Sales Forecast Input
Sales
Net sales are operating revenues a company earns for selling its products or rendering its services. Revenue is also referred to as sales or net sales, and it is reported directly on the income statement as sales or net sales.
For financial ratios that use income statement sales values, "sales" refers to net sales, not gross sales. Sales are the unique transactions that occur in professional selling or during marketing initiatives.
The term "sales" in marketing, advertising, or a general business context often refers to a contract in which a buyer has agreed to purchase some products at a set time in the future. "Outstanding orders" refers to sales orders that have not been filled.
A sale is a transfer of property for money or credit. In double-entry bookkeeping, a sale of merchandise is recorded in the general journal as a debit to cash or accounts receivable and a credit to the sales account. A discount from the list price might be noted if it applies to the sale (discount expense debit).
Fees
for services are recorded separately from sales of merchandise, but the
bookkeeping transactions for recording sales of services are similar to
those for recording sales of tangible goods.

Sales Forecasting An example of sales forecasting for a company over a decade.
Forecasting: Gross Sales and Net Sales
Net sales = Gross sales – (customer discounts, returns, allowances)
Gross
sales are the sum of all sales during a time period. Net sales are
gross sales minus sales returns, sales allowances, and sales discounts.
Gross sales do not normally appear on an income statement. The sales
figures reported on an income statement are net sales.
- Sales returns are refunds to customers for returned merchandise/credit notes
- Debit notes
- Sales journal entries non-current, current batch-processed
transactions, predictive analytics in strategic
management/administration/governance research meta frameworks
- Sales allowances are reductions in sales price for merchandise
with minor defects; the allowance agreed upon after the customer has
purchased the merchandise
- Sales discounts allowed are reduced payments from the customer
based on invoice payment terms such as 2/10, n/30 (2% discount if paid
within 10 days, net invoice total due in 30 days)
- Interest received for amounts in arrears
- Includes/excludes amounts of capital goods & services, non-capital goods & services, input value-added tax, with cost of non-capital goods sold
- Input vat - output vat
- Sales of portfolio items and capital gains taxes
- Sales Returns & Allowances and Sales Discounts are contra-revenue accounts
Sales Forecasting
When launching a program, managers often begin by identifying the dollar profit they desire and ask
what sales levels will be required to reach it. The target volume is the
unit sales quantity required to meet an earnings goal. Target revenue is
the corresponding figure for dollar sales. We can view both of these metrics as extensions of break-even analysis.
Increasingly, marketers are expected to generate volumes that meet their firm's target profits. This often requires them to revise
sales targets as prices and costs change.
- Target volume: the volume of sales necessary to generate the profits specified in a company's plans.
- Target Volume = [Fixed costs + Target Profits] / Contribution per Unit
- The formula for target volume will be familiar to those who have
performed break-even analysis. The only change is to add the required
profit target to the fixed costs. From another perspective, the
break-even volume equation can be viewed as a special case of the
general target volume calculation – one in which the profit target is
zero, and a company seeks only to cover its fixed costs.
- The company broadens this objective to solve for a desired profit in target volume calculations.
- Target Revenue = Target Volume * Selling Price per Unit; or
- Target Revenue = 100 * [ { Fixed Costs + Target Profits } / Contribution Margin ]
Profit-based sales target metrics ensure that marketing and sales objectives mesh with profit targets. In target volume and target revenue calculations, managers go beyond break-even analysis (the point at which a company sells enough to cover its fixed costs) to determine the level of unit sales or revenues needed to cover a firm's costs and attain its profit targets.
Key Points
- Net sales are operating revenues earned by a company for selling its products or rendering its services.
- Gross sales are the sum of all sales during a time period. Net sales are gross sales minus sales returns, sales allowances, and sales discounts.
- The purpose of profit-based sales target metrics is to ensure that marketing and sales objectives mesh with profit targets.
Terms
- Fixed Costs – In economics, fixed costs are business expenses that are not dependent on the level of goods or services produced by the business.
- Contribution Margin – In cost-volume-profit analysis, a form of management accounting, contribution margin is the marginal profit per unit sale.
Source: Boundless Finance, https://ftp.worldpossible.org/endless/eos-rachel/RACHEL/RACHEL/modules/en-boundless-static/www.boundless.com/finance/textbooks/boundless-finance-textbook/forecasting-financial-statements-4/forecasting-the-income-statement-50/index.html
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