ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
16.10.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Estimate the Profit Consequences of Adding More Benefits to Grow More Rapidly

Author: Donald Mitchell Author Ranking Gold | Posted: 03-01-2008 | Comments: 0 | Views: 9 | Rating:  (50) Article Popularity - Green (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

From space many places on Earth look pretty flat. From the ground more obstacles become apparent: Granite mountains loom in places where chasms divide neighboring areas. Both perspectives tell you something you need to know.

The space view shows you the most direct route as the proverbial crow flies, while the close-up view shows you obstacles that are well worth avoiding where that's possible. In this article, the broadest perspective, like that from space, is emphasized. That perspective encompasses expanding your business model (the who, what, when, why, where, how, and how much of your offerings) in volume-improving ways.

In considering how to expand your business model's delivery of offerings and benefits, you should be guided by what will be easily understandable and desirable by your stakeholders (those who are affected by what you offer) . . . and where the adjustments will provide more profit for businesses and more effectiveness for nonprofit organizations.

Business model innovation is something that many organizations struggle with. In this article, I've broken out the elements and added continuing examples to make innovative business model thinking and analysis easier to do. This article's material will, however, be clearest to those who have already read about continuing business model innovation.

Expand What You Do Now

Unless you are providing a very small percentage of the needs of each customer or beneficiary, growing by 21-fold requires adding customers or beneficiaries. Because so many organizations can expand to provide 21 times the number of customers or beneficiaries, that's a great place to begin. You should start by considering who you will serve as these added customers and beneficiaries and where those benefits will be delivered to make the expansion more practical.

Let me share a story with you that I first examined in an earlier book to help make that point about who and where clearer. A young married couple, Mr. William and Ms. Dorothy Hustead, bought a small store in a tiny town near the South Dakota Badlands. From 1931 to 1936, they struggled through the Depression serving the town's 326 impoverished residents.

One day in 1936, Ms. Hustead, bothered by the sound of cars on the nearby highway heading for Mount Rushmore, persuaded her husband to expand their business to serve these travelers. Mr. Hustead put up signs on the highway to draw visitors to their store, making a unique appeal. The signs said, "Free Ice Water . . . Wall Drug."

In those days before automobile air conditioning was common, that offer was a powerful appeal. Beginning from this humble expansion of its customer base, Wall Drug now serves more than 20,000 visitors a day during the summer in its Wall, South Dakota, store and many more on its Web site.

Who Is Served and Where

Let's begin considering volume-expanding business models by looking at "who" is served. The lesson is to keep it simple. Change as little as possible while becoming more efficient and effective as an organization for your customers and beneficiaries. The simplest way to do this is to put more volume through an existing organizational structure without adding fixed costs or increasing the ratio of variable costs to sales.

In a for-profit organization you will naturally first want to attract the most profitable potential customers. If current customers buy a very small percentage (say 1 to 2 percent) of their needs from you, such a profitable expansion may simply be possible by selling 40 to 50 times more to selected current customers.

You are already spending time and money to gather a small part of these customers' total requirements. In many cases your overhead costs to provide more products and services would not increase.

Let's assume your current pretax profits are 10 percent of sales and your contribution to profits before overhead costs is 30 percent of sales. This circumstance means that selling more of the same mix of offerings at the same price to an existing customer would almost triple the profit contribution margin on the increased sales. Were that to occur, a 20 times increase in volume would lead to a 60 times increase in profits!

See Example 1 if you want to explore how this could happen.

Example 1: Adding 20 Times More Revenues Without Increasing Overhead Costs Speeds Profit Growth

If corporate overhead cost remains constant while profit contribution grows to $6.3 million from $0.3 million, pretax profits expand by $6.0 million (60-fold) while earning the same profit contribution as a percentage of revenues.

Annual Pro Forma Financials Before Volume Expands

Revenues $1,000,000

Cost of providing offerings $700,000

Profit contribution $300,000

Corporate overhead cost $200,000

Pretax profit $100,000

20 Times Volume Increase with No Additional Overhead Expenses

Revenues $21,000,000

Cost of providing offerings $14,700,000

Profit contribution $6,300,000

Corporate overhead cost $200,000

Pretax profit $6,100,000

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/management-articles/estimate-the-profit-consequences-of-adding-more-benefits-to-grow-more-rapidly-296026.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
About the Author:

Donald Mitchell is an author of seven books including Adventures of an Optimist, The 2,000 Percent Squared Solution, The 2,000 Percent Solution, The 2,000 Percent Solution Workbook, The Irresistible Growth Enterprise, and The Ultimate Competitive Advantage. Read about creating breakthroughs through 2,000 percent solutions and receive tips by e-mail by registering for free at http://www.2000percentsolution.com .

Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Who, What, and Where You Provide Your Offerings Have Huge Profit Effects
By: Donald Mitchell | 08/01/2008 | Management
This article looks at the interaction of customer selection and location with the type of offerings you provide for impacting profits and growth potential.

How Can You Find and Study Examples of Continuing Business Model Innovators?
By: Donald Mitchell | 19/04/2008 | Management
This article describes a methodology that executives and managers can use to locate and understand role models for continuing business model innovation.

Steer Your Customers to the Right Offerings
By: Donald Mitchell | 17/01/2008 | Management
Most customers pick the wrong offerings and for the wrong reasons. The resulting disappointments harm your business. This article shows how to avoid that problem.

