Margin versus Markup

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 53

  • @TheFinanceStoryteller
    @TheFinanceStoryteller  4 года назад +3

    If you are looking for powerful inventory software that’s easy to use, and provides you with important insights on your margin performance, then try InFlow inventory management software for free: inflow.grsm.io/margin

  • @allgravy8155
    @allgravy8155 4 года назад +10

    Thank you! I have just realised I've been misunderstanding these terms for the past 2 years. You explained it so well, very helpful!

  • @picalingo5244
    @picalingo5244 4 года назад +9

    Gosh! After so much reading, I can't still draw the line btwn these two! But your video made me understand it instantly! Thanks for explaining the PURPOSE of having margin and markup! :)

  • @lisat7850
    @lisat7850 3 года назад +2

    Thank you ! your videos are very helpful - easy to understand, to the point and you highlight important information to note !

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  3 года назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words, Lisa! So happy to hear that. :-) Happy to help.

  • @cbaide100
    @cbaide100 5 лет назад +4

    Great video!. I like the way things are explained: to the point supported with useful examples.

  • @Mohamed-xt1fp
    @Mohamed-xt1fp 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the simple explanation with examples.

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  7 месяцев назад

      You are welcome! I recently made a follow-up video on how to calculate margin and markup in Excel, that might be useful for you as well: ruclips.net/video/B6p-agZasys/видео.html

  • @derrickmoubs5055
    @derrickmoubs5055 2 года назад +1

    Perfectly explained in few minutes.. Thank you very much

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  2 года назад +1

      Happy to help, Derrick! Thank you for watching and commenting.

    • @derrickmoubs5055
      @derrickmoubs5055 2 года назад +1

      @@TheFinanceStoryteller Welcome, I wish to have the same video format explaining shortly the difference between Landed Cost and COGS

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  2 года назад

      Hello Derrick! I have heard of landed cost before, but never really looked into it. However, it seems that others have made RUclips videos on the topic. Please do a quick search on the term, and hopefully it will answer your question.

  • @charlieparagliding8246
    @charlieparagliding8246 4 года назад +1

    very well explained and easy to understand , thank you best video on the subject I have found !

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  4 года назад

      You are welcome, Charlie! Maybe my video on price vs value would be helpful for you to watch as well: ruclips.net/video/2PO9tIt5830/видео.html

    • @charlieparagliding8246
      @charlieparagliding8246 4 года назад +1

      @@TheFinanceStoryteller i am going to go watch it right now, thank you

  • @Fly_HiGh-wt8xd
    @Fly_HiGh-wt8xd 6 лет назад +2

    Thanks! Very useful

  • @vivalavivi4073
    @vivalavivi4073 4 года назад +2

    So helpful!

  • @hhectorlector
    @hhectorlector 2 года назад +1

    Very well explained

  • @renansassi
    @renansassi 6 лет назад +2

    Very much!!

  • @Thawolf878
    @Thawolf878 4 года назад +1

    Very helpful cid

  • @quickwingposts
    @quickwingposts 6 лет назад +2

    I wish I had discovered you earlier.

  • @sisayt1041
    @sisayt1041 Год назад +1

    As per your example, sales=100, cost=80, profit=20. profit margin=20%(20/100) which interpretes out of total sales p=20 & markup=25%(20/80), what is the interpretation?Thank you🙏

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  Год назад

      I think I explained that clearly in the video: it's a fundamentally different attitude as to how you do business. Value-based thinking vs cost-based thinking….

  • @shekahamedshadhik1592
    @shekahamedshadhik1592 2 года назад +1

    I am a trader and buy goods and sell goods for a profit. In my finance sheet I have a markup column and don’t consider the margin count. Is my approach wrong?

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  2 года назад +1

      Hello! I don't think your approach is wrong, as long as you understand the difference between the two concepts.

  • @TheRoche19
    @TheRoche19 3 года назад

    Hello, If I use a logical answer we take for both price and cost, a full amount I mean include taxes, right?...
    Example: Price Full vs Cost Full not Cost less Taxes
    1,990 1,690 1,433
    Ty Dr.

  • @allenchia9942
    @allenchia9942 3 года назад +1

    How is Markup different from ROI in %? Thanks!

