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Profit and profit margins are the most important business metric yet no one teaches them (except me) and no one talks about them in the right way
Revenues are not profits – anyone who says this is not an experienced, educated, and authentic business coach.
-- Revenues are money that comes into your business via sales
-- Profits are what is left over after expenses
Profits formula is Profit = revenue – expenses - this is accounting 101
Revenue is dependent on sales and how you market your business
Expenses are what you spend in and on your business
Expenses include your salary, cost of running your business, equipment, utilities, and more
Expenses are fixed or variable – marketing is a variable cost, your course platform is a fixed cost
Profits are what is left over after expenses
Sell $100 with expense of $99 your profit is $1.00 This is your COGS – cost of goods sold. It is an important metric in your business as it tells how much you are spending per sale – you want this number to be low so your profits are high
Profit margin is the percentage of profits you can expect based on sales. You want this number to be high. In an online business with few overhead costs and good management of your expenses, you should expect a profit margin of 50% or more
Here is the business information and background for this Profit Case Study:
$3.2 million in sales
$1.5 million spent on ads
$170,000 in profit
$1.93 million in incidental costs (fixed and variable)
That’s a .05% profit margin and it’s terrible for an online business
What can you expect?
$497 course price x 100 people is $49,700
Costs: $97/month for the course platform $200 marketing
Administration costs for help at $40 per hour, 20 hours is $800. I manage my administrative staff and they work on very specific tasks, which means they do work they enjoy and have the skills for and do not spend time on 'busy work' that eats into my budget.
That’s a total of around $1000 in expenses (remember the course platform is a fixed cost which covers all courses in the platform, not just this one)
$49,700 - $1000 = $48,700 in profits that is not an unrealistic number if you have done your pre-sale marketing correctly, meaning you are nurturing your audience, posting on social media, and creating interest in your upcoming launch and sale.
I corrected my math here since I had originally said that there was about $1 million in administrative costs (outside of marketing and ads) but there is actually $1.93 million in uncategorized costs that could represent a host of expenses including administrative, design, support, etc.
In closing, this is not a profitable company. Sure it makes money and it sounds good to say “I made $3.2 million in sales” but when you look closely at the numbers, the expenses, and the profit margin, this company could use some expert advice on how to better manage its profit margins and a profit audit to determine why its profit margins are so low.
copyright (2004-2024) by Jennifer Hoffman. All US and international rights reserved.
Copy by Jennifer Hoffman
Narration by Jennifer Hoffman
Artwork by Jennifer Hoffman
No part of this work may be shared in any form whatsoever and on any platform whatsoever without the express written permission of the copyright holder. Failure to obtain permission and share this content or illegally appropriate this content for business or personal use will be subject to civil and criminal prosecution seeking actual and punitive damages and restitution. We have ZERO TOLERANCE for content theft, copyright infringement, and theft of intellectual property.
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Profit and profit margins are the most important business metric yet no one teaches them (except me) and no one talks about them in the right way
Revenues are not profits – anyone who says this is not an experienced, educated, and authentic business coach.
-- Revenues are money that comes into your business via sales
-- Profits are what is left over after expenses
Profits formula is Profit = revenue – expenses - this is accounting 101
Revenue is dependent on sales and how you market your business
Expenses are what you spend in and on your business
Expenses include your salary, cost of running your business, equipment, utilities, and more
Expenses are fixed or variable – marketing is a variable cost, your course platform is a fixed cost
Profits are what is left over after expenses
Sell $100 with expense of $99 your profit is $1.00 This is your COGS – cost of goods sold. It is an important metric in your business as it tells how much you are spending per sale – you want this number to be low so your profits are high
Profit margin is the percentage of profits you can expect based on sales. You want this number to be high. In an online business with few overhead costs and good management of your expenses, you should expect a profit margin of 50% or more
Here is the business information and background for this Profit Case Study:
$3.2 million in sales
$1.5 million spent on ads
$170,000 in profit
$1.93 million in incidental costs (fixed and variable)
That’s a .05% profit margin and it’s terrible for an online business
What can you expect?
$497 course price x 100 people is $49,700
Costs: $97/month for the course platform $200 marketing
Administration costs for help at $40 per hour, 20 hours is $800. I manage my administrative staff and they work on very specific tasks, which means they do work they enjoy and have the skills for and do not spend time on 'busy work' that eats into my budget.
That’s a total of around $1000 in expenses (remember the course platform is a fixed cost which covers all courses in the platform, not just this one)
$49,700 - $1000 = $48,700 in profits that is not an unrealistic number if you have done your pre-sale marketing correctly, meaning you are nurturing your audience, posting on social media, and creating interest in your upcoming launch and sale.
I corrected my math here since I had originally said that there was about $1 million in administrative costs (outside of marketing and ads) but there is actually $1.93 million in uncategorized costs that could represent a host of expenses including administrative, design, support, etc.
In closing, this is not a profitable company. Sure it makes money and it sounds good to say “I made $3.2 million in sales” but when you look closely at the numbers, the expenses, and the profit margin, this company could use some expert advice on how to better manage its profit margins and a profit audit to determine why its profit margins are so low.
copyright (2004-2024) by Jennifer Hoffman. All US and international rights reserved.
Copy by Jennifer Hoffman
Narration by Jennifer Hoffman
Artwork by Jennifer Hoffman
No part of this work may be shared in any form whatsoever and on any platform whatsoever without the express written permission of the copyright holder. Failure to obtain permission and share this content or illegally appropriate this content for business or personal use will be subject to civil and criminal prosecution seeking actual and punitive damages and restitution. We have ZERO TOLERANCE for content theft, copyright infringement, and theft of intellectual property.