Consider All Your Costs Before Adding New Products and Services
By: Donald Mitchell | 08/01/2008 | Management
Sometimes you are better off not adding an offering because your costs go up faster than your profit contribution. This article shows how to avoid that problem and add highly profitable new offerings for your customers.

Start Business Model Innovation First, and Stay Focused on it
By: Donald Mitchell | 19/09/2008 | Business
Gaining industry leadership won't secure future success unless you also lead the industry in improving your business model.

Report to Stakeholders What You Heard About Your Proposed New Business Model and Your Intentions
By: Donald Mitchell | 28/08/2008 | Business
Develop a new business model in cooperation with listening to and reporting to stakeholders if you want to get the best ideas and have the most support.

Success Sequence for Achieving Exponential Profit Growth
By: Donald Mitchell | 29/03/2008 | Business
This article looks at the sequence by which company leaders learn to produce continuing business model innovation to expand their profits exponentially.

Pursue the Business Model Tests With the Highest Potential and Least Risk if They Don't Succeed
By: Donald Mitchell | 12/05/2008 | Business
Business model innovation is most likely to succeed with small, low-cost, low-risk tests precede choosing a new direction.

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Management Articles

Diversity Management
By: Janine Sergay | 16/10/2008
Opportunity for all Is it not every individual's right to be afforded opportunities to put forward their best efforts? To develop their potential? And to show their worth through the results they produce? Not only is this a moral and ethical imperative but, within many countries, a legal one too. Simple statistics...

Inventory Management System for Proper Demand and Supply
By: spinxwebdesign | 16/10/2008
Inventory management system is being popularly used by many companies and organization worldwide.

Executive Coaching India : How Does Coaching Work?
By: Vaishally Nath | 14/10/2008
Executive Coaching India www.executivecoachingindia.com The Orange Academy (www.executivecoachingindia.com) is one of the front runners of coaching in India. The organization has in its fold world class coaches with sizeable experience and insights at the leadership levels. Their expertise gives The Orange Academy an edge to provide the best of coaching results. This article outlines the coaching process and answes some frequently asked questions by the users consumers of coaching services.

Six Sigma Green Belt Certification
By: Robert | 14/10/2008
six sigma green belt certification as an employee can increase your effectiveness as an employee and save you thousands or millions of dollars as a business owner.

Tips on Looking for a Good Venture Capital Business Firm
By: Trisha Rich | 14/10/2008
Numerous ventures are experienced with the challenging task of increasing thier venture capital. If you are one them, then this process might be helpful on finding the right venture capital firm for your business. Although this may look easy.

Improve Employee Performance by Letting "talkers" Speak
By: Barbara Brown, PhD | 14/10/2008
If you have employees who love to talk, consider using their passion for talking as a way to encourage greater cooperation and contributions. This article explains the usefulness of this approach and gives you four situations where you might apply it.

Payroll Frequency: the Difference and the Cost Savings
By: Rebecca Beckett | 14/10/2008
It is essential that companies consider payroll frequency when looking for a way to cut costs. Choosing the frequency best for your company will make for a smooth process.

Problem-solving Success Tip - Know the Job is Really Done
By: Jeanne Sawyer | 14/10/2008
Know a job is REALLY done by using completion criteria. You don't want to tell someone who has worked really hard to complete a task that what they did isn't what you meant. This tip tells you how to avoid this common problem.

More from Donald Mitchell

Speakers: Think Through What Might Happen to Prepare Your Audience
By: Donald Mitchell | 14/10/2008 | Motivational
It's easy to get carried away with an exciting message. But that message can have more impact if you plan for what effects you want to achieve.

Speakers: Ask People to Step Out in Faith to Achieve Something New
By: Donald Mitchell | 14/10/2008 | Self Improvement
If you don't know exactly what you need to do, tell everyone and ask for their help.

How Do You Explain Something No One Has Ever Thought About Before?
By: Donald Mitchell | 13/10/2008 | Self Improvement
A new idea can be better explained through putting the information into a familiar, interesting context. One of the best ways to do this is with a demonstration.

Watch Your Listeners to See If the Message Is Sinking In
By: Donald Mitchell | 13/10/2008 | Self Improvement
No matter how well prepared your speech or presentation is, unless the listeners understand and are interested you are in trouble. Be ready to respond by switching gears until you get the right response.

How Do You Focus on Excellence?
By: Donald Mitchell | 09/10/2008 | Motivational
This article explores a method for helping an audience appreciate the potential of developing more excellence.

Expect the Unexpected When You Learn to Meditate
By: Donald Mitchell | 09/10/2008 | Self Improvement
In this article, I describe how learning to meditate led me into unexpected learning.

Learn to Build an Ideal, Secure Lifestyle
By: Donald Mitchell | 07/10/2008 | Careers
Many people get caught up in business careers that make them unhappy. How can you live a great life and be successful in your business career? This article explains how you can learn to do both and includes questions to help you do so.

Be Prepared to Succeed: Do Your Homework before Starting New Businesses and Jobs
By: Donald Mitchell | 02/10/2008 | Careers
A little homework can make all the difference in starting new businesses or new jobs. This article describes the benefits of the right homework, and tells you what to do to prepare for success.

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below