Talk Back
Post a Comment
|
||||||||||
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- International Residential Codes Available Online
- Growing your remodeling business in the current economy
- 2008 Remodeler of the Year
- Develop Land Or Buy Lots? Home Builders Face Dilemma
- ProBuilder Product Report: Kitchen Appliances
- What Can You Recycle?
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
- Myths and Facts About Automatic Fire Sprinklers
- How to Use Percentage-of-Completion Accounting
'Road map' Targets Financial Ratios
Simplify the route to double-digit builder profitability with a set of financial ratios that target cost control
Bill Lurz, Senior Editor
June 1, 2003
Professional Builder
|
"Step one is to stop blaming your lack of profitability on the market, and focus instead on home and option pricing, reducing construction costs and maintaining balance between sales volume and operating costs," Shinn says. "By setting the right price to reach targeted sales velocity, controlling the cost of sales (land and construction) and keeping operating costs proportionate to sales volume, you can reach our target of 12% net profit. Many builders, in fact, far exceed that target."
Shinn cautions that builders who develop land should treat that as a separate business, capturing land profit separate from home building, so they don't unknowingly subsidize inefficient building operations with land profits. This table shows how Shinn's target financial ratios compare to the range he says typical builders actually achieve.
Next month, we'll break down the cost of sales into targets for land and direct construction costs.
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This