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Default Not sure how to do this...

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units I intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit for the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325 units I would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the next 100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!
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Default Not sure how to do this...

Thank you for the helpful suggestions. The products I'm dealing with have 11
tiers for price, so I decided to try what appeared to be the simplest method.
Unfortunately, I can't get it to provide the correct answer!

Here is my fx:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000 ;99999}),
(A1-{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000;999 99}),
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

This is the actual data I'm trying to build the fx to:

Volume Range Price/Unit
1-100 $21.64
101-300 $21.21
301-500 $20.80
501-800 $20.58
801-1100 $19.99
1101-1500 $19.60
1501-5000 $18.26
5001-6000 $17.60
6001-7000 $17.43
7001-8000 $17.25
8001 $17.08


The fx above gives me a total cost of $18,926 for 1000 units. Manually
calculating the price, it should be $20,738 ($20.74 / unit average) -
(100*21.64)+(200*$21.21)+(200*$20.80)+(300*$20.58) +(200*$19.99).

Where did I go wrong?

Lipper

"Lipper" wrote:

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units I intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit for the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325 units I would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the next 100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!

  #3   Report Post  
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Posts: 15,768
Default Not sure how to do this...

Where did I go wrong?

You left out the first interval boundary which is 0.

=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;80 00}),
(A1-{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000}) ,
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

I would create the table! When you use a table it's a lot easier to make
changes to the table than it is to edit the formula if /when the price
structure changes. (and we know prices always change!).


--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the helpful suggestions. The products I'm dealing with have
11
tiers for price, so I decided to try what appeared to be the simplest
method.
Unfortunately, I can't get it to provide the correct answer!

Here is my fx:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000 ;99999}),
(A1-{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000;999 99}),
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

This is the actual data I'm trying to build the fx to:

Volume Range Price/Unit
1-100 $21.64
101-300 $21.21
301-500 $20.80
501-800 $20.58
801-1100 $19.99
1101-1500 $19.60
1501-5000 $18.26
5001-6000 $17.60
6001-7000 $17.43
7001-8000 $17.25
8001 $17.08


The fx above gives me a total cost of $18,926 for 1000 units. Manually
calculating the price, it should be $20,738 ($20.74 / unit average) -
(100*21.64)+(200*$21.21)+(200*$20.80)+(300*$20.58) +(200*$19.99).

Where did I go wrong?

Lipper

"Lipper" wrote:

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units I
intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit for
the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325 units I
would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the next 100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!



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Posts: 4
Default Not sure how to do this...

It worked!

I tried to build a table and then reference cells in the table inside the
formula, but it wouldn't work for me. Do I need to enclose the cell
reference with "" or some other method?

Thanks very much for your help so far. If I can't get the cell reference
figured out it still saves me a ton of time.

Lipper

"T. Valko" wrote:

Where did I go wrong?


You left out the first interval boundary which is 0.

=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;80 00}),
(A1-{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000}) ,
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

I would create the table! When you use a table it's a lot easier to make
changes to the table than it is to edit the formula if /when the price
structure changes. (and we know prices always change!).


--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the helpful suggestions. The products I'm dealing with have
11
tiers for price, so I decided to try what appeared to be the simplest
method.
Unfortunately, I can't get it to provide the correct answer!

Here is my fx:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000 ;99999}),
(A1-{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000;999 99}),
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

This is the actual data I'm trying to build the fx to:

Volume Range Price/Unit
1-100 $21.64
101-300 $21.21
301-500 $20.80
501-800 $20.58
801-1100 $19.99
1101-1500 $19.60
1501-5000 $18.26
5001-6000 $17.60
6001-7000 $17.43
7001-8000 $17.25
8001 $17.08


The fx above gives me a total cost of $18,926 for 1000 units. Manually
calculating the price, it should be $20,738 ($20.74 / unit average) -
(100*21.64)+(200*$21.21)+(200*$20.80)+(300*$20.58) +(200*$19.99).

Where did I go wrong?

Lipper

"Lipper" wrote:

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units I
intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit for
the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325 units I
would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the next 100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!




  #5   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
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Posts: 15,768
Default Not sure how to do this...

Here's a small sample file that demonstrates this.

xLipper.xls 14kb

http://cjoint.com/?jhxhP57sAb

--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
It worked!

I tried to build a table and then reference cells in the table inside the
formula, but it wouldn't work for me. Do I need to enclose the cell
reference with "" or some other method?

Thanks very much for your help so far. If I can't get the cell reference
figured out it still saves me a ton of time.

Lipper

"T. Valko" wrote:

Where did I go wrong?


You left out the first interval boundary which is 0.

=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;80 00}),
(A1-{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000}) ,
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

I would create the table! When you use a table it's a lot easier to make
changes to the table than it is to edit the formula if /when the price
structure changes. (and we know prices always change!).


--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the helpful suggestions. The products I'm dealing with
have
11
tiers for price, so I decided to try what appeared to be the simplest
method.
Unfortunately, I can't get it to provide the correct answer!

Here is my fx:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000 ;99999}),
(A1-{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000;999 99}),
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

This is the actual data I'm trying to build the fx to:

Volume Range Price/Unit
1-100 $21.64
101-300 $21.21
301-500 $20.80
501-800 $20.58
801-1100 $19.99
1101-1500 $19.60
1501-5000 $18.26
5001-6000 $17.60
6001-7000 $17.43
7001-8000 $17.25
8001 $17.08

The fx above gives me a total cost of $18,926 for 1000 units. Manually
calculating the price, it should be $20,738 ($20.74 / unit average) -
(100*21.64)+(200*$21.21)+(200*$20.80)+(300*$20.58) +(200*$19.99).

Where did I go wrong?

Lipper

"Lipper" wrote:

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on
volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units I
intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit for
the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325 units
I
would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the next
100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!








  #6   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Not sure how to do this...

That did the trick!

I wish I could explain to you the amount of work you saved myself and my
team on this! I'm almost embarrased at how simple the fx is. Thanks again -
you've made alot of folks happy today!

Lipper

"T. Valko" wrote:

Here's a small sample file that demