Conducting Profitability Analysis
When To Use
- Evaluating product-level, customer-level, or business-segment profitability
- Determining whether to retain, reprice, or discontinue a product line or customer relationship
- Allocating shared costs (overhead, SG&A, shared services) to profit centers
- Supporting pricing decisions with fully-loaded cost visibility
- Preparing segment reporting for management review or board presentations
- Benchmarking margin performance across divisions or time periods
Inputs To Gather
- Revenue data — gross revenue by product/customer/segment, including volume, price, and mix breakdowns
- Direct costs — COGS, direct labor, materials, commissions, and any costs traceable to a single profit unit
- Indirect costs — overhead, shared services, corporate allocations, and facility costs requiring allocation
- Allocation bases — headcount, revenue share, square footage, machine hours, transaction counts, or other drivers already in use [VERIFY which bases the organization currently uses]
- Period scope — trailing 12 months, YTD, quarterly, or specific project window
- Organizational structure — chart of accounts hierarchy, cost center mapping, and any existing segment definitions
- Prior analyses — previous profitability studies, transfer pricing policies, or management allocation methodologies already approved
Workflow
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Define the profitability dimension
- Confirm the unit of analysis: product, SKU family, customer, customer tier, channel, geographic segment, or business unit
- Agree on the margin layers to compute: gross margin, contribution margin, segment operating margin, fully-loaded net margin
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Map revenue streams
- Disaggregate revenue into the chosen dimension; reconcile to the general ledger total
- Separate recurring vs. non-recurring revenue if relevant (e.g., license vs. services)
- Identify intercompany revenue and decide whether to include or eliminate [VERIFY transfer pricing treatment]
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Classify and assign direct costs
- Trace every cost that is unambiguously attributable to a single profit unit
- Compute contribution margin (Revenue minus Direct Variable Costs) as the first profitability layer
- Flag any costs currently pooled that could be directly traced with better data
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Allocate indirect costs
- Select allocation methodology — activity-based costing (ABC), revenue-weighted, headcount-weighted, or hybrid
- Document each cost pool, its total, the chosen driver, and the rationale
- Run allocation calculations; show the per-unit or per-segment burden clearly
- Sensitivity-test at least one alternative allocation basis to show how results shift
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Compute margin layers and rank
- Build a waterfall from gross revenue down through each cost layer to fully-loaded margin
- Rank segments/products/customers by absolute profit contribution and by margin percentage
- Identify the top and bottom deciles; flag any units operating below breakeven
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Analyze drivers and root causes
- For underperforming units: isolate whether the issue is pricing, volume, cost structure, or allocation drag
- For outperformers: assess sustainability — are margins dependent on one-time factors or structural advantages?
- Calculate customer/product concentration risk (e.g., top 10 customers as % of total profit)
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Formulate recommendations
- Tier findings into action categories: reprice, restructure cost base, cross-sell, discontinue, or investigate further
- Quantify the profit impact of each recommended action where possible
- Note dependencies — e.g., contractual commitments, minimum order obligations, strategic accounts exempt from pure profitability criteria
Output
- Profitability summary table — rows by dimension (product/customer/segment), columns for revenue, direct costs, contribution margin, allocated costs, operating margin, margin %
- Margin waterfall chart — visual cascade from gross revenue to net margin for each key segment
- Ranking schedule — segments ordered by profit contribution with cumulative percentage (Pareto view)
- Cost allocation appendix — each pool, driver, rate, and resulting allocation per segment
- Sensitivity analysis — margin impact under at least one alternative allocation basis
- Recommendation memo — prioritized actions with estimated profit uplift and implementation considerations
Quality Checks
- Total allocated costs reconcile to total indirect cost pool (zero residual)
- Sum of segment revenues reconciles to consolidated revenue (no double-counting or gaps)
- Contribution margins are computed before any allocation — never blend direct and allocated costs in a single line
- Allocation drivers are sourced from auditable operational data, not estimates [VERIFY data source for each driver]
- Negative-margin segments include root-cause narrative, not just the numbers
- Any transfer pricing or intercompany elimination treatment is disclosed and consistent with corporate policy [VERIFY]
- Sensitivity analysis covers at least one materially different allocation method to test robustness of conclusions
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