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Pricing Your Melt and Pour SoapsAs a small business owner, youre faced with all kinds of decisions from what brand of olive oil to use to whether to have a graphic designer design your logo. There are a whole lot of little decisions (name brand labels vs. generic, gel colorants vs. powder pigment) that, taken by themselves, are worth only pennies, or at most, a few dollars. But the cents and dollars add up quickly. This article will put some cold hard financial fact on paper and hopefully, make some of those tiny decisions a bit easier for you to make. Send us your questions or comments on this and other articles: click here.
First, lets discuss some basic overhead costs incurred by any small business (be it soaping or clothing design) like heat, electricity, phone bills etc. If you are like many small scale soapmakers, you work out of your own home or apartment. To get a true overhead cost, your soap company should be paying you rent (but for tax purposes, only if youve allocated a room solely for soapmaking). Typically, renting a room will be $150 (Mortgage of $600 divided by 4). Next, you have your phone bill, heating, electric, water, sewer and garbage. (NOTE: When figuring out your own cost analysis, use your OWN numbers). For purposes of example, Ive inserted some numbers which I believe are average for a month of soapmaking:
There are also some fixed costs, such as postage, pans, spoons, an extra burner, shelves etc When we initially built our soaproom, we added shelving, cabinets, a range, and bought new equipment. All together, this added up to about $400.00. However, while these are all up-front costs, they still need to be amortized over the life of your business. Assuming you make no additions or need new equipment, amortizing this out for 1 year is ($400.00/12 = $33.33) $33.33 per month so add this to your overhead. Youre already up to $283.33 before even starting your month! And lets not forget insurance! This is the one, essential thing you should have before starting any soap business. On average, this will run about $20.00 per month. So, your grand total for all your fixed overhead costs, is $303.33. Now, to cost the materials in your soap. This article will focus on melt and pour soap. Future articles will discuss cold process. For melt and pour, the figures look something like this to make four bars:
Now, $.85 cents to make a bar of soap looks pretty good right? Lets add in molds, using Milky Way Molds, ($7.50/3-4 cavity mold), youve got 5 of them, delivered, thats about $42.50. Amortizing that over the year of your mold, youve spent $3.54 a month on your mold. If you make 1000 bars a month, the mold adds $.04 to your cost per bar. So far, this is all looking quite manageable until you try to pay yourself. Your labor is expensive. How much time did you spend creating and designing your bar? Actually making it? Wrapping it? For creating and designing, lets add 3 hours at $15 per hour. If your batch size is 24 bars (6 pounds) and you can make 24 bars in an hour, it adds $.63 per bar (15 divided by 24). Wrapping adds another $.31 cents per bar if you wrap and label 48 bars an hour (15 divided by 48). Wrapping costs can vary, depending on whether you designed your own label (3 hours at $15 per hour) or hired a designer, $100, plus materials. For sake of example, you designed your own labels and print them yourself. So, for 1000 bars, your labels cost $.05 per bar ($45.00/1000 labels) plus materials (wear on your printer, new printer ribbon, paper) are about $.05. So where does this leave us?
Now, this is actually a great number since youve been paying yourself $15.00 (counted into your design, production and wrapping time). But, if youre wholesaling your soap for $2.00 per bar, that only leaves $.02 per bar to pay your overhead. If you recall, your overhead is $333 per month. If you sell 1000 bars per month, thats $2.31 per bar to both pay your wages and pay your overhead. So, what do you do to bring your profits up? There are a few things you can do: Pay yourself $5 per hour which brings your bar price with overhead to:
Adding that $.33 cents per bar for overhead, youre only at $1.61 per bar. Thats looking more feasible, but youve just paid yourself minimum wage all month. Ouch! Your second option is to find cheaper suppliers. If you save $5.00 per tub on your melt and pour, $10 per pound on fragrance oils, $.50 on your color and use more cost effective molds (a six cavity mold versus a 3 cavity mold or buy in bulk to get discounts), you actually can save yourself quite a bit of money. Lets see how your materials costs add up now:
By seeking out the most cost effective suppliers, youve just saved yourself $.20 per bar, almost enough to pay yourself that $15.00 per hour! Your third option is to make bigger batches. If you make 48 bars in an hour, youve just cut your labor in half (remember, you were making only 24 bars any hour). If you take your labor to $.31 per bar, instead of $.62 per bar (wrapping time remains the same), your total cost is only $1.67 per bar leaving that magical $.33 cents for overhead! However, if you combine options two and three and double your batch sizes and source out cheaper raw materials, look what happens to your numbers:
Congratulations! By sourcing out the most cost effective materials and doubling your batch size, you just made a bar of soap for $1.78!
Send us your questions or comments on this and other articles: click here. |
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This article was originally prepared for The Saponifier by Anne-Marie Faiola and was published in Volume 2, Issue 1 |
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