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Pricing Policy
Identifying the actual cost of
doing business requires careful and accurate analysis. No one is expected
to calculate the cost of doing business with complete accuracy. However,
failure to calculate all actual costs properly to ensure an adequate
profit margin is a frequent and often overlooked cause of business
failure.
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Establishing Selling
Prices
The costs of raw materials, labor, indirect overhead, and research
and development must be carefully studied before setting the selling
price of items offered by your business. These factors must be
regularly re-evaluated, as costs fluctuate.
Regardless of the strategies employed to maximize profitability, the
method of costing products offered for resale is basic. It involves
four major categories: |
* Direct Material Costs
* Direct Labor Costs
* Overhead Expenses
* Profit Desired
Combining these factors allows you to calculate an item's minimum sales
price, which is described below:
1. Calculate your Direct Material Costs. Direct material costs are the
total cost of all raw materials used to produce the item for sale. Divide
this total cost by the number of items produced from these raw materials
to derive the Total Direct Materials Cost Per Item.
2. Calculate your Direct Labor Costs. Direct labor costs are the wages
paid to employees to produce the item. Divide this total direct labor cost
by the total number of items produced to get the Total Direct Labor Cost
Per Item.
3. Calculate your Total Overhead Expenses. Overhead expenses include rent,
gas and electricity, telephone, packing and shipping, delivery and freight
charges, cleaning expenses, insurance, office supplies, postage, repairs
and maintenance, and the manager's salary. In other words, all operating
expenses incurred during the same time period that you used for
calculating the costs above (one year, one quarter, or one month). Divide
the Total Overhead Expense by the number of items produced for sale during
that same time period to get the Total Overhead Expense Per Item.
4. Calculate Total Cost Per Item. Add the Total Direct Material Cost Per
Item, the Total Direct Labor Cost Per Item, and the Total Overhead Expense
Per Item to derive the Total Cost Per Item.
5. Calculate the Profit Per Item. Now, calculate the profit you determine
appropriate for each category of item offered for sale based on the sales
and profit strategy you have set for your business.
6. Calculate the Total Price Per Item. Add the Profit Figure Per Item to
the Total Cost Per Item.
A Pricing Example
You produce skirts that take 1 1/2 yards of fabric per skirt, and you can
manufacture three skirts per day. The fabric costs $2.00 per yard.
Thenormal work week is five days. If you complete three skirts per day,
your week's production is 15 skirts.
1. Calculate Direct Materials Cost
Materials
Cost
Fabric for 1 week's production:
15 skirts x 1 1/2 yds. each = 22 1/2 yds. x $2 per yd.
$45.00
Linings, interfacings, etc.:
$.50 per skirt x 15 skirts
7.50
Zippers, buttons, snaps:
$.50 per skirt x 15 skirts
7.50
Belts, ornaments, etc.:
$.75 per skirt x 15 skirts
11.25
Notions, seam binding, etc.:
1 week's supply
5.00
Total Direct Materials Cost:
$76.25 per week
Total Direct Materials Cost per week = $5.08 Direct Materials
------------------------------------
Cost per skirt
15 skirts per week
2. Calculate Direct Labor Costs
Wages paid to employees = $100.00 per week
Total Direct Labor Cost per week = $6.67 Direct Labor Cost
--------------------------------
per skirt
15 skirts
3. Calculate Overhead Expenses Per Month
Overhead Expenses
Monthly
Expenses
Owner's Salary
$400.00
Rent
100.00
Electricity
24.00
Telephone
12.00
Insurance
15.00
Cleaning
20.00
Packing Materials and Supplies
15.00
Delivery and Freight
20.00
Office Supplies, Postage
10.00
Repairs and Maintenance
15.00
Payroll Taxes
5.00
Total Monthly Overhead Expenses:
$636.00
15 skirts per week x 4 weeks in one month = 60 skirts per month.
Total Monthly Overhead Expenses = $10.60 Overhead Cost
-------------------------------
per skirt
60 skirts per month
4. Calculate the Total Cost per Skirt by adding the total individual costs
per skirt calculated in the three preceding steps.
