Price Volume Mix Analysis: how to do it in Excel and Power BI (2024)

Next-level price-volume-mix variance analysis 👉

The new Zebra BI for Office is just been released. And it brings the latest reporting best practices to your Excel & PowerPoint.

We’ve also prepared 20 financial & sales report templates based on the latest reporting best practices.Enjoy!

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When looking at your revenue variance, you want to have complete insight into what drove the changes you are seeing. You have questions, such as: Are my margins eroding? What are the most profitable products in my portfolio? How is my product mix affecting my revenue? To find answers, we'll explore Price Volume Mix analysis and show how you can do it in either Excel or Power BI.

If you'd like to jump straight to the templates for Power BI from this guide, grab them here:

Get Power BI Template

PVM analysis is a great way to improve your understanding of your business. It adds another dimension to your business reporting.

However, it is a topic that many users struggle with.

Overview

In this article, we'll explore how you can improve your business dashboards by including a Price Volume Mix analysis.

We will explain the three concepts and show how to prepare your data for analysis in Excel and Power BI.

Next, we will show you how to use Zebra BI visuals to visualize this analysis.

We will also discuss two different approaches to analysis and show you which will deliver better results.

Why a typical business dashboard is not enough

Typically, when designing a business dashboard, we take revenue, gross profits, income, or another KPI and compare current results to the previous year, plan, or another target. Once we have that variance we can drill down deeper: explore variances by business units, geography, products, and so on. Most companies do not go much further than that.

Let's take a look at a typical dashboard.

This is a good start but there is a better way that delivers more insight. That is the Price Volume Mix analysis, where we can see how individual factors, such as price changes, sales volumes and product mix affected your revenue.

Price - This is the simplest concept to understand. Price simply reflects the price of your product as you sell it. It is the main contributor to the growth of margins in your business. Increased price directly translates to improved margins. But keep in mind that higher price may result in lower volumes as fewer customers decide to buy.

This is an important way of looking at your business. Let's take price - it is one of the key factors affecting your growth and performance as a company. The relation is pretty straightforward - the increased price usually translates to improved performance. Volume is another factor driving your company's growth. Growth in volume normally correlates to better performance unless offset by something else.

Volume - This is the number of products you sell. Selling more products at the same price means more revenue. However, volume has little effect on your profit margins. Selling more products at lower prices reduces your profitability if the cost of goods remains unchanged.

Take a look at how Zebra BI shows you this data:

Let's review what it shows.

The chart shows that 5.5% growth in sales has different sources. We can look at what drove the change. Did we increase or decrease the price of products in the past year and how did that drive the sales? Did it increase the volume or depress it? Are we selling more items of the same product than last year or less? What is the total effect of the volume increases?

How product mix affects revenue

Then there's this third mysterious category called "the Mix". It's a bit vague but it adds a very important and interesting insight. The mix is not about the prices and it's not about the volumes. It does actually explain how deep the change in the structure of your products is. It essentially explains how your product mix affects the revenue. For example, are you selling higher value products this year than the last year? Then the mix will be positive. Are you selling more of your less valuable products? That might drag your mix down.

Mix - This reflects the fact that not all products are created equal. Some products have better profit margins than others, which means that changes in your product mix will affect your revenue. Selling more products with better profit margins drives up the revenue and vice versa.

Once you get into Price Volume Mix variance analysis, you can get really creative with many options. Instead of just analyzing the growth from the previous year, you can analyze the change in the budget. Instead of using revenue, you can use your contribution margins or your gross profit which will make the story even more powerful. Particularly using the profit makes this analysis 10 times or 20 times more valuable to your insight.

Adding more dimensions

And there is no rule that says you have to stick with just these three categories because your business has other drivers, is there? Two typical ones are new and discontinued products. Have you launched new products which didn't sell last year? Of course, this will grow your business. This means that you can identify the revenue that was achieved with new products. You could also look at the impact of discontinued products. Once you add all this to your analysis you are starting to get a clearer picture of what impacts your sales.

