Back
 
Margin Print
Topic Contents
Margin
Contribution Margin
What is critical here?

Margin points are earned in three areas.


  • Contribution Margin Percentage (Up to 33 1/3 points). Each product with a contribution margin greater than 30% earns points. If all products have contribution margins greater than 30%, you earn 33 1/3 points.
  • Net Margin Percentage (Up to 33 1/3 points). Each product with a net margin greater than 20% earns points. If all products have margins greater than 20%, you earn 33 1/3 points.
  • ROS or Return On Sales (Up to 33 1/3 points). ROS is defined as (Net Profit / Total Sales). ROS looks at the entire company's after tax margins. You earn 33 1/3 points for an ROS of 10% or greater. You earn nothing for a negative ROS. An ROS between 1% and 10% is scaled. For example, an ROS of 5% would earn 16.65 points.

To be considered for contribution and net margins, a product must start the year with a plant and begin making sales on January 1. Products that are in R&D at the beginning of the year are ignored.

Why do margins matter? And why focus upon Contribution Margin, Net Margin, and Return On Sales? To simplify things, let's consider an example where you have only one product.

Example

REVENUE ($000) Awsum     Product Awsum
Sales $30,000     Price $30.00
VARIABLE COSTS       Labor $7.00
Direct Labor $7,000     Material $11.50
Direct Material $11,500     Inventory Carry $0.50
Inventory Carry $500     Unit Margin $11.00
Total Variable Costs $19,000     Units Sold  1,000,000
Contribution margin $11,000 36.7%      
PERIOD COSTS          
Depreciation $2,000        
SG&A:  R&D $500        
Promotion $1,300        
Sales $1,100        
Admin $300        
Total Period Costs $5,200        
Net Margin $5,800 19.3%      
Other (fees, write-offs) $100        
EBIT $5,700        
Interest $2,500        
Taxes $1,120        
Profit Sharing $50        
Net Profit $2,030 6.8%