Title: Analyzing Profit for a Manufacturing Company: From Full Capacity to Reduced Production and Cost Savings

Meta Description:
This article explores the profit dynamics of a company producing 500 units daily at $8 per unit, selling each for $12. After 7 days, production drops by 20% and unit costs fall by 15%. We calculate the profit for the next 5 days under revised operations.


Understanding the Context

Introduction

Understanding profit performance is essential for any manufacturing business, especially when production volume and unit costs fluctuate. In this scenario, a company starts producing 500 units per day at $8 per unit, selling each unit for $12—yielding strong margins. After 7 days, production cuts by 20%, and unit costs decrease by 15%, changing the profit equation. This article examines revenue and costs under these new conditions to calculate the profit for the following 5 days.


Initial Phase: 7 Days of Full Production

Key Insights

Production:

  • 500 units/day
  • Cost per unit: $8
  • Selling price: $12
  • Daily revenue = 500 × $12 = $6,000
  • Daily variable cost = 500 × $8 = $4,000
  • Daily gross profit = $6,000 – $4,000 = $2,000

Total profit after 7 days:
$2,000 × 7 = $14,000


After 7 Days: Reduced Production and Lower Costs

Changes:

  • Production reduced by 20%:
    New daily production = 500 × (1 – 0.20) = 400 units/day
  • Cost per unit reduced by 15%:
    New cost per unit = $8 × (1 – 0.15) = $6.80

Final Thoughts


Daily Metrics for Next 5 Days

  • Units produced per day: 400
  • Cost per unit: $6.80
  • Selling price: $12

Daily calculations:

Revenue:
$12 × 400 = $4,800

Variable Cost:
$6.80 × 400 = $2,720

Gross Profit per Day:
$4,800 – $2,720 = $2,080


Total Profit Over Next 5 Days

Since daily gross profit remains consistent:
$2,080 × 5 = $10,400