This is a great example of how powerful this type of analysis can be. At a glance, you can see whether new products are offsetting the revenue lost from discontinued products. You can see the movements in your prices and product volume while also keeping your finger on the pulse of the performance of your product mix.

It is clear that Price Volume Mix variance analysis should become an essential tool in your reporting belt. You can use it for ad-hoc analyses or make it a regular part of your quarterly or annual reports. This post will look at how you can do these calculations in Excel or Power BI, how to prepare your data and how to organize it.

Price Volume Mix analysis in Excel

Let's start by explaining what you actually need to create your first Price Volume Mix variance analysis. The bare minimum you need is data by products - this can be products at the most basic levels like SKUs for each and every product, product groups, or even more sophisticated hierarchies with sub-products. You also need revenue for your current and previous year as well as quantities, which is simply the number of items sold in the current and previous year. You could also replace the previous year's data with your plans, even though many people do not plan product quantities.

Your data may vary, depending on where you exported it from.

The popular approach - The Mix Change Method

First, we'll look at a method for doing Price Volume Mix variance analysis that is very popular online, let's call it "The Mix Change Method". Despite its popularity, I do believe there is a better way to tackle this analysis. However, this method is popular enough that I want to show you how to do it in Excel using Zebra BI Excel Add-in.

Let's start by looking at the data. The first column has product groups, followed by two columns with sales revenues from this and the previous year. The next two columns show quantities for this and previous years, followed by price. In this case, price is a bit of a misnomer, because it is actually just revenue per unit. Here are the calculations for the Price PY and Price AC columns:

Price PY = Revenue PY / Quantity PY
Price AC = Revenue AC / Quantity AC

You also need to make sure you don't calculate the total for prices as the average of all totals in the column. Instead, just divide your total revenue with your total quantity. You now have everything necessary to calculate the price change, which is simply the difference between the two prices (AC and PY), multiplied by the number of units sold in this year.

Looking at the example above, we can see the baby food prices went up while we are taking a large hit on the baked goods category because of declining prices. To calculate the total, you just need to add up all the values in the entire Price column and you get the overall impact of prices on your revenues. In our example, reduced prices in several categories resulted in a severe drop in revenues because of pricing.

Next up is the volume change and the trick here is to separate the volume effect from the mix effect. Put very simply, the volume represents the number of products bought by your customers, while the mix is that volume expressed in percentage.

Here are the formulas for calculating the Mix:

Mix PY = Quantity PY / SUM(Quantity PY)
Mix AC = Quantity AC / SUM(Quantity AC)

Our table shows that baby food represented 5.1% of the entire volume of products we sold, meaning that one out of twenty products sold in our stores was baby food. This year, this percentage grew to 5.4%, meaning we are selling more baby food. This can be either good or bad. If baby food is a profitable product, that is good news. However, if this is a less profitable product, this could have a negative impact. Imagine, you are selling more of your loss leader. That would have a serious impact on your bottom line.

Here is the formula to calculate the impact of the product mix on total revenue. First, calculate the change in the mix share (Mix AC - Mix PY). For baby food in our example, the change in portfolio share is 0.26%. The final calculation seems fairly complicated and reads as follows:

Mix = SUM(Quantity AC) / (Price PY - Price PY / SUM(Price PY)) * Mix Change

The basic idea here is to calculate the average revenue per unit. You take the sum of your revenue for the previous year. And then you take the quantity of products sold this year and divide it by the difference in the price of each product minus this average price. So basically, just think of it as taking the average price and then looking at whether the price of the baby food is higher than this average price.

In our example, baby food is priced higher than the average, and increasing the volume will grow our revenue. On the other hand, the baked goods category is priced below our average, which means increasing the volume will get us a negative effect.

A better method for Price Volume Mix Variance analysis

The method we just described works with most data sets, but I think it's not completely okay. I would like to talk about another way, which uses a different method for calculating the mix variance as simply a subtraction at the end of the process. This is a method recommended by Controller Akademie.

Here is the dataset we will be using.

As you can see, we introduced two new categories reflecting the product status:

New products are products that are only sold this year and can't be compared between years.

Discontinued products have not contributed to this year's results because they stopped being sold before or during this year.

In my example, I'm simply checking whether revenue was first generated this year (for new products) or last generated last year (discontinued products).

The first change in how we calculate everything comes with volume change. First, we check a product is active so we can exclude the new and discontinued products, which are not included under volume. We take the quantity this year minus the quantity of the previous year and multiply the result by the average revenue per unit from the previous year. Here's the formula:

Vol = IF(Status = "Active"; (Quantity AC - Quantity PY) * Price PY)

The thing that is most obviously different from the previous example is that the mix value is zero and will always be zero at the individual product or SKU level. Product mix means the change in the products within a certain group or in your total product portfolio. This is something most people get wrong and is slightly confusing. You should remember that your mix value should be zero at the base level.

Another very significant difference is in the Total row. Take the difference in the total quantity of products sold this year minus the quantity in the previous multiplied by the average price. We're not just adding up all the volume changes from our products and are instead doing the calculation on the level of the group. This is what actually ensures that you are excluding the effect of the prices in the volume of variance.

This approach results in a slightly different volume change on the level of the group and that is why this then appears in your mix. The mix is then simply: the total variance, minus price variance, minus volume variance, minus new products, minus discontinued products.

Visualizing Price Volume Mix data in Excel

Here is our data shown in Excel with Zebra BI:

When creating this type of chart, make sure you turn on the difference highlight, showing the actual AC and PY revenue difference. This is a very meaningful visual emphasis that will definitely help you understand your data.

Once you have set it up, you can also use this data on each product level.

You take the basic data for the previous year, price change, volume, and mix, and do an analysis for all product groups at once. If you're using Zebra BI for Excel, you should bring everything to a single table with small multiples. There is simply no better way to understand what's going on in your business at a single glance.

This Price Volume Mix analysis gives you an insightful overview. It shows you what is going on with the fruits and vegetables, for example. Are the prices going down or are we selling more? What is going on with our product mix and are we pushing more profitable products? What is pushing a certain product category forward? These are the types of questions you can now answer.

Next-level price-volume-mix variance analysis 👉

The new Zebra BI for Office is just been released. And it brings the latest reporting best practices to your Excel & PowerPoint.

We’ve also prepared 20 financial & sales report templates based on the latest reporting best practices.Enjoy!

Try Zebra BI for Office for Free

Price Volume Mix analysis in Power BI

If you'd like to download the Price Volume Mix analysis Power BI template, click below:

Get Power BI template

Again, we first need to prepare data. Here is the table, imported from Excel, although you can import it from other sources.

An important thing to do here is to separate your products from this table, especially if you have a sales table with all columns on a single table. An easy way to do this in Power Query is to create a reference to your sales table, rename it and remove all columns but the ones containing products and product groups to create the dimension of products.

When you return to your sales model, you will have your sales table along with a separate product table. Then you need to make sure that the link relationship is one to many. This is how it should look in the end.

Setting up Price, Volume and Mix variance measures

Once we have our separate products table, we have something to work with. In the Fields pane, you have Quantity and Revenue for the current and previous year. Now you can start calculating your Price field, meaning your average revenue per unit. That is very easy to do. Just divide revenue by quantity and add "zero" at the end. Or - even better - use the blank function here for handling the division by zero.

Price AC = DIVIDE([Revenue AC], [Quantity AC], BLANK())

The next step is again calculating the Price change field, which is just the difference between the actual and the previous year's price.

The Price variance gets a bit trickier. Let's take a look at the formula and then go through it step by step.

∆Price = SUMX(Products, IF([Price PY] * [Price AC] <> 0,[Price change] * [Quantity AC],0))

This formula takes the price change for every product and multiplies it by the actual quantity. The IF statement is used to check for active products only and exclude any new or discontinued products. Then we use the SUMX to aggregate everything from the product level to all of the hierarchies above that. That is why SUMX is used here with the products table and why it is so important to have a completely separate table for products.

After this, the Volume variance is very straightforward.

∆Volume = IF([Quantity PY] * [Quantity AC] <> 0, ([Quantity AC] - [Quantity PY]) * [Price PY])

For the volume variance, calculate the change in the quantity and multiply it with the price for the previous year.

To calculate the Mix variance, you need to essentially replicate what you did in Excel.

∆Mix = ([∆PY]) - ([∆Volume] + [∆Price] + [New] + [Discontinued])

After calculating the total variance by subtracting the previous year's revenue from this year's revenue, you simply subtract everything. Subtract the volume change, price change, and new and discontinued products. This provides you with your Mix variance.

Creating the Price Volume Mix analysis visualization

Now is a good time to use Zebra BI visuals for Power BI to visualize your data. However, before you start that, here is a simple trick to make it all easier. As you work with your data, you end up with many separate measures. However, for charts and tables and so on, you can make it simpler by collecting the measures in a single category.

You do this by creating a separate disconnected table, which I named PVM. This simple table is not connected to any data and is just a list of values.

The table contains short and long names of measures and a SWITCH statement is used to transfer the value from those measures into this table.

Revenue by PVM = SWITCH(MAX(PVM[ID]), 1, [Revenue PY], 2, [∆Price], 3, [∆Volume], 4, [∆Mix], 5, [New], 6, [Discontinued], 7, [Revenue AC])

In this case, the values are transferred from the actual measures. This is just the way to unpivot all the measures and put them into one dimension for easier handling.

This allows you to take a Zebra BI chart and simply take the Category measure from the PVM table and drop it onto the Category field in your Visualization pane.

This puts all categories on the axis. The only way for this visualization to work, you need to use a waterfall chart. This is very easy to do - simply add a Zebra BI Charts visual, select Revenue by PVM measure, and add the Category measure to the Category field. All that's left is right-clicking on Revenue AC and Revenue PY column headings to mark these values as Results.

If you are using subtotals, you can easily just mark any additional columns as subtotals. This will help you in your analysis.

You could also easily create Small multiples by dropping the Product group measure into the group field.

This delivers a great-looking view with small multiples by product groups.

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Price Volume Mix Analysis: how to do it in Excel and Power BI (2024)

FAQs

What is mix in price volume/mix analysis? ›

Price effect refers to what happens when you apply higher- or lower-selling prices per unit; volume effect refers to the variation in the number of units sold; and the mix effect refers to the change in the mix of quantities sold — that is, the percent of units sold per reference over the total.

How do you calculate mix effect? ›

It is calculated as the difference between the actual unit and actual unit at budget price multiplied by the budget price. For example, if we calculate the mix-effect for any product where the actual unit is 30 and the actual unit at a budget price is 15, then: Mix effect on quantities= 30-15= 15 units.

What is mix analysis? ›

This is an analysis that enables us to differentiate what part of our margin evolution has been driven by the changes in mix from our product or volumes of sales by product, and which part of it has been driven by the changes in gross margin percentage by product.

What is price/volume analysis? ›

Volume analysis involves examining relative or absolute changes in an asset's trading volume to make inferences about future price movements. Volume can be an indicator of market strength, as rising markets on increasing volume are typically viewed as strong and healthy.

What is the formula for calculating sales mix? ›

Sales mix percentage is the number of one product's sales divided by the number of total products sold.

What is price/mix example? ›

Price Mix Examples

For instance, the price of jeans is $25 while that of a T-shirt is $15. Thus, the pricing objective of the brand is sales-oriented, aiming to increase market share. Furthermore, the brand pays attention to quality and doesn't go bogus on fashion trends like its competitors.

How do you use volume price analysis? ›

The key principle when doing volume price analysis is that a price drop on large volume shows that something might have triggered the move. This 'something' could be a news or economic release such as the non-farm payrolls or an interest rate decision. Traders also use volume as a way to confirm chart patterns.

