Margin and Markup

So you have an item which costs 100 and you need to find the selling price which would make the company 20%. Do you use margin, or markup?

Margin and Markup are two concepts that measure value added and profit in terms of a percentage, either of the selling price, or the cost price.

For the same amount, Margin and Markup do not result in the same value.


Let’s have a look at the equations used.

If the difference between the selling price and the cost price is the profit:

margin = selling pricecost price selling price

margin is calculated by dividing the profit by the selling price, and

markup = selling pricecost price cost price

markup is calculated by dividing the profit by the cost price.


Let’s see it in action with some numbers.

We are usually in the situation where we want to determine the selling price based on a known cost, and a desired rate. Which method should we use?

First, let us rearrange the equations so that both show the selling price as the subject of the formulas:

selling price = cost price 1margin

selling price = cost price x ( 1 +markup )

If my product costs 100 and I need a margin of 20%, the selling price would be
100/0.8 = 125

On the other hand, if I were to markup by 20%, the selling price would be
100×1.2 = 120


So when should I use which?

I guess it is a matter of policy. Such choice is usually dictated by the policies of the department, or based on your experience in the sector.

I personally prefer the margin method for the following reasons:

  • Margin keeps the value adding in terms of the selling price. This keeps the profit in perspective of the selling price.
  • It allows me the keep the rate numbers lower, thus more conservative. Depending on the value being added to the product, and the market in question, 10% to 20% maybe good enough for a good profit; 30% to 40% may be very healthy, while 50% and more might be very lucrative. Once again, remember that this is highly subjective.
  • I also find that margin puts discounts in perspective. A 5% discount on a selling price having 20% margin still gives me around 15% margin. For the markup method, a 5% discount effectively eats up closer to 6% of the profit.

I hope that the above helped you clarify this point. It took me a while, some modelling and simulation, and experience to understand and master this. Today I am comfortable in making quotations that generate good returns for the value offered, give me confidence in negotiating satisfactory discounts to the clients, and designing meaningful KPIs for the team.

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