Profit is the difference between cost price and sale price, minus operating expenses-payroll, utilities, rent, licensing, insurance, fees, leakage,restocking, shipping, and incidentals.
And quite a few more, but a good reply none the less.
Profit is the difference between cost price and sale price, minus operating expenses-payroll, utilities, rent, licensing, insurance, fees, leakage,restocking, shipping, and incidentals.
Er, I run my own business and have done for almost a decade, and have a degree in Business Studies from a Russell Group university ...If you were in business you would know there is a huge difference. It is easy for a business to have margin but no profit.
Er, I run my own business and have done for almost a decade, and have a degree in Business Studies from a Russell Group university ...
I presume you are using 'margin' to mean you make x% on an individual sale or item, and 'profit' to mean the amount left over at the end of the year when all costs have been paid? Ergo you could sell everything you sell for more than you paid for it, but still not make a profit overall? I'm just not sure what the point you are making is - making 'margin' (if this is what you mean by making margin) is the same as making-a-loss-but-not-realising surely - and as with any loss it is unsustainable?
It'd be nice if you could be constructive, and when someone says they are not sure what you mean by something you could, perhaps, explain a little more rather than being dismissive? Just to make this a nice place, you understand. You might not want that, I suppose.
Oh I know - I get "it must be expensive having premises here" and "I can get it online cheaper" - sometimes from the same peopleAs you may tell I am not as well educated as yourself, please accept my apologise I did not mean to cause offense. As you know we get the, how much! every day off of people who do not understand the costs of running a business.
The worst time to go into any business market is when it is booming. You get a false impression of the sectors true value and are liable to catch a severe cold when things return to normal levels.
Is December quieter than January in your trade then? Am thinking of swapping cars in January, perhaps it would be worth bringing it forward a month?I try and get the guys who come to me for training to set their standard of living for the year by what they earn in December, which is a quiet month in the motor trade. This way come next December they have some money in the pot, unfortunately most by a new car in the middle of a busy spell. Muppets.
Well, nobody rings a bell. But currently cycling is enjoying an unprecedented boom as a leisure activity, it my not have peaked but I'd guess we're not far off.Not easy to get the timing right, how do you know when a business has topped out?
Mate of mine is opening a Tennis Shop this week. Says it's really popular at the moment.Well, nobody rings a bell. But currently cycling is enjoying an unprecedented boom as a leisure activity, it my not have peaked but I'd guess we're not far off.
Is December quieter than January in your trade then? Am thinking of swapping cars in January, perhaps it would be worth bringing it forward a month?