in pretty much the same was as markup based on cost. There is a mathematical challenge
here, though. If we know the item’s cost, and if we know our markup percent based on cost,
calculating the selling price is fairly straightforward. Profi t margin, though, is a percent of
the selling price. Obviously we don’t know the selling price before we know the selling
price!
We’ll need to be a bit sneaky to get around this, but we can. Here is the idea: if 35%
of the selling price is gross profi t, we can conclude that the remaining 100% 35%
65% must be the cost of the item. Before taking this any further, we’ll generalize this to a
formula:
FORMULA 8.2.1
Markup Based on Selling Price
C SP(1 r)
where
C represents the item’s COST
SP represents the SELLING PRICE
and
r represents the gross PROFIT MARGIN
We can now put this formula to work to solve the question at hand.
Example 8.2.7 Determine the selling price of an item costing $45 in order to have
a 35% gross profi t margin.
Applying the formula:
C SP(1 r)
$45 SP(1 0.35)
$45 SP(0.65)
To fi nd the selling price, we divide both sides by 0.65 to get:
SP $69.23
Notice that the 0.65 that we wound up with on the right side of this equation is the 65% that
we said must be the percent cost of the item. Remember that expressed as a decimal 100%
is 1, and so the (1 r) in this formula serves the purpose of subtracting the gross profi t
margin from 100% to get the percent cost.
Markup based on selling price may also be used even when the idea of gross profi t margin
is not explicitly what is driving the pricing. Another example will serve to illustrate this.
Example 8.2.8 A cooperative market allows its members to place special orders for
items they want to buy in bulk. The price the member pays is based on an 8% markup
on selling price. Lynne ordered a case of protein bars, for which the market’s cost was
$24.17. How much will she pay for this order?
C SP(1 r)
$24.17 SP(0.92)
SP $26.27
A Dose of Reality
Before getting too carried away with this method of pricing, a few cautions are in order.
You should absolutely not draw the conclusion from this section that in the real world
prices are set by determining a desired gross profi t margin and then automatically apply-
ing that margin. Whether we think of prices as based on a markup based on cost or based
on a markup based on selling price, the fact of the matter is that a retailer has to deal with
the fact that the prices that they charge must be prices that their customers will pay. Based
on your costs and profi t targets you may calculate that your hardware store should sell a
346 Chapter 8 Mathematics of Pricing