How do you calculate volume and mix? ›

Volume Impact = Target Price * (Actual Volume – Target Volume) Mix Impact = (Actual Volume – Target Volume) * (Actual Price – Target Price)

How do you calculate price/volume variance? ›

Determine how many units you budgeted for when you planned your sales. Identify the price per unit sold. Subtract the budgeted units sold from the actual units sold. Multiply your answer by the price per unit sold to determine what your sales volume variance is.

How do you create a price bridge volume? ›

In order to create a price volume bridge, you just need to know revenue and volume information for the relevant periods. From this information, you can calculate average sales price and ultimately the price and volume movements.

What is price volume trend indicator? ›

The volume price trend indicator is used to determine the balance between a security's demand and supply. The percentage change in the share price trend shows the relative supply or demand of a particular security, while volume indicates the force behind the trend.

What is mix pricing strategy? ›

A product mix pricing strategy, therefore, can be any strategy that takes the product mix into consideration. Most often, however, the product mix is segmented into the products consumers are most likely to buy together, and the strategy aims to maximize product, market share or company growth.

How do you calculate price impact? ›

Impact Cost Formula

Buy Quantity is 1000 and Buy Price is 9.80 and Sell Price 9.90 and Sell Quantity is 1000. Now to buy 1500 shares, the ideal price would be = ((9.80+9.90))/2 = 9.85 i.e. the best bid plus best offer divided by 2 or taking average of best bid and best offer.

How do you Analyse the product mix of a company? ›

Dimensions of a Product Mix
  1. #1 Width. Width, also known as breadth, refers to the number of product lines offered by a company. ...
  2. #2 Length. Length refers to the total number of products in a firm's product mix. ...
  3. #3 Depth. Depth refers to the number of variations within a product line. ...
  4. #4 Consistency.
4 days ago

How do I create a price volume chart in Excel? ›

What to Know. Enter your stock data in the worksheet, including date, volume traded, high price, low price, and closing price. Select the data, select Insert > Recommended Charts > All Charts > Stock > Volume-High-Low-Close > OK.

How is price/volume calculated? ›

VPT = Previous VPT + Volume x (Today's Closing Price – Previous Closing Price) / Previous Closing Price. The idea behind the indicator is to multiply the market volume of a stock by the percentage change in its price.

What is a price volume chart? ›

A price by volume (PBV) chart is a horizontal histogram plotted on a security's chart, showing the volume of shares traded at a specific price level. Often times, price by volume histograms are found on the Y-axis and are used by technical traders to predict areas of support and resistance.

What are 5 product mix pricing strategies? ›

Five product mix pricing situations
  • Product line pricing – the products in the product line.
  • Optional product pricing – optional or accessory products.
  • Captive product pricing - complementary products.
  • By-product pricing – by-products.
  • Product bundle pricing – several products.

What are the 4 pricing strategies? ›

What are the 4 major pricing strategies? Value-based, competition-based, cost-plus, and dynamic pricing are all models that are used frequently, depending on the industry and business model in question.

Which of the 4 Ps is most important? ›

Price: The Most Important P in the Marketing Mix.

Which is best volume indicator? ›

There are two most popular and widely used volume indicators: PVI (Positive Volume Index) and NVI (Negative Volume Index) that help in volume analysis. The positive volume index is used to measure the positive impact or increase in the trading volume.

How do you find the price analysis? ›

You need to figure out the price at which you can maximize your profit.
  1. Document your cost structure.
  2. Capture your main competitors' prices.
  3. Estimate how sensitive your market is to price fluctuations.
  4. Calculate the price and volume that will maximize profit.
  5. Recommend a price.

How do you conduct a market price analysis? ›

How to conduct a market analysis
  1. Determine your purpose. ...
  2. Research the state of the industry. ...
  3. Identify your target customer. ...
  4. Understand your competition. ...
  5. Gather additional data. ...
  6. Analyze your data. ...
  7. Put your analysis to work.

What are the 3 methods used to calculate volume? ›

To illustrate the effects of precision on data, volumes will be determined by three different methods: geometrically (measuring lengths); water displacement; and pycnometry.

