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Contribution Margin (AKA “Happy Dollars”)

Contribution Margin (CM) = Revenue - Variable expenses

CM% = (Revenue - Variable expense) / Revenue

 

There are 2 levers that can be pulled in a business to drive more net profit and Contribution Margin is one of them (the other being “fixed expenses”). This measurement might sound complex but it’s not. In fact, it’s both easy to calculate and just so happens to answer most questions around how you should use advertising dollars, whether it makes sense to create new products, execute a distribution deal, or expand the business–and a lot more. 

 

The contribution margin dollars metric is calculated by subtracting the variable expenses from revenue. Using the same example as above, the company would have earned $4,900 contribution margin dollars ($10,000 revenue – $5,100 variable expenses).

 

In order to convert that to a true margin, just divide the total by the revenue to get to 49 percent.

 

What do you do with that information? Well, this is where the magic happens. Contribution margin is the amount of revenue that contributes to paying for the fixed expenses in the business and, if the fixed expenses are fully paid for (meaning that there are more contribution margin dollars than fixed expenses), the additional contribution margin is net profit. 

 

An important question to ask: is the activity that you’re considering going to add contribution margin dollars to the business? And how can we make those contribution margin dollars more impactful and move into net profit faster?