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  3 года назад +1

      Hi Allen! These terms apply to completely different domains. Markup is used in discussions within the commercial or product management team: what is the cost to manufacture this good or service, and how much can/should/do we add in profit margin on top of that, in order to get to a selling price. ROI is used in capital budgeting discussions: how much is our upfront investment/spend to implement a change, versus how much annual return do we expect to get in return for making this investment. ruclips.net/video/o4of1uNSRis/видео.html

  • @hollykm
    @hollykm 4 года назад +1

    Please help! My professor says that the equation for Profit Margin = 1 - cost/price. I have no idea what _this_ equation means because your video says that Profit Margin = profit/revenue. And honestly believe that you are better at this than her.
    Can anyone tell me what the former equation [Profit Margin = 1 - cost/price] means?

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  4 года назад +1

      Hello Holly! Your professor and I are using different words for the same thing.... Let's use the numbers from the video. We sell 1 unit at $100 price per unit, so revenue is $100. The cost of the unit is $80, so the profit margin is $100 - $80 = $20. If we translate that to percentages, then your professor says profit margin = 1 - cost/price = 1 - $80/$100 = 1 - 0.8 = .2 = 20%. I say the same thing in a different way, profit margin = profit/revenue = $20/$100 = 20%. Does that make sense?

    • @hollykm
      @hollykm 4 года назад +1

      The Finance Storyteller This is great!! Thank you. I love your videos and am so grateful you took the time to reach out to me!

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  4 года назад

      @@hollykm You're welcome! Happy to help. :-) Please share the videos/channel with friends!

    • @thennav1077
      @thennav1077 4 года назад +1

      The Finance Storyteller You are Great..You just Cleared my confusion In this Margin Vs Markup..Your way of explaining is ultimate..How much explaination is enough to clear this topic is already known to you..You are just dropping that words

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  4 года назад

      @@thennav1077 Thank you!!!! Yes, I am trying to discuss topics in full in a very "direct" way. :-)

  • @lemisosaroni8857
    @lemisosaroni8857 3 года назад +1

    👍🏽👌🏽

  • @footage6402
    @footage6402 6 лет назад

    I'm so confused as to why you do let's say you want 20% proft margin on 100 dollar item cost, then why do you take 100%-20% = 80% and divide below 100 to get that it is 125 revenue cost that you want. Why does one have to take 1-20% ?

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  6 лет назад

      Profit margin is calculated as percentage of revenue. If you know the cost of an item, which in your question is $100, and you have a target profit margin of 20% (of revenue), then what is missing in the picture is how much you charge the customer (=revenue) for the item. Revenue minus cost is margin. Revenue is set at 100%, you want margin to be 20%, therefore cost is 100% - 20% = 80%. This means that 80% of the revenue is equal to $100. To get to the revenue, you take $100 divided by 0.8 = $125. In mathematical terms 0.8 is the same as 80%; 1 is the same as 100%; 0.2 is the same as 20%. Hope this helps!

    • @footage6402
      @footage6402 6 лет назад

      Thanks I understand .8 equals 80% but why do you divide the cost by it. What is intuitively being done by dividing by the percentage .8? I don't get that part?

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  6 лет назад

      Dividing by .8 is the same as multiplying by 1.25.
      1) Revenue = 100%
      2) Margin = 20% of Revenue
      3) Cost = 80% of Revenue.
      We already know the cost in absolute dollar terms, so we can fill in the third of the above equations. It becomes $100 = 80% of Revenue. We want to figure out how much Revenue needs to be, so we rewrite the equation. In simplified math terms, we have to get the "80%" to jump over the "=" sign. Two ways to do that: a) Revenue = $100 / 0.8 = $125. b) Revenue = $100 * 1.25 = $125.

  • @jecobineleccion6445
    @jecobineleccion6445 4 года назад

    Is margin and mark-on the same?

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  4 года назад +1

      Nope. Mark-on is the same as markup, and the short video explains why they are different, and why it is very important to understand.

  • @rickyraton12
    @rickyraton12 2 года назад

    Still not clear

    • @TheFinanceStoryteller
      @TheFinanceStoryteller  2 года назад +1

      Sorry to hear that. I would suggest to watch a few more videos on the topic, as there are others available by different channels.