Quick and Dirty Calculation of Break Even As a Result of Promotional Costs—by Eduardo R. Casas

Thanks to Ed Casas for guest posting today and covering a topic I know very little about! Thanks to Ed for developing a formula for finding it out.

BY EDUARDO R CASAS
Below is a simple way to calculate how many books one has to sell to recover the promotional costs ( or any additional fixed cost) of a marketing campaign.

Break Even Promo Spreadsheet

Both in units and dollars

You need to know 4 things:

A. UNIT SALES PRICE
B. VARIABLE COTS PER UNIT
C. TOTAL FIXED COSTS
D. PROMOTION COSTS

The spread sheet is flexible so that every time you have any additional fixed costs or promotional costs just simply enter the amounts on the cell 1 FC for fixed costs, 2 FC for promotional costs , 3 FC automatically sums up all the costs , and below you can see the results.

For those who can use Excel, it’s rather simple , if you would like an Excel copy of the spreadsheet, please send an email address in the comments or comment with an email to my blog.

You can see given these factors that an additional 333 books need to be sold to cover this additional cost. Just plug in the cells motioned new costs and the spreadsheet gives you the new results.

3 New --Books copy BLOG

Ed CasasBorn in Havana Cuba, Ed now lives in Coral Springs Florida. His experience as an auditor has spanned over 20 years. He has traveled to many international locations and has dealt with all kinds of financial situations, providing a myriad of experiences, from which Ed has drawn on for inspiration for his stories. You can find Ed on his blog, on Facebook, and at his profile on Crimespace.

Devil's auditor

Elizabeth Spann Craig

View posts by Elizabeth Spann Craig
Elizabeth writes the Memphis Barbeque series (as Riley Adams) and the Southern Quilting mysteries for Penguin and writes the Myrtle Clover series for Midnight Ink and independently. She also has a blog, which was named by Writer’s Digest as one of the 101 Best Websites for Writers. There she posts on the writing craft, finding inspiration in everyday life, and fitting writing into a busy schedule.

5 Comments

  1. Stephen TrempDecember 10, 2011

    Its great to meet Ed and I will definitely want this spreadsheet and the formulas. I’m very much familiar with Excel formulas (at least I used to be). This is a very simple, straight forward, handy dandy tool to have!

  2. Hilary Melton-ButcherDecember 10, 2011

    Hi Elizabeth and Ed .. this strikes me as a really useful tool for all authors.

    Ed – I imagine your books are excellent reads .. and one day I’d love to read them .. audit mystery crimes ..

    Cheers to you both – Hilary

  3. Jemi FraserDecember 10, 2011

    Nice! I will definitely bookmark for future reference! :)

  4. BarbaraDecember 10, 2011

    It pains me to tell you how familiar I am with promotional costs vs. profits = hopefully the break-even point. It’s a long sad story. :(

  5. Alex J. CavanaughDecember 10, 2011

    Glad most of my promotional efforts don’t cost money. I imagine my publisher does a spreadsheet like this though.

Comments are closed.

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