What is the formula for volume mL? ›

1 Expert Answer

V = m / d.

How do you calculate sales volume variance in Excel? ›

(Units sold - Projected units sold) x Price per unit = Sales volume variance.

What is a price variance example? ›

Sales Price Variance Example

The store ends up selling all 50 shirts at the $15 price, bringing in a gross sales total of $750. The store's sales price variance is the $1,000 standard or expected sales revenue minus $750 actual revenue received, for a difference of $250.

How do you calculate price action and volume? ›

An increase in price and volume confirms the price trend upward. A decrease in price and volume confirms the price trend downward. An increase in price accompanied by a decreasing or flat volume trend is a negative divergence suggesting that the downward price movement is weak and may reverse.

Where do you anchor volume by price? ›

Anchored Volume-by-Price show what price levels experienced the most volume. Unlike traditional volume that's plotted on the X-axis below the price chart, price-by-volume is plotted on the Y-Axis on the right side of the chart, with each bar representing the volume at the associated price.

Which is better OBV or RSI? ›

RSI is one of the most popular trading indicators around, and is quite different from the OBV indicator. While OBV relies on both price and volume data, RSI looks only at price, and measures the momentum of the price changes, instead of the volume on up and down days.

Which indicator is best for price action? ›

The most commonly used price bars which are used as a price action indicator, are called candlesticks. All trading platforms in the world offer candlestick charting - proving just how popular price action trading is.

What are 3 pricing methods? ›

Cost-Based Pricing. Value-Based Pricing. Competition-Based Pricing.

What are the components of price mix? ›

PRICE MIX is the value of the product determined by the producers. Price mix includes the decisions as to: Price level to be adopted; discount to be offered; and, terms of credit to be allowed to customers.

What are the factors of price mix? ›

Price Mix is an important decision, and is related to the fixing of the price of a product or service.
...
Factors Affecting Price Determination
  • Pricing Objectives. ...
  • Extent of Competition in the Market. ...
  • Product Cost. ...
  • Demand and Utility of a Customer. ...
  • Marketing Methods Used.
8 Sept 2022

How do you calculate margin mix? ›

We do this by multiplying each product's gross profit by its percentage of unit sales. Each products percentage contribution to this metric is its margin mix.

How do you calculate price per object? ›

We divide the price of certain number of units of an item by the number of units to find the unit price of that item. For example, to find the unit price of 12 ounces of soup that costs $2.40, divide $2.40 by 12 ounces, to get unit price of soup as $0.20 per ounce.

What is the formula for impact analysis? ›

—is given by the basic impact evaluation formula: = (Y | P = 1) (Y | P = 0). This formula says that the causal impact () of a program (P) on an out- come (Y) is the difference between the outcome (Y) with the program (in other words, when P = 1) and the same outcome (Y) without the program (that is, when P = 0).

What are the 4 product mix dimensions? ›

Product mix, also known as product assortment, refers to the total number of product lines a company offers to its customers. The four dimensions to a company's product mix include width, length, depth and consistency.

What are the 4 elements of the product mix? ›

The 4Ps are:
  • Product (or Service).
  • Place.
  • Price.
  • Promotion.

How do you find the mixed variance? ›

To calculate sales mix variance, use this formula: Sales Mix Variance = (Actual Unit Sales x (Actual Sales Mix Percentage – Planned Sales Mix Percentage) x Planned Contribution Margin Per Unit.

How do you calculate mix and volume effect? ›

The mix impact for individual products is calculated by using: (Volume in FY01 – (Total Volume in FY02 * (FY01 Volume/Total FY01 Volume))) * Average price FY01. The overall mix impact is calculated by taking the sum total of the mix impacts for each individual product.

How do you calculate volume and mix? ›

Volume Impact = Target Price * (Actual Volume – Target Volume) Mix Impact = (Actual Volume – Target Volume) * (Actual Price – Target Price)

How do you calculate material mix variance? ›

The material mix variance is calculated as the difference between the standard cost of the actual input materials in the actual mix used, compared to the standard cost of the actual input materials if the standard mix had been used.

