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Break-Even Analysis
The Gale Encyclopedia of Busine$$ and Finance - Cite This Source(SEE: Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis)
The Gale Encyclopedia of Busine$$ and Finance
Copyright © 1999 by The Gale Group.
Published by The Gale Group. All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Break-Even Analysis
Encyclopedia of Small Business - Cite This SourceBreak-even analysis is used in cost accounting and capital budgeting to evaluate projects or product lines in terms of their volume and profitability relationship. At its simplest, the tool is used as its name suggests: to determine the volume at which a company's costs will exactly equal its revenues, therefore resulting in net income of zero, or the "break-even" point. Perhaps more useful than this simple determination, however, is the understanding gained through such analysis of the variable and fixed nature of certain costs. Break-even analysis forces the small business owner to research, quantify, and categorize the company's costs into fixed and variable groups.
"Understanding what it takes to break even is critical to making any business profitable," Kevin D. Thompson stated in Black Enterprise. "Incorporating accurate and thorough break-even analysis as a routine part of your financial planning will keep you abreast of how your business is really faring. Determining how much business is needed to keep the door open will help improve your cash-flow management and your bottom line."
The basic formula for break-even analysis is as follows:
BEQ FC /(P-VC)
Where BEQ Break-even quantity
FC Total fixed costs
P Average price per unit, and
VC Variable costs per unit.
Fixed costs include rent, equipment leases, insurance, interest on borrowed funds, and administrative salaries—costs that do not tend to vary based on sales volume. Variable costs, on the other hand, include direct labor, raw materials, sales commissions, and delivery expenses—costs that tend to fluctuate with the level of sales. A key component of break-even analysis is the contribution margin, which can be defined as a product or service's price (P) minus variable costs (VC) per unit sold. The contribution margin concept is grounded in incremental or marginal analysis; its focus is the extra revenue and costs that will be incurred with the next additional unit.
The first step in determining the level of sales needed for a small business to break even is to compute the contribution margin, by subtracting the variable costs per unit from the selling price. For example, if P is $30 and VC are $20, the contribution margin is $10. The next step is to divide the total annual fixed costs by the contribution margin. For example, a company with FC of $50,000 and a contribution margin of $10 would need to sell 5,000 units to break even. This number can easily be converted to the dollars of revenue the company would need to break even for the year. Simply multiply the break-even point in units by the average selling price per unit. In this case, a BEQ of 5,000 units multiplied by a P of $30 per unit yields break-even revenue of $150,000.
Break-even analysis has numerous potential applications for small businesses. For example, it can help managers assess the effect of changing prices, sales volume, and costs on profits. It can also help small business owners make decisions regarding whether to expand their operations or hire new employees. Break-even analysis would also be useful in the following situation: a small business owner is skeptical of her marketing manager's projection for sales of 15,000 units of a new product, and wants to know what minimum quantity of units must be sold to avoid losing money, assuming a selling price of $25, fixed costs of $100,000, and variable costs of $15. The equation tells her that these parameters will require a break-even volume of 10,000 units; fewer than that level yields losses, more than that level yields profits. This perspective of analysis may be employed where the analyst is highly confident of the estimates for price and costs, but feels less certain about the assessment of market demand. In this case, the small business owner might be interested in how low sales could fall below the marketing manager's forecast without causing an embarrassment at year-end reporting time.
Another scenario may involve the question of how to manufacture a product, in terms of the nature of operations and how they will affect fixed costs. Here, a small business owner may have a good handle on the quantity expected, the likely selling price, and the variable costs involved, but be undecided about how to structure the new operation. If the volume is expected to be 10,000 units, at a selling price of $5 and variable costs of $3.50, the break-even equation tells him that fixed costs can be no greater than $15,000. "The bottom line is that, especially for small businesses, the margins for error are much too narrow to make business decisions on gut instinct alone," Thompson concluded. "Every idea, whether it is the introduction of a new product line, the opening of branch offices, or the hiring of additional staff, must be tested through basic business analysis."
FURTHER READING:
Davis, Joseph M. "Project Feasibility Using Break-Even Point Analysis." Appraisal Journal. January 1998.
Dennis, Michael C. "What Credit Managers Should Know about Break-Even Analysis." Business Credit. February 1995.
Hilton, Ronald W. Managerial Accounting. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1991.
"Numbers You Should Know to Keep in Touch with Your Business." Profit-Building Strategies for Business Owners. May 1993.
Thompson, Kevin D. "Business Management: Planning for Profit." Black Enterprise. April 1993.
Worm, Mark. "Break-Even Analysis and the Commercial Loan Decision." Journal of Lending and Credit Risk Management. November 1997.
Encyclopedia of Small Business
Copyright © 1999 by The Gale Group.
Published by The Gale Group. All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Even
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceGeneral
Even may refer to:- Even, a Scandinavian male personal name (coincidentally, Odd is also a common Norwegian name).
- Even (people), an ethnic group from Siberia and Russian Far East
- Even language, a language spoken by the Evens
- Even Balance Inc., a software producer based in Spring, Texas (USA).
