
In business, every transaction finally answers one question: Did we gain (profit) or lose (loss)? This unit teaches the language of pricing and selling:
These topics appear repeatedly in B.Com/BBA and in B.Tech management/entrepreneurship papers because they connect directly to billing, quotations, retail pricing, and cost-volume-profit decisions.
Always check the base:
Mark-up is usually on cost:
If CP = 800 and profit = 25% on CP, SP = CP × (1 + 25/100) = 800 × 1.25 = 1000.
If SP = 1200 and profit = 20% on CP, SP = CP × 1.20 ⇒ CP = 1200/1.20 = 1000.
If CP = 1500 and SP = 1800, Profit = 300, Profit % = (300/1500)×100 = 20%.
This is a frequent confusion in exams.
Profit % = (Profit/CP)×100. Example: CP 100, profit 20% ⇒ profit 20, SP 120.
Profit % = (Profit/SP)×100. Example: SP 120, profit 20% on SP ⇒ profit = 0.20×120 = 24, CP = 96.
Important: The same number “20% profit” can mean different CP/SP depending on the base.
Conversion formulas:
(You don’t need to memorize if you can do a quick 100-base example.)
A reduction on list price given to retailers/wholesalers. Usually shown on invoice as deduction from MP.
Access the complete note and unlock all topic-wise content
It's free and takes just 5 seconds
From this topic
Trade discount:
Cash discount:
Successive discounts mean two or more discounts applied one after another on the reduced price (not added directly).
For two discounts d1% and d2%: Net discount % = d1 + d2 − (d1×d2)/100
Here d1 = 30 and d2 = 10: Net discount % = 30 + 10 − (30×10)/100 = 40 − 3 = 37%.
So, 30% and 10% successive discounts are equivalent to a single discount of 37%.
Business mathematics are mathematics used by commercial enterprises to record and manage business operations. Commercial organizations use mathematics in accounting, inventory management, marketing, sales forecasting, and financial analysis.
Download this note as PDF at no cost
If any AD appears on download click please wait for 30sec till it gets completed and then close it, you will be redirected to pdf/ppt notes page.
In business, every transaction finally answers one question: Did we gain (profit) or lose (loss)? This unit teaches the language of pricing and selling:
These topics appear repeatedly in B.Com/BBA and in B.Tech management/entrepreneurship papers because they connect directly to billing, quotations, retail pricing, and cost-volume-profit decisions.
Always check the base:
Mark-up is usually on cost:
If CP = 800 and profit = 25% on CP, SP = CP × (1 + 25/100) = 800 × 1.25 = 1000.
If SP = 1200 and profit = 20% on CP, SP = CP × 1.20 ⇒ CP = 1200/1.20 = 1000.
If CP = 1500 and SP = 1800, Profit = 300, Profit % = (300/1500)×100 = 20%.
This is a frequent confusion in exams.
Profit % = (Profit/CP)×100. Example: CP 100, profit 20% ⇒ profit 20, SP 120.
Profit % = (Profit/SP)×100. Example: SP 120, profit 20% on SP ⇒ profit = 0.20×120 = 24, CP = 96.
Important: The same number “20% profit” can mean different CP/SP depending on the base.
Conversion formulas:
(You don’t need to memorize if you can do a quick 100-base example.)
A reduction on list price given to retailers/wholesalers. Usually shown on invoice as deduction from MP.
Discount for early payment (credit terms).
If discounts are d1% and d2% successively: SP = MP × (1 − d1/100) × (1 − d2/100)
Net discount formula (two discounts): Net discount % = d1 + d2 − (d1×d2)/100
Example: 30% and 10% successive discount: Net discount = 30 + 10 − 3 = 37%.
Mark-up is usually computed on cost.
Margin (often called gross margin) is profit as a percentage of selling price.
Let mark-up = m% on CP. Then SP = CP × (1 + m/100). Margin on SP becomes: Margin % = [m / (100 + m)] × 100
Example: Mark-up 25% on cost ⇒ margin = 25/125 × 100 = 20%.
Break-even analysis answers: How much must we sell so that profit is zero?
BEP (units) = Fixed Cost / Contribution per unit
If contribution ratio is known:
Suppose:
SP = CP × (1 + p/100)
SP = CP × (1 − l/100)
If these notes helped you, a quick review supports the project and helps more students find it.
Profit % (generally on CP) = (Profit/CP) × 100
Example: CP = ₹1000, SP = ₹1200 Profit = 1200 − 1000 = ₹200 Profit % = (200/1000) × 100 = 20%
Loss % (generally on CP) = (Loss/CP) × 100
Example: CP = ₹1000, SP = ₹900 Loss = 1000 − 900 = ₹100 Loss % = (100/1000) × 100 = 10%
Conclusion: Profit/loss indicates gain or sacrifice in a transaction and percentage form helps compare performance across products or time.