How to calculate the number of units sold?
Learn how many of the units in a condominum are lived in by their owners, and then divide that number by the total number of units there.
The answer depends on what information you have about profits per units sold, or on the costs and revenues per unit.
Then you have a surplus.
Count up the number of obseravtions made on the experimental units. That is the sample size.
You can calculate 13 + 56, and 13 - 56.
Forumula for calculation of actual saees: Actual sales = (number of units sold * Sales price ) - sales returns and discounts
To calculate the average cost in accounting, you add up the total costs and then divide by the number of units produced or sold. This gives you the average cost per unit.
The number of units of the product sold last month was not disclosed.
1. Find the difference between the two years (+128) 2. Divide the difference by your first year's number (128/36 = 3.55) 3. You have a YOY increase of 355%!
Here's the Top 10 Best-Selling Vehicles of 2009 based on Edmunds.com.Toyota CamryNumbers of units sold: 333,937Honda AccordNumbers of units sold: 287,491Ford F-150Numbers of units sold: 283,613Toyota CorollaNumbers of units sold: 252,414Chevrolet Silverado 1500Numbers of units sold: 245,306Honda CivicNumbers of units sold: 244,603Nissan AltimaNumbers of units sold: 194,211Honda CR-VNumbers of units sold: 191,214Chevrolet ImpalaNumbers of units sold: 165,565Ford FusionNumbers of units sold: 165,117The answer to your question is, the Toyota Camry which sold 333,937 units.
That number is incalculable.
If delivery cost changes with the number of units of product sold then it is variable cost.
Learn how many of the units in a condominum are lived in by their owners, and then divide that number by the total number of units there.
The answer depends on what information you have about profits per units sold, or on the costs and revenues per unit.
The cost of the merchandise sold is not important!!! :p
To calculate producer surplus from a table, subtract the minimum price that producers are willing to accept from the actual price they receive for each unit of a good or service, then multiply that difference by the quantity of units sold. Add up these values for all units sold to find the total producer surplus.
If amount of sales commission is fixed and not base on number of units sold then it is fixed expense and vice versa.