Sunday, September 25, 2011

E-Myth...

I have just read this book...I swear Mr Gerber was writing about me, my life, my experiences!!

What an eye-opener.

I have alot, lot, lot of work to do...so much that it's daunting; overwhelming even; yet exhilirating and exciting at the same time.

Stay tuned...

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Mark Up versus Gross Profit Margin...

I stumbled across something very interesting today and just had to record it here.


Markup Versus Gross Profit Margin

We’re glad you took an interest in this topic. This topic explains the difference in gross profit margin (or profit margin) and price markup.

There is a big difference between markup and gross profit. In fact, this is one of the most common errors contractors make and it can cost you big.

Markup and margin, what’s the difference?

Short Answer

Markup is a percentage of the cost.
Margin is the same dollar amount expressed as a percentage of the selling price.

Example
Item costs $1.00 Items sells for $1.50.
Markup is .50 or 50 percent of the cost.
Margin is .50 or 33 a percent of the selling price.

Long Answer

Markup Defined
Markup is the difference between invoice cost and selling price. It may be expressed either as a percentage of the selling price or the cost price and is supposed to cover all the costs of doing business plus a profit. Whether markup is based on the selling price or the cost price, the base is always equal to 100 percent. Markup is the additional amount added to a sales proposal (bid) or price and which contain overhead, profit, excess costs, etc.

Margin Defined
The difference between net sales and the cost of goods sold. It is also referred to as gross profit. Gross Profit/Total Sales. The percentage of every dollar earned that can be used to pay general and administrative expenses.

Margin Versus Markup Formula

Applying a simple formula will determine how much the margin will be based on a percentage that the contractor expects to make. The contractor will set a margin that ensures that they will be competitive in the local market. It may or may not reflect the actual value of an item. In your example, we are looking to make an 60% margin assuming that our item costs $10. To figure out our sales price we use the following formula, expressing the margin as a decimal (i.e., 60% = .60):

Retail Price = (Cost of item)/(1 – desired margin)

Markup Versus Margin Table

Markup %
Gross Profit
Margin %
Multiplier %
20
16.67%
120
21
17.36%
121
22
18.03%
122
23
18.70%
123
24
19.35%
124
25
20.00%
125
26
20.63%
126
27
21.26%
127
28
21.88%
128
29
22.48%
129
30
23.08%
130
31
23.66%
131
32
24.24%
132
33
24.81%
133
34
25.37%
134
35
25.93%
135
36
26.47%
136
37
27.01%
137
38
27.54%
138
39
28.06%
139
40
28.57%
140
41
29.08%
141
42
29.58%
142
43
30.07%
143
44
30.56%
144
45
31.03%
145
46
31.51%
146
47
31.97%
147
48
32.43%
148
49
32.89%
149
50
33.33%
150
51
33.77%
151
52
34.21%
152
53
34.64%
153
54
35.06%
154
55
35.48%
155
56
35.90%
156
57
36.31%
157
58
36.71%
158
59
37.11%
159
60
37.50%
160
61
37.89%
161
62
38.27%
162
63
38.65%
163
64
39.02%
164
65
39.39%
165
66
39.76%
166
67
40.12%
167
68
40.48%
168
69
40.83%
169
70
41.18%
170
71
41.52%
171
72
41.86%
172
73
42.20%
173
74
42.53%
174
75
42.86%
175

Source: http://www.mrhvac.com/2010/03/26/margin-versus-markup/