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All eight of these will come into play as a value investor. Throughout these lessons, anytime one of these affects the principle or particular situation, it will be noted and identified to the member. The key is that it is so important to be on the alert for these economic concepts and their respective impact on a business financial model.<\/span><\/p>\n In addition to the impact economics plays on a financial model, there is another equally impactful aspect of value investing. This is the business model.<\/span><\/p>\n In business there are four distinct business models. Just about any business can be identified with one of the four. The following are the four types of business models:<\/span><\/p>\n No single model is the best nor the worse. Each works within their respective industries. In general, the models exist by default and it is highly improbable that the model can move into another one of the types without changing the particular business sector\/industry. An illustration is appropriate.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Wal-Mart is by far the most significant retail player in the world-wide market. They control about more than 11% of all retail. They definitely follow the Hi-Volume, Low-Margin model mostly out of default. All of their competition uses the same model. It is impossible for Wal-Mart to shift their model to Hi-Volume, Hi-Margin format. Their customer retention would fall dramatically if they raised their prices. But, this model works well with the retail industry.<\/span><\/p>\n At the other corner sits Boeing. Here, it is low-volume with a hi-margin. Nobody is going to mass produce huge airplanes; it literally takes several years from start to finish constructing an airplane. Quality control is a cornerstone of their business and even a little error can cause huge repercussions. They could go to the low-volume low-margin section but the overhead costs would cause the company to lose money. If this happens, they would go out of business. Out of necessity, this type of industry exists using this model.<\/span><\/p>\n Some businesses lean more towards one of the four but may have elements of two of the business models within its structure. It isn\u2019t as if every business has to fall distinctively within one of these four types. But some bleeding over exists between two of the types is rare not the rule.<\/span><\/p>\n The following sections below explain the four types of business models and provide examples of businesses that use this model. In addition, this article elaborates as why the model is successful in the respective industries and that no single model is absolutely the best.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n An extreme example of this type of business is a shipyard. Imagine how long it takes to build an aircraft carrier. In reality, it takes a little over 8 years from start to finish. Prior to laying the keel, there are several years of engineering and material requisition requirements to build the carrier in an efficient manner. Then there is the construction period and the testing period before final delivery is made to the Navy. In effect, one product taking 8 years employing several thousand workers has to cover its share of the overhead and profit for the company. To do this, the final product may have hard costs of materials and labor that is half of the final price charged to the Navy. The bulk of the sales price has to cover all the equipment used, facility costs, general overhead, licensing (the government just doesn\u2019t let anyone handle nuclear material), taxes, and a host of other costs to run a shipyard.<\/span><\/p>\n The following are more examples of low-volume, hi-margin businesses:<\/span><\/p>\n Large Companies<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n Small Business<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n There are certain business attributes that force the industry to exercise this model. They are:<\/span><\/p>\n Notice that in this model, although it is a low volume company, the term reflects the physical quantity, not the dollar value. Go back to the shipyard, an aircraft carrier is ONE item (low volume) but the sales price is nearly $8,000,000,000. That\u2019s billions of dollars.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n In small business, it is really the same concept. For construction, it is ONE house, but it is an expensive item. It is the only way that a company can cover the indirect and overhead costs associated with running a construction company.\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n Now on the flip side of this are industries that have high volume and high margins.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Absolutely this is the preferred type of business model to have due to the contribution value both extremes bring to the company. But these types of companies are not as common and often have significant capital barriers to start operations. Mostly they are in the professional services industry such as law, accounting, engineering, and in some of the medical specialties. In general, the margins are in the 40 to 50% range. This is mostly attributable to<\/span> variable costs<\/a><\/strong><\/span> as the primary cost driver. The following are some other examples of these types of businesses:\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n An example of a large company with a high margin and a high volume is Apple. The I-Phones costs less than $450 to manufacture and get to market. Retail prices run in excess of $1,000 for the device. Apple sells nearly 100 million units per year. This is a rare business model that has driven the stock price off the charts.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n This type of business model is ideal. Typically in these types of business models, the overhead and capitalization costs are higher than other models. This is mostly attributable to the development of manufacturing facilities, distribution systems and reliance on technology. In addition, competition is keen as others seeking to enter this type of business model seek the same high margins this model provides. In effect, lucrative returns create competition.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Another factor necessitating the high-margin requirements relates to higher than normal fixed costs. In many of these types of operations, fixed costs are recorded in the overhead section of the profit and loss report and therefore are not a function of<\/span> cost of sales<\/strong><\/a><\/span>.<\/span><\/p>\n This type of business model is traditionally seen in the retail and other consumer based product businesses. The following is a list of businesses that use this model:<\/span><\/p>\n An interesting business attribute is the low capitalization threshold to enter the market.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n One last interesting fact about these types of businesses; this is most common form of business in our consumer based society. This reflects several business attributes:<\/span><\/p>\n In this type of model, the gross margin in absolute dollars is a direct reflection on volume. Competition is significantly keen. The best example of this are gas stations. In general, most gas retailers only have about an 18 cent contribution margin per gallon of gas sold. When the station down the street has his price 10 cents lower, he is really trying to garner market share that week.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n By the way, the number one company in the world using this business model. You guessed it: Wal-Mart.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Based on this, you would think that it would really be tuff in your low-volume, low-margin business activity. Why would anyone get involved in that type of business model? Let\u2019s find out.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n This one is the most interesting of all the business types. With low-volume low-margin operations the reader would wonder how on earth you would make a profit. Well, it turns out that there is another way to look at the equation. Less experienced business entrepreneurs always think in terms of margin as a percentage of sales. Experience and a little more sophistication teaches us that it is really about the<\/span> absolute dollars<\/strong><\/a><\/span>. Which would you rather have?\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\nValue Investing – Business Model<\/span><\/strong><\/h2>\n
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Low-Volume, High-Margin Business Activity\u00a0<\/span><\/strong><\/h3>\n
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High-Volume, High-Margin Business Activities\u00a0<\/span><\/strong><\/h3>\n
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High-Volume, Low-Margin Business Activities\u00a0<\/span><\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Low-Volume, Low-Margin Business Activities\u00a0<\/span><\/strong><\/h3>\n
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