Breakeven Analysis. Author: Paul Farris Marketing Metrics Reference: Chapter Paul Farris and Management by the Numbers, Inc.

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Breakeven Analysis This module covers the concepts of variable, fixed, average and marginal costs, contribution, contribution margin, unit and dollar breakeven analysis. Author: Paul Farris Marketing Metrics Reference: Chapter 3 2011-2017 Paul Farris and Management by the Numbers, Inc.

Definition Fixed and Variable Costs Fixed Costs (FC): Costs that remain unchanged with volume sold. Examples include rent for facilities, management salaries, and most advertising media. FIXED AND VARIABLE COSTS Definition Variable Costs (VC): Costs that change with volume sold. Examples include material used to construct a product, commissions paid to salespeople, and packaging costs. Variable costs are usually assumed to be relatively constant on a per-unit basis. By definition, those costs that are not fixed are variable! 2

Distinguish Variable Costs from Fixed Costs Definition Total Costs = Total Fixed Costs + Total Variable Costs Total costs ($) 0 Units Total Costs = FC+VC Total Variable Costs (change at a constant rate) Total Fixed Costs (don t change with units sold) Note visually how variable costs as well as total costs increase with units sold while fixed costs remain constant. DISTINGUISH VARIABLE COSTS FROM FIXED COSTS 3

1. Rent for office space 2. Packaging Material Fixed or Variable? Fixed 1 2 Variable 1 2 FIXED OR VARIABLE? 3. Sales Force Salaries 4. Sales Force Commission 5. TV Advertisement 6. Amazon.com shipping charges 7. CEO s limo lease payment 8. Mfg warranty expenses 3 4 5 6 7 8 3 4 5 6 7 8 4

Definitions More on Variable Costs Unit Variable Cost = Total Variable Costs for 1 Unit of Production Total Variable Costs = Unit Variable Costs * Units Sold Units Sold 1 10 100 1,000 Variable Mfg. Costs 2 20 200 2,000 MORE ON VARIABLE COSTS Packaging Material 3 30 300 3,000 Unit Variable Cost 5 5 5 5 Total Variable Costs 5 50 500 5,000 In this example, the unit variable cost equals the variable mfg cost ($2) plus the packaging material ($3). The unit variable cost remain constant at $5 as volume increases, while total variable costs increase with volume sold. Insight Often, variable costs will decrease with volume. This might occur due to impacts such as volume discounts or economies of scale. 5

Definitions Average Costs Total Costs = FC + VC = Fixed Costs + (Unit Var. Cost * Units Sold) Average Costs = Total Costs / Units Sold AVERAGE COSTS Units Sold 1 10 100 1,000 Fixed Costs 500 500 500 500 Variable Mfg. Costs 2 20 200 2,000 Packaging Material 3 30 300 3,000 Total Variable Costs 5 50 500 5,000 Total Costs 505 550 1,000 5,500 Average Cost 505 55 10 5.50 Now let s add fixed costs to our example. As the number of units sold increases, fixed costs stay fixed at $500, unit variable costs remain constant at $5, total variable costs increase with each additional unit sold, and the average cost per unit decreases as more units are sold. 6

Insight Marginal vs. Variable Cost A brief digression for those remembering Economics 101 Marginal Costs vs. Variable Costs Almost the same concept: Marginal cost refers to what it costs to produce an additional unit; variable cost analysis usually assumes constant marginal cost. Over a wide range of output, the unit variable costs may not change. Therefore the marginal cost of producing an additional unit and the variable cost for that range will be the same. Over some range, variable costs might change (discounts from suppliers for a larger order of packaging materials, for example) but still would not be considered fixed costs. MARGINAL VS. VARIABLE COST 7

Revenues and Profits Up to now, we ve been discussing costs. Let s add revenues to the equation. Total Revenues equals the selling price x unit sales. Total Contribution is the difference between revenues and variable costs. The Profit (or loss if negative) is the difference between total revenues and total costs. Definitions Total Revenues = Selling Price * Units Sold Total Contribution = Total Revenues Total Variable Costs Profit (or Loss if negative) = Total Revenues Total Costs or Profit = Total Contribution Fixed Costs REVENUES AND PROFIT Units Sold @ $12 1 10 100 1,000 Total Revenues 12 120 1,200 12,000 Total Variable Costs 5 50 500 5,000 Total Contribution 7 70 700 7,000 Fixed Costs 500 500 500 500 Profit (Loss) -493-430 200 6,500 8

Revenues and Profits Adding revenues and profits to our total cost / units graph, visually, might look something like this: Total costs ($) Profit! Total Revenues Total Costs REVENUES AND PROFITS Total Fixed Costs 0 Units The firm becomes profitable where total revenues crosses total costs Since fixed costs don t change over the short-term, they may be sunk costs 9

Definitions Contribution Unit Contribution = Selling Price per unit Variable Cost per unit Contribution Margin % = Unit Contribution / Selling Price per unit CONTRIBUTION Total variable costs and revenues ($) 0 Total Revenues - Total Variable Costs = Total Contribution Total Revenues... minus Total Contribution Total Variable Costs Units Take a moment to consider why unit contribution might be meaningful 10

Contribution: Sample Problems Unit Contribution is significant because it measures a net inflow of funds to a company as additional units are sold. Let s try a few contribution calculations: Question 1: If a firm receives $12 revenue from each unit it sells, and pays $5 per unit in variable costs, then what is the contribution of each unit? CONTRIBUTION: SAMPLE PROBLEMS Answer: We know that Unit Contribution = SP per unit VC per unit Therefore, substituting in our values: Unit Contribution = $12 - $5 Unit Contribution = $7 11

