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ACCOUNTING 101
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What's
Your Favorite Profitability Report?
We
asked Clients & Profits users to speak out on their
favorite profitability reports, a subject close to
their hearts-and their bottom lines
.
Projected vs. Actual Gross Margin "It's so important to
measure how well your job estimating is stacking up to what's actually
done," says Kym Tedesco of The Townsend Agency. "It's an especially
important tool when you first start using C&P to ensure your estimating
is right on the money."
Gross Margin by Job
"Sorting by job type gives the unique perspective of what type of work is most
profitable for your shop," says Bryant Walton of Pentagram Design. "I wait until
the jobs are closed, so I get the full profitability picture."
Gross Margin by Client
"Our AEs want to see profit before and after
labor for all their jobs and clients," says Kelly
Ruzich of Fruehling Communications. "The one
client per page format makes it easy to distribute
to AEs."
Client vs. Client Gross Margin "I want
to know how well we are maintaining our gross
margin from month to month," says Sue Augustine
of Creative Concepts, "so I print this report
by work date range each month. I get the AEs
involved in the results, too."
Client P&L Analysis "It's the report our
owner wants to see," says Kathi Landis of Creative
Company, Inc. "She's very interested in how direct
costs apply to our various clients, and this
report shows that...and a lot more! |
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By
Mark Robillard
What owner hasn't heard this statement
from consultants, CFOs and pundits in the agency business:
ADVERTISING AGENCIES SHOULD MAKE A 20% PROFIT ON INCOME. But
statistics from the American Association of Advertising Agencies
(AAAA) show that actual agency profit margins aren't close.
These stats shows that 80% of agencies surveyed made a 10%
or less gross profit -- and fully 12% lost money.
Before comparing your financials to those of other
agencies, here are some key terms to know: gross profit, profit before taxes,
and net profit. Gross profit (i.e., agency gross income, or AGI) is not
billings; it is what the agency earns by media commissions, markups on outside
costs, billed staff time and fees. Profit before taxes is profit left
after paying for the shops expenses, like rent and utilities. For small
shops, a 20% profit before taxes (after deducting a reasonable owners salary)
is the goal. Net profit is simply whats leftover after taxes.
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A
typical ad agency spends half of its gross profit on salaries.
In addition, about one-third is spent on overhead expenses --
just keeping the doors open. (Its easy to compare these
percentages throughout the month by printing an Income Statement
w/AGI from Clients & Profits.)
Not making a 20% profit doesn't mean the shop
is failing, especially in this unpredictable industry. If a 20% profit is unrealistic,
what should your agency earn? You need a consistently good profit margin to build
up your financial strength, helping the shop survive client losses, bad debts,
slower payers and economic downturns. It also provides the equity every shop
needs to invest in its future.
With Clients & Profits, you have the means
to easily track budgets, costs, billings and profit. All it takes is putting
it to work.
Mark
Robillard is the founder of Clients & Profits,
Inc. and is the program's developer |
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