Are You Making Money?

by Jon Schreibfeder

In this article, we revisit the concept of adjusted margin and show how you can determine whether specific inventory contributes to your company's profitability using the "Adjusted Margin – NIREP" comparison.


I'm going to begin this article with two assumptions which should be true for all manufacturers (who maintain stock inventory), distributors, and retailers:

In this article we're going to look at how the material you have in stock relates to these goals – that is, how it is helping you meet your customers' expectations of availability while contributing positively to your company's bottom line.


The Three Types of Stocked Inventory

Whether you are a manufacturer, distributor, or retailer, each piece of each item in your stocked inventory can fall into one of three categories:

Your first step in analyzing the profitability of your inventory investment is to place each item you stock into one of these three categories. But to do this, we must determine when a product contributes to corporate profitability – that is, what inventory falls into the "good" category.


Defining Profitability

How does the typical distributor, manufacturer, or retailer define profit? Well, if you ask someone in the sales department, they'll probably talk to you about his or her company's gross margin:

Annual Sales Dollars – Annual Cost of Goods Sold
Annual Sales Dollars

The higher gross margin, the better. Under most circumstances salespeople would rather sell a product with a 24% margin than an item with a 20% margin. Why? Because most salespeople are paid based on gross margin. But does the company get a better return on investment on the product with a 24% margin? Maybe, maybe not. It depends on the average value of inventory the company must maintain to generate the sales of the item.

The average inventory investment will depend on such factors as:

The higher the average inventory investment, the more it costs you to maintain or "carry" the inventory in your warehouse. What expenses do incur in carrying inventory?

Typically the carrying cost of finished goods inventory is 25%-35% per year of the average inventory value. With this fact in mind, does a product with a gross margin of 24% contribute more to a company's bottom line than another product with a gross margin of only 20%? Let's look at an example:

Product "A": Annual Sales = $12,500  
  Cost of Goods Sold = $9,500  
  Gross Margin = $12,500 – $9,500
$12,500
= 24%
 
Product "B": Annual Sales = $12,500  
  Cost of Goods Sold = $10,000  
  Gross Margin = $12,500 – $10,000
$12,500
= 20%

At first look, item "A" contributes more to the company's profitability. But what the gross margin doesn't reflect is that we have to maintain an average inventory of $5,000 of item "A" and $2,500 of item "B." If we subtract the yearly cost of maintaining this average inventory investment from the annual profit dollars (i.e. sales – cost), the result is a new measure of profitability, the adjusted margin:

Annual Sales Dollars – Annual Cost of Goods Sold – (Average Inventory Value x Carrying Cost%)
Annual Sales Dollars

Let's look at the adjusted margin of our two products:

Product "A": Annual Sales = $12,500  
  Cost of Goods Sold = $9,500  
  Average Inventory Value = $5,000  
  Carrying Cost = 25%  
  Adjusted Margin = $12,500 – $9,500 – ($5,000 x .25)
$12,500
= 14%
 
Product "B": Annual Sales = $12,500  
  Cost of Goods Sold = $10,000  
  Average Inventory Value = $2,500  
  Carrying Cost = 25%  
  Adjusted Margin = $12,500 – $10,000 – ($2,500 x .25)
$12,500
= 15%

Even though product "B" has a lower gross margin, its adjusted margin shows that it contributes more to the company's profitability.

You may be asking yourself, "But how do we know if the company is making money?" The answer is actually fairly simple. You compare the adjusted margin to percentage of "non-inventory related expenses," or NIREP. The NIREP is calculated with this formula:

Annual Non-Inventory Related Expenses
Total Annual Sales

Annual non-inventory related expenses include all of the expenses you incur other than what was included in the carrying cost. This includes all selling, marketing, and administrative costs. Every expense from your profit and loss statement should be included in either the carrying cost or NIREP. If your adjusted margin is 14% and your NIREP is 10%, you're making money. If your NIREP is higher than your adjusted margin, you're looking at either "bad" or "ugly" inventory. Please don't confuse the NIREP with the operating expense as a percentage of sales. That measurement includes the expenses that make up the carrying cost of inventory.

You can use the Adjusted Margin – NIREP comparison to gauge profitability throughout your organization. For example:

If an item or product line's adjusted margin doesn't exceed the NIREP for the company, someone had better be able to prove that, even though the material doesn't directly contribute to the bottom line, it contributes to other profitable sales.

The Adjusted Margin – NIREP comparison is a great tool for separating your good bad and ugly inventory. Start using it today!

©1998, Effective Inventory Management, Inc., 215 South Denton Tap Road, Suite 230, Coppell TX 75019. All rights reserved. This article cannot be reprinted, or reproduced, in whole or in part, without the expressed written permission of Effective Inventory Management, Inc.

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215 South Denton Tap Road, Suite 230
Coppell, TX 75019
(972) 304-3325
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