Contribution: Sample Problems Question 2: If a firm realizes $50 in total contribution by selling 10 units of a product at a selling price of $20, what is the unit variable cost per unit? Answer: We know that Total Contribution = Unit Contribution * Units Sold And that Unit Contrib. = Selling Price per unit - Variable Cost per unit Therefore, substituting in our values: $50 = Unit Contribution * 10 Unit Contribution = $50 / 10 Unit Contribution = $5 CONTRIBUTION: SAMPLE PROBLEMS $5 = $20 - Unit Variable Cost Unit Variable Cost = $20 - $5 Unit Variable Cost = $15 12

Contribution: Sample Problems Question 3: If a firm receives $100 revenue from selling 5 units of a product, and pays $25 in total variable costs, then what is the contribution and contribution margin (%) of each unit? Answer: We know that Total Revenues = Selling Price per unit * Units Sold $100 = SP * 5; Selling Price = $20 and Total Variable Costs = Unit Variable Costs * Units Sold $25 = Unit Variable Costs * 5; Unit Variable Costs = $5 CONTRIBUTION: SAMPLE PROBLEMS and Unit Contribution = SP per unit VC per unit Unit Contribution = $20 - $5 = $15 and Contribution Margin % = Contribution / Selling Price Contribution Margin % = $15 / $20 = 75% 13

Contribution Analysis Some of the types of questions that contribution analysis can help answer include: Will our unit prices cover unit variable costs? Target unit volumes: Will the additional contribution cover our fixed costs and make a profit? We want to sell 10,000 units. Will the contribution cover our fixed costs? How much can we afford to pay marketing to sell an additional unit? If an advertisement cost $1,000, how many units will we need to sell to make it worthwhile? What kinds of commission programs are feasible for our salespeople? CONTRIBUTION ANALYSIS 14

Breakeven Volume in Dollars Breakeven Bug fix BREAKEVEN Total Revenues Total costs ($) Breakeven Point: (Total Costs = Total Revenues) Profit! Total Costs Total Variable Costs Total Fixed Costs 0 Units Break-even Volume in Units Breakeven is where total revenues = total costs 15

Not a loss, but zero Breakeven Selling enough to just cover fixed costs Where a business becomes profitable Each sale contributes to covering a portion of fixed costs The amount each sales contributes to covering fixed costs is the difference between unit price (revenue) and unit variable costs (e.g. unit contribution) Marketers (and CFOs) like to know how high sales have to be to breakeven (e.g. where do we become profitable?) BREAKEVEN 16

Breakeven Formulas Two types of breakeven analysis: Unit Breakeven = How many unit sales need to be made to cover fixed costs? Revenue Breakeven = What level of sales are needed to cover fixed costs? BREAKEVEN FORMULAS Definitions Unit Breakeven = Fixed Costs / Unit Contribution Unit Breakeven = Fixed Costs / (Selling Price Variable Cost) Revenue Breakeven = Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin % Revenue Breakeven = Fixed Costs / (Unit Contribution / Selling Price) With either measure it is simple to calculate the other, using price to convert. Revenue Breakeven = Breakeven in units * Unit Price Breakeven in Units = Dollar Breakeven / Unit Price Also Target Profit Breakeven = (Fixed Costs+Target Profit) / Contrib Margin % 17

Breakeven: Sample Problems Question 1: Mickey s Mousetraps wants to know how many of its Magic Mouse Trappers it needs to sell in order to breakeven. The product sells for $20, it costs $5 per unit to make, and the company s fixed costs are $30,000. Answer: We know that Breakeven (units) = Fixed Costs / (Selling Price Var. Cost) BREAKEVEN: SAMPLE PROBLEM S Therefore, substituting in our values: Breakeven (units) = $30,000 / ($20 - $5) Breakeven (units) = 2,000 mousetraps 18

Breakeven: Sample Problems Question 2: Mickey s Mousetraps wants to know how many dollars worth of its Deluxe Mighty Mouse Trappers it needs to sell in order to break-even on costs. Again, the product sells for $20, it costs $5 per unit to make, and the company s fixed costs are $30,000. Answer: We know that Breakeven (units) = Fixed Costs / (Selling Price Var. Cost) and that Breakeven (revenues) = Breakeven units * price BREAKEVEN: SAMPLE PROBLEM S Therefore, substituting in our values: Breakeven (units) = $30,000 / ($20 - $5) Breakeven (units) = 2,000 mousetraps Breakeven (revenues) = 2,000 * $20 = $40,000 19

Breakeven: Sample Problems Question 3: Swiss entrepreneur Herr Zeitgeist buys watch faces from Italy for 5 Euros, buys watch mechanisms for 15 Euros from Spain, and hires assembly in Portugal for 10 Euros per watch. His only other expense is 100,000 Euros he pays the Zuricher Flughafen ad agency to place ads in inflight magazines to build the Zeitgeist brand. Herr Zeitgeist sells each watch for 50 Euros to airport duty-free shops, earning the retailer an 80% margin. What is his breakeven volume? Answer: BREAKEVEN: SAMPLE PROBLEM S We know that Breakeven (units) = Fixed Costs / (Selling Price Var. Cost) Therefore, substituting in our values: By reading the information provided, we see that fixed costs are 100,000 Euros, and variable costs are 5+15+10 = 30 Euros per watch. BE (units) = 100,000 / (50 30) = 100,000 / 20 = 5,000 watches. 20

Marketing Metrics by Farris, Bendle, Pfeifer and Reibstein, 2 nd edition, pages 65-108 (Chapter 3). - And - Breakeven - Further Reference Profit Dynamics (core MBTN module). This module builds on the breakeven analysis to volume price interactions and their impact on profits. BREAKEVEN FURTHER REFERENCE 21