Business Management SL
Business Management SL
6
Chapters
175
Notes
Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB
Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB
Unit 2 - Human Resource Management - QB
Unit 2 - Human Resource Management - QB
Unit 3 - Finance & accounts - QB
Unit 3 - Finance & accounts - QB
Unit 4 - Marketing - QB
Unit 4 - Marketing - QB
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Unit 6 - Assessment
Unit 6 - Assessment
IB Resources
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Business Management SL
Business Management SL

Unit 5 - Operations management - QB

Unlock The Secret To Profit: Master Your Break-Even Point & Margin Of Safety

Word Count Emoji
666 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited onΒ 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Breaking even πŸ“Š

  • The break-even quantity is the minimum number of items that must be sold so that all costs are covered by the sales revenue.
  • At the break-even point, there is no loss, but no profit either.

Break - even chart πŸ“‰

  • A break-even chart shows the value of a firm’s costs (fixed costs, variable costs, total costs) and revenue against a given level of output.
  • It can be drawn by plotting the following lines
    • Fixed Costs (FC): A horizontal line representing the constant fixed costs regardless of the output.
    • Variable Costs (VC): Begins at zero and increases proportionally with output.
    • Total Costs (TC): Starts at the level of FC and follows the same trend as the VC line.
    • Total Revenue (TR): Begins at zero and increases with the number of units sold.
  • The break-even point is where the TC line intersects the TR line.
  • The left side of the break-even point indicates a loss, while the right side indicates profit.

Margin of safety πŸ›‘

  • The margin of safety is the difference between the break-even level of output and the actual level of output.
  • The formula is: margin of safety = current output - break-even output.
  • A positive margin indicates profit, while a negative margin indicates loss.

Calculating break - even quantity πŸ”’

  • Contribution Per Unit Method
    • Formula: break-even quantity = fixed costs / contribution per unit
    • Contribution per unit = selling price - variable cost per unit
  • Total Costs = Total Revenue Method
    • Total revenue = price per unit × quantity sold
    • Total costs = total fixed costs + total variable costs
    • Solve for quantity (Q) where TR = TC.

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IB Resources
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Business Management SL
Business Management SL

Unit 5 - Operations management - QB

Unlock The Secret To Profit: Master Your Break-Even Point & Margin Of Safety

Word Count Emoji
666 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited onΒ 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Breaking even πŸ“Š

  • The break-even quantity is the minimum number of items that must be sold so that all costs are covered by the sales revenue.
  • At the break-even point, there is no loss, but no profit either.

Break - even chart πŸ“‰

  • A break-even chart shows the value of a firm’s costs (fixed costs, variable costs, total costs) and revenue against a given level of output.
  • It can be drawn by plotting the following lines
    • Fixed Costs (FC): A horizontal line representing the constant fixed costs regardless of the output.
    • Variable Costs (VC): Begins at zero and increases proportionally with output.
    • Total Costs (TC): Starts at the level of FC and follows the same trend as the VC line.
    • Total Revenue (TR): Begins at zero and increases with the number of units sold.
  • The break-even point is where the TC line intersects the TR line.
  • The left side of the break-even point indicates a loss, while the right side indicates profit.

Margin of safety πŸ›‘

  • The margin of safety is the difference between the break-even level of output and the actual level of output.
  • The formula is: margin of safety = current output - break-even output.
  • A positive margin indicates profit, while a negative margin indicates loss.

Calculating break - even quantity πŸ”’

  • Contribution Per Unit Method
    • Formula: break-even quantity = fixed costs / contribution per unit
    • Contribution per unit = selling price - variable cost per unit
  • Total Costs = Total Revenue Method
    • Total revenue = price per unit × quantity sold
    • Total costs = total fixed costs + total variable costs
    • Solve for quantity (Q) where TR = TC.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Business Management SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟

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