 9 months at $11,000). Fixed costs can also include depreciation, licenses, interest payments, some taxes, and indirect labor. Variable Costs Variable costs are those that depend on your production level. As the production volume goes up, the variable costs go up as well. If I make toy wagons, I have to purchase one wagon body, two axles, and four tires per wagon. If a wagon body cost $3 and I need enough to make six wagons, my wagon body costs will be $18. However, if I need to make 20 wagons, my wagon body costs will be $60. I can estimate variable costs at the beginning of the year, but my estimate will not be as precise as was my estimate of fixed costs. Variable costs include the  cost of materials used in manufacturing, certain utilities, some taxes and fees, and direct labor. Fixed Cost and Variable Costs Some cost  the business incurs, such as labor will have to be split between fixed costs and variable costs. The wages you pay production labor, called direct labor, is a variable cost. It is tied to how many units you produce. Other labor costs, such as the salaries you pay the accounting department, are fixed costs. These indirect labor costs are not tied directly to production levels. If your production increases from 10 widgets per month to 15 widgets per month it is unlikely you would hire an additional accounting clerk. Utilities are another cost that is split between fixed and variable costs. Your phone bill, for instance, probably wont change much as production increases or decreases. However, the demand for electrical power and its cost will increase as production lines run longer and lights stay on further into the night because of increased production. Income When someone pays you, that is income. Income is usually related to production levels  but is not tied to it directly. You may produce more or less than you sell. For instance, if you have 100 widgets in the warehouse when you receive an order for 150, you only have to produce 50 additional widgets. If you make widgets for skis, you may make 20 widgets every month during the summer even though you dont sell any, just so you have enough in the warehouse when winter arrives. So income is when you actually get paid, not when you make the product you are going to sell. Total income is just the total of all your payments received during the year. Break-even Analysis The break-even point is the production level where your income for a certain number of units produced equals your fixed costs plus the variable costs for that number of units. For instance, you have fixed costs of $500, variable costs of $20 per widget, and you sell the widgets for $25 each, your break-even point is 100 widgets. If you reduce your fixed costs to $400, your break-even point is 80 units. Or if you cut the cost per unit from $20 to $15, your break-even point drops to only 50 widgets. Money In Your Pocket Any sales beyond the break-even point are profit. In the final example above (fixed cost $500, variable cost $15 each, income $25 each), your break-even point is 50 units. If you produce 50 units and sell 50 units you will break even. Your costs will equal your income. You will have a profit of $0. If you sell less than 50, you will have a loss. If you sell more than 50 you will have a profit. For example, if you sell 70 units your fixed costs are $500 and your variable costs are $1050 ($15 x 70), so your total costs are $1,550. Your income is $1,750 ($25 x 70) and your profit is $200 ($1,750 - $1,550). The Bottom Line To make a profit, you must be able to sell each unit for more than it costs to make, and you must be able to sell it for a price high enough to cover both the variable cost of making it and its share of the fixed costs. This is true whether you are selling widgets, boxcars of apples, dance lessons, or hours of financial consulting.

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