- Even-weave, any woven textile where the warp and weft threads are of the same size
- Even Ha'ezer, a section of Rabbi Jacob ben Asher's compilation of halakha (Jewish law), Arba'ah Turim
- Even HaEzel, Rabbi Isser Zalman Meltzer's commentary on Mishneh Torah
- Even-Shoshan concordance (1977), a New Concordance of the Bible's Old Testament Hebrew text by Abraham Even-Shoshan
- Odd and Even, a solitaire card game which is played with two decks of playing cards
Science and technology
- In mathematics, the term even is used in several senses related to odd:
- even and odd numbers -- even if divisible by 2
- even and odd functions -- even if
- even and odd permutations -- even if composed of an even number of transpositions
- Singly even number, an integer divisible by 2 but not divisible by 4
- Even code, if the Hamming weight of all of a binary code's codewords is even
- Even-odd rule, an algorithm implemented in the PostScript language
- Even-toed ungulate, whose weight is borne about equally by the third and fourth toes - mammal order Artiodactyla
English expressions
- Don't even think about it!, a phrase commonly used when a person denies another person something
- Even money, describes a wagering proposition with even odds
- "Not even wrong", phrase often used to describe pseudoscience
Entertainment
- Even, Dark-Hard-Rock band from Italy (website)
- Even (band), an Australian alternative rock band
- Even Akamaru is jealous of its super tracking power! Search for the phantom Faint Smell Bug, episode 148 of the anime series Naruto
- Even As We Speak, indie band from Sydney, Australia
- Even Better Than the Real Thing, 2nd song from U2's 1991 album, Achtung Baby
- Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, 1976 novel by Tom Robbins
- Even Cowgirls Get the Blues (film), 1993 film based on the novel
- Even Dozen Jug Band, founded in 1963 by Stefan Grossman and Peter Siegel in New York
- Even Dwarfs Started Small (Auch Zwerge haben klein angefangen), 1970 film by German director Werner Herzog
- Even Flow (1991), a song by the band Pearl Jam
- Even God Can't Change the Past, Charlotte Church's third single on her 2005 album Tissues and Issues
- Even Heaven Cries, a pop ballad on Monrose's debut studio album Temptation (2006)
- Even Hitler Had A Girlfriend, 1993 song by the punk band The Mr. T Experience
- Even If and Especially When, 1987 album by Screaming Trees
- Even if I Die, I Won't Kick You! Sanji's Manly Chivalry, 287th episode of the anime adaptation of the manga One Piece
- Even If You Don't, a single released by the band Ween in 2000
- Even in Blackouts (EiB), an acoustic pop-punk band from Chicago, Illinois
- Even in Darkness, collaborative debut LP by the Dungeon Family
- Even in His Youth, a song by the American rock band, Nirvana
- Even in the Quietest Moments (1977), 5th album by progressive rock band Supertramp
- Even It Up, a song recorded by the rock band Heart, released in 1980
- Even My Sure Things Fall Through, 2001 EP by Arizona band Calexico
- Even Now, the sixth studio album by singer and songwriter Barry Manilow
- Even Serpents Shine, 1979 album produced by Alan Mair and Peter Perrett
- Even Song, disambiguation page
- Even Stevens (2000-2003), a comedy television program which originally aired on Disney Channel
- Even Stevens
- The Even Stevens Movie, 2003 American family comedy motion picture that debuted on the Disney Channel
- Even the Losers, 1979 song by American rock band Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers
- Even the Queen, a short story by Connie Willis
- Even Worse, the fifth album by "Weird Al" Yankovic, released in 1988
- Getting Even, a 1993 rock album released by Greg Ginn on Cruz Records
- Getting Even with Dad, 1994 comedy film starring Macaulay Culkin and Ted Danson
- Never Give a Sucker an Even Break, a 1941 Universal Pictures comedy film starring W.C. Fields
- Sieges Even, progressive metal band from Southern Germany
- The Even Chance, a TV adaption of the exploits of Horatio Hornblower, first related by C.S. Forester
- You're Gettin' Even While I'm Gettin' Odd (1984), 14th and final album by American rock band J. Geils Band
People
- Abraham Even-Shoshan (1906-1984), Russian-Israeli Hebrew linguist and lexicographer
- Even Wetten (born 1982), Norwegian speed-skater
- Maya Even (born 1958), Canadian born British based University lecturer, journalist and television presenter
- Nahshon Even-Chaim (aka Phoenix )(born 1971), first major computer hacker convicted in Australia
- Pierre Even (born 1946), Luxembourgian composer
- Shimon Even (1935-2004), Israeli computer science researcher
- Uzi Even (born 1940), Israeli professor of chemistry as well as a politician
Places
- Even-Yehuda, an Israeli village in the Sharon region of Netanya
- Even Menahem, an Israeli cooperative agricultural community (moshav) in Western Galilee
- Even Sapir, an Israeli cooperative agricultural community (moshav) near Jerusalem
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