Some SMEs minimise the importance of the sales margin. Don't make this mistake. Knowing how to calculate your sales margin correctly is essential for the survival of your small business. No more, no less. That's why today we tackle this subject in a clear, simple and practical way. Do you want to learn how to calculate your sales margin? Go ahead, start reading...
The sales margin or gross margin is defined as the direct benefit that a company achieves when marketing a product or service. Knowing this margin is essential to verify the profitability of a business, whatever their size and irrespective of their sector of activity.
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There are two classic ways of calculating the sales margin:
Forgetting about VAT, IGIC and other taxes, let's try to clarify how the sales margin is calculated with a simple everyday example: imagine you have a clothes shop and you buy a pair of trousers from your wholesaler worth 100 euros, but in your shop you put them at the retail value of €150. What is your sales margin?
Some would say that this trader's sales margin would be 50 %, but beware, that is It is not:
I'm sure you understand the first calculation: if we buy a pair of trousers for €100 and sell them for €150, we will put €50 in our cash register. But this does not mean that we are having a sales margin of 50 %, that is the most typical mistake which most people inexperienced in the field fall into. Our sales margin in percentage terms, in relative terms, would be only 33 %. How do we arrive at this percentage? By using the following mathematical formula:
Sales margin = (Sales price - Purchase cost) / Sales price.
Applying this formula to our example we would have the following mathematical operation:
Sales margin = (150-100) / 150
Sales margin = 50 / 150
Sales margin = 0,33 or 33 %.
We would like to read your comments: did you know how to calculate the sales margin before reading this article? Was the example clear to you?
