How do you even know what it might be...
To put it
bluntly, every sale you make, has an expected profit built into it.
The total amount of sales for a month yields an expected gross profit.
This gross profit needs to be large enough to cover all of the sales,
general and administrative expenses (not the purchases of products for
re-sale). This bucket of expenses is commonly know as your overhead, or
the SG&A.
So, the break-even point is the
point at which the value earned is equal to the total cost. For a
business, it's extremely important to know how much revenue is required
to just pay for the operation for the period measured, like a month or
year.
Break-even may be expressed in terms
of accounting, profit and loss, or it may be expresses in terms of cash
flow, which is when cash collected is equal to disbursements.
Understanding
the break-even point for a business, product or other unit of business
allows management to make better management decisions about pricing,
marketing, sales, production and other business matters. Before you
increase your overhead or SG&A, you must be able to project that
your gross margin would grow to cover your expenses.
You must now understand the concept of gross margin, what impacts that and how you can manage and calculate it.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
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