Total Direct Material Cost per Skirt $ 5.08
Total Direct Labor Cost per Skirt 6.67
Total Overhead Expense per Skirt 10.60
TOTAL COST PER SKIRT $22.35
5. Assume you want to make a profit of $5.00 per skirt.
6. Calculate the Total Price Per Item:
Total Cost per Skirt $22.35
Total Profit per Skirt 5.00
Total Selling Price Per Skirt $27.35
The Retailer's Mark-Up
A word of caution is in order regarding the popular but misunderstood
pricing method known as retailers mark-up. Retail mark-up means the amount
added to the price of an item to arrive at the retail sales price, either
in dollars or as a percentage of the cost.
For example, if a single item costing $8.00 is sold for $12.00 it carries
a mark-up of $4.00 or 50 percent. If a group of items costing $6,000 is
offered for $10,000, the mark-up is $4,000 or 66 2/3 percent. While in
these illustrations the mark-up percentage appears generally to equal the
gross margin percentages, the mark-up is not the same as the gross margin.
Adding mark-up to the price merely to simplify pricing will almost always
adversely affect profitability.
To demonstrate, assume a manager determines from past records that the
business's operating expenses average 29 percent of sales. She decides
that she is entitled to a profit of 3 percent. So she prices her goods at
a 32 percent gross margin, in order to earn a 3 percent profit after all
operating expenses are paid. What she fails to realize, however, is that
once the goods are displayed, some may be lost through pilferage. Others
may have to be marked down later in order to sell them, or employees may
purchase some of them at a discount. Therefore, the total reductions
(mark-downs, shortages, discounts) in the sales price realized from
selling all the inventory actually add up to an annual average of six
percent of total sales. To correctly calculate the necessary mark-up
required to yield a 32 percent gross margin, these reductions to inventory
must be anticipated and added into its selling price. Using the formula:
Initial Mark-up = Desired Gross Margin + Retail Reductions
----------------------------------------
100 Percent + Retail Reductions
32 percent + 6 percent = 38 percent = 35.85 percent
----------------------- -----------
100 percent + 6 percent 106 percent
To obtain the desired gross margin of 32 percent, therefore, the retailer
must initially mark up his inventory by nearly 36 percent.
Pricing Policies and Profitability Goals
Break-Even Analysis, discussed in Chapter IV, and Return on Investment,
described in Chapter III, should be reviewed at this time. Remember, all
costs (direct and indirect), the break-even point, desired profit, and the
methods of calculating sales price from these factors must be thoroughly
studied when you establish pricing policies and profitability goals. They
should be understood before you offer items for sale because an omission
or error in these calculations could make the difference between success
and failure.
Selling Strategy
Proper product pricing is only one facet of overall planning for
profitability. A second major factor to be determined once costs,
break-even point, and profitability goals have been analyzed, is the
selling strategy. Three sales planning approaches are used (often
concurrently) by businesses to develop final pricing policies, as they
strive to compete successfully.
In the first, employed as a short-term strategy in the earliest stages of
a business, the owner/manager sells products at such low prices that the
business only breaks even (no profit), while trying to attract future
steady customers. As volume grows, the owner/manager gradually builds in
the profit margin necessary to achieve the targeted Return on Investment.
"Loss leaders" are a second strategy practiced in both developing and
mature business. While a few items are sold at a loss, most goods are
priced for healthy profits. The hope is that while customers are in the
store to purchase the low-price items, they will also buy enough other
goods to make the seller's overall profitability higher than if he had not
used "come-ons." The seller wants to maximize total profit and can
sacrifice profit on a few items to achieve that goal.
The third strategy recognizes that maximum profit does not result only
from selling goods at relatively high profit margins. The relationship of
volume, price, cost of merchandise, and operational expenses determines
profitability. Price increases may result in fewer sales and decreased
profits. Reductions in prices, if sales volume is substantially increased,
may produce satisfactory profits.
There is no arbitrary rule about this. It is perfectly possible for two
stores, with different pricing structures to exist side by side and both
be successful. It is the owner/manager's responsibility to identify and
understand the market factors that affect his or her unique business
circumstances. The level of service (delivery, availability of credit,
store hours, product advice, and the like) may permit a business to charge
higher prices in order to cover the costs of such services. Location, too,
often permits a business to charge more, since customers are often willing
to pay a premium for convenience.
The point is that many considerations go into setting selling prices. Some
small businesses do not seek to compete on price at all, finding an un- or
under-occupied market niche, which can be a more certain path to success.
What is important is that all factors that affect pricing must be
recognized and analyzed for their costs as well as their benefits.
Pricing Policy Article
Copyright Evergreen Publishing
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