Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Opportunity Cost Part 2

OK, so now that you know that opportunity cost is this for that, you need to know what is the best that you can get for your this.

In mommy words, here it is: you have 3 hours without the kids but no access to a car. How do you spend it? TV is relaxing... housework is work but whittles down that to-do list... a nice bath is relaxing but after 3 hours cold... surfing online can be fun but like TV, the after effects make one feel wasted. Eating that favorite dessert without paws reaching in is also nice. There are so many things... what is the best way for you to spend it? Well, thats going to depend on you and your situation. Its that work-play balance again. So much of a certain play is going to cost you so much work and the accompanying stress that comes from not doing it.

In business terms, you can sell apples or oranges. Apples make twice the profit of oranges (so oranges are X and apples are 2X.) So your profit equation is X+2X=Profit.

Doing all apples will cost you your orange labor and profits... which is fine if there is no market for oranges. But what if oranges sell more units than apples (they are eaten more at a certain blogger's household.) Lets say people buy 3 times as many oranges as apples. Now, X apples = 3X oranges. At that point, it is worth your trouble to also sell oranges, simply because your profits may end up exceeding apple profits as a total. So you want to make the most profit out of both oranges and apples.

These equations are called 'constraints.' One would phrase the question, what is the opportunity cost of selling one additional unit of apples?

OK, so its almost dinner, nothing's started, the baby is about to cry, I am hungry, Sesame Street is on and math is not my strong point... I am going to finish this when I can better focus on it... you can see why companies do not encourage bringing your 4 year old, 1 year old and your newborn to work. I promise you a good sequel to this post! Point is, you want to maximize your profit within the given constraints of your market and your product. Baby's crying. See you later!

No comments:

Post a Comment