Like-For-Like Sales

It’s time for our annual shareholder meeting, and here at Claire V. Oyant Enterprises, we couldn’t be more excited. Ouija board and tarot card retail sales nationwide are up 54%, psychic consultant service sales are up 67%, and as far as we’re concerned, the otherworldly skies are the limit. Our company is growing, and it feels so good.

“But Dr. Oyant,” someone pipes up, totally ruining our chill, “it says right here on the financial statements that total sales this year are only half of what they were last year. How can we say we’re growing when our sales numbers are down?” “Puh-lease, brochacho,” we reply with a roll of the eyes. “Everybody knows we’re only supposed to compare like-for-like sales when looking at overall revenue growth trends.”

Like-for-like sales are just what they sound like: they’re sales of items that are like, or comparable. So we compare this year’s retail sales to last year’s retail sales, and this year's consultancy sales to last year’s consultancy sales. We don’t take into account unusual or one-off transactions that artificially inflate or deflate our overall sales numbers. And since we sold our subsidiary publishing company last year—their books were nothing but a bunch of hooey anyway—our total sales figure for the year looks a little inflated, even though, in reality, our product sales revenue is much higher this year.

Comparing like-for-like sales is also useful because it can help us see how various sectors of our business are doing. (That’s how we knew we needed to ditch the publishing company.) For example, if all of our stores in major metro areas are underperforming, we can start looking at the effect of population size and other factors on the success of our retail locations. But so far, it looks like no matter where the location is, business is booming. Who could have predicted that? Oh yeah—we could.

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Finance: What is forecasting?8 Views

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Finance allah shmoop what is forecasting one better than three

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casting Okay so forecasting in a financial sense isn't all

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that different from the crazed witchy ramblings of a medium

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in a say aunts divine ing your future dating life

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not necessarily on tinder which she and tones will be

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cloudy with a chance of rejection Our company's forecast future

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revenues and profits as driven by sales volumes and usually

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and the pricing of whatever products they're moving out the

00:32

door Why like why bother Well you sell so many

00:35

units of your product what can you do about it

00:38

Well in practice there's plenty you can do about it

00:41

Let's say you won huge discounts and extruded plastic volumes

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for your sneeze guard business The snot thickens any way

00:49

at all that you get in return for ordering five

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years supply Your supplier loved knowing well in advance what

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the demand would be for their extruded plastic so that

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it could negotiate with its unions It's plastic mining contracts

01:04

its natural gas supplier teo melt the plastic and so

01:07

on So in return for a lot of commitment came

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a lot of discounting You've now committed to buy five

01:13

years worth of extruded plastic supplies no matter what Like

01:17

twenty five tons this year thirty tons next thirty five

01:20

the next and so on But after year to the

01:21

economy softens and buffets have decided to cave to the

01:25

germs They aren't just buying enough sneeze guards Toe warrant

01:28

your commitment of thirty five tons of extruded plastic Well

01:31

what can you dio a cry Yes you always do

01:35

that Be wine and blame washington That's a good one

01:38

that always works Or see Spend money on marketing and

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discounting to just quote get through it unquote So yeah

01:45

the answer to see you're on the hook for thirty

01:47

five tons no matter what So rather than have it

01:49

just pile up in the back of a factory you

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lower prices and spend a bit more on marketing And

01:54

instead of only needing a twenty seven tons that the

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existing market would have had you send out the door

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you stimulated demand Five tonnes worth They now have thirty

02:03

two tons needed Teo get sent out for snot guards

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and yes that three tons less And you really wanted

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to sell But it's not terrible You don't go bankrupt

02:12

in three tons of plastic fits right here in the

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back of the factory yard Thing neither Yeah that stuff

02:18

is heavy So through forecasting which letyou know very early

02:21

the softness in the market demand for your sneeze guards

02:24

you were able to stave off what could have been

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a calamitous slow down or even shutdown bankruptcy or whatever

02:31

in production Yeah and that's nothing to sneeze at Gross

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