Calculating a retail markup |
Alicia appears to understand the basic concept of a markup, or at least she managed to find some sort of reference (perhaps written at a fifth-grade level?) that could explain to her that
"If you want to make a profit in your business, you have to understand how to mark up from cost..."
No duh, Alicia: but how does the reader do that? Well, Ms Bodine is there to help them, sort of, but only if they happen to own an HP12C Platinum Calculator; although we believe that the instructions she provides aren't quite correct:
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"Divide your total number of products by how much money you want to make for the year. If you want to make $50,000 and you have 10,000 items you believe you can sell you would compute the mark up cost like this: 10,000 divided by 50,000 = 5. So you would want to mark up each item $5. In small products this isn't reasonable, and in large products this isn't enough. You are going to have to adjust the prices of the small and large products so that your totals average out to $5. "Gee: people go to business school and take seminars costing thousands of dollars per day, yet Alicia Bodine is giving these secrets away for free! And it's worth every penny!
No, Alicia, that's not how you mark up from cost. If you want to mark up an item with a cost of $18.76, you
- Convert the markup percentage to a decimal, e.g., 75% becomes 0.75
- Add the decimal to 1.0 -- in our example, 1.75
- Multiply the cost by the result: $18.76 * 1.75 = $32.83
¹ The original has been deleted by Leaf Group, but can still be accessed using the Wayback machine at archive.org. Its URL was ehow.com/how_2364388_markup-from-cost.html
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DD - RETAIL
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