What is a 3x3 mixed ANOVA? ›

three-way mixed ANOVA, used to evaluate if there is a three-way interaction between three independent variables, including between-subjects and within-subjects factors. You can have two different designs for three-way mixed ANOVA: one between-subjects factor and two within-subjects factors.

Is mix variance part of volume variance? ›

Sales Mix Variance is one of the two sub-variances of sales volume variance (the other being sales quantity variance). Sales mix variance quantifies the effect of the variation in the proportion of different products sold during a period from the standard mix determined in the budget-setting process.

What is a 2x2 mixed design ANOVA? ›

The two-way mixed-design ANOVA is also known as two way split-plot design (SPANOVA). It is ANOVA with one repeated-measures factor and one between-groups factor. Minimum Origin Version Required: OriginPro 2016 SR0.

What are the 3 methods used to calculate volume? ›

To illustrate the effects of precision on data, volumes will be determined by three different methods: geometrically (measuring lengths); water displacement; and pycnometry.

How do you use volume price analysis? ›

The key principle when doing volume price analysis is that a price drop on large volume shows that something might have triggered the move. This 'something' could be a news or economic release such as the non-farm payrolls or an interest rate decision. Traders also use volume as a way to confirm chart patterns.

How do you calculate price impact? ›

Impact Cost Formula

Buy Quantity is 1000 and Buy Price is 9.80 and Sell Price 9.90 and Sell Quantity is 1000. Now to buy 1500 shares, the ideal price would be = ((9.80+9.90))/2 = 9.85 i.e. the best bid plus best offer divided by 2 or taking average of best bid and best offer.

What are the 4 methods used to find volume? ›

Different Ways to Find Volume
  • Solve for Volume by Space. All physical objects occupy space, and you can find the volume for some of them by measuring their physical dimensions. ...
  • Solve for Volume by Density and Mass. Density is defined as an object's mass per a given unit of volume. ...
  • Solve for Volume by Displacement.
30 Apr 2018

What is the formula for calculating volumes? ›

Whereas the basic formula for the area of a rectangular shape is length × width, the basic formula for volume is length × width × height. How you refer to the different dimensions does not change the calculation: you may, for example, use 'depth' instead of 'height'.

What are the formulas to calculate volume? ›

Depending on your object shape, you can use different formulas to calculate volume:
  • Cube volume = side. ...
  • Cuboid (rectangular box) volume = length × width × height.
  • Sphere volume = (4/3) × Ï€ × radius. ...
  • Cylinder volume = Ï€ × radius2 × height.
  • Cone volume = (1/3) × Ï€ × radius2 × height.
  • Pyramid volume = (1/3) × base area × height.
11 Oct 2022

What is the formula for calculating material price variance? ›

Calculation of the direct material price variance : The direct material price variance can be calculated as follows: Direct Material Price Variance = (Standard price per unit of direct materials - Actual price per unit of direct materials) x Actual of direct materials used.

What is a mix variance? ›

Direct material mix variance is the difference between the budgeted and actual mixes of direct material costs used in a production process. This variance isolates the aggregate unit cost of each item, excluding all other variables. The formula is: Standard cost of actual mix - Standard cost of standard mix.

How do you record material price variance? ›

The variance is calculated using the direct materials price variance formula which takes the difference between the standard material unit price and the actual material unit price, and multiplies this by the quantity of units.

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Author: Wyatt Volkman LLD

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Name: Wyatt Volkman LLD

Birthday: 1992-02-16

Address: Suite 851 78549 Lubowitz Well, Wardside, TX 98080-8615

Phone: +67618977178100

Job: Manufacturing Director

Hobby: Running, Mountaineering, Inline skating, Writing, Baton twirling, Computer programming, Stone skipping

Introduction: My name is Wyatt Volkman LLD, I am a handsome, rich, comfortable, lively, zealous, graceful, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.