November 24, 2009

Analyst Spotlight: Profit

Dear Analysts:

You asked me to help you understand what CEOs and Executives are looking for from the analyst community. Today, we're going to focus on profit.

Always remember that Executives care about two things.
  1. Increased Sales.
  2. Increased Profit.

And there are three reasons that Executives care about these two things.

  1. As long as Sales and Profit increase, they get to keep their job.
  2. If Sales and Profit increase consistently over time, under their watch, they get promoted.
  3. Executives usually have a bonus structure that pays if both Sales and Profit increase. And for most Executives, the bonus structure is very rewarding, and consequently, very motivating.

So, in order for an Executive to truly be interested in what you have to offer, your analysis needs to be aligned with increasing Sales, and increasing Profit. Increasing both will perk up the ears of any Executive. Increasing just profit (in other words, recommending to decrease sales as a way to increase profit) is a very slippery slope that most Executives aren't interested in (though it can be exactly what a company needs).

Now, it isn't hard to calculate the annual sales impact of what you are communicating. For instance, say you execute an online optimization test, and you find that you can increase conversion rates by 7%, increasing the rate from 5% to 5.35%. Say you have 3,000,000 annual visitors. And assume that the average order value is $100.

  • Annual Sales Increase = 3,000,000 * (0.0535 - 0.0500) * $100 = $1,050,000.

As an analyst, you're half-way there. Next, you need to convert the $1,050,000 to profit.

To do this, go find a friend in your Finance department. In fact, set up a meeting with the CFO (Chief Financial Officer). Now this may surprise you. Of all the members of the Executive team, the CFO is most likely to take a meeting with you.

Here's why. Your CFO knows where your business is headed (sales up/down, profit up/down). Your CFO might be dying to trim the advertising budget, your CFO might be dying to add money to the advertising budget to prop up sales, your CFO might be livid with the IT team for not implementing website improvements that could boost sales today.

So if you have any information that could help the company increase sales or profit, your CFO wants to know about it. Now.

Here's where you benefit. After you present your findings to the CFO, ask for help converting sales to profit. Ask the CFO to share with you the formula for converting sales to profit.

At most companies, there is a percentage that Finance folks use to quickly convert sales to profit. This number is called the "flow-through rate" or the "profit factor". The metric represents the percentage of sales that convert to profit after backing out returns, unfulfilled items, cost of goods sold, marketing discounts, pick/pack/shipment of items, and call center / distribution center staffing costs. Across the businesses I work with, this percentage varies, usually between 10% (companies like Overstock.com that sell $500 items with a $425 cost of goods) to as much as 50% (companies that sell $500 items with a $200 cost of goods).

Assume that the percentage is 30%. In our case, sales increased by $1,050,000. We multiply this number by 0.30, yielding an estimated amount of profit of $315,000.

Is $315,000 a good number? Who knows?

Here is where you can work with your Finance team for some additional information. Ask the Finance team for a year-end projection of Sales and Profit. If they are willing to share the information (most Finance folks at most companies will be willing to provide you with numbers that are close to accurate), you're likely to see something like this:

  • Annual Sales = $15,000,000.
  • Annual Profit = $800,000.

Now you have some "context". If you are working for this company, you just found a way to increase annual profit from $800,000 to $1,115,000.

I promise you, that if you have found a way to increase company profitability by about 40%, your CFO is going to annoint you as The Savior to a vast audience of Executives.

This is what is important, Dear Analysts.

  • Do not communicate that your multivariate optimization testing strategy increased conversion rates by 7%.
  • Do communicate that you found a way to tweak the website so that company profit increases by 40%.

Which of those two sentences is more likely to resonate with your Executive team?

Analysts seldom succeed on the merits of their work. Analysts have a good chance of succeeding when they communicate via the language of the Executive. The most important word in Executive parlance is "profit".

"Profit".

Learn how to calculate "profit".

Make friends with an Executive in Finance.

Demonstrate to your Executive team, via "profit", that you have the keys to business success!

You can do this!

4 comments:

  1. W. Hunger3:30 AM

    For me, this sounds like thin ice. How can the profit factor be 30 %, given an annual profit of $800,000 along with annual sales of $15,000,000? I am not a finance guy, but for my understanding, given these figures, the profit factor should be well below 10 %, shouldn't it?

    ReplyDelete
  2. You and I are talking about two different things.

    YOu are looking at total profit ($800,000 vs. $15,000,000 sales), and suggesting that this rate is below 10%. It is. This rate is not the "profit factor", but instead is EBT (Earnings Before Taxes) expressed as a percentage of Net Sales.

    What I am talking about is different. I am talking about the next dollar that is earned, beyond $15,000,000. That dollar is "variable", if you will, because there are no employee salaries, depreciation of equipment, etc., associated with it. You only have to subtract cost of goods and pick/pack/ship expense information, returns, that kind of stuff. This is a different metric, called the "profit factor", and is typically closer to 30%, +/-, of sales.

    ReplyDelete
  3. W. Hunger10:09 AM

    I think i got it now. When reading your post this morning, i was confident that it must be invalid to put the calculation this way, a bit like comparing apples and oranges. Now i understand that it is indeed the profit, not the profitability, that matters. Thank you *very* much for pointing this out to a more technical guy like me.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for asking the question!

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

You're Not Doing It Right

Back in the 2001-2002 timeframe, I'd invite our list partners to a once-a-year summit. I'd line up some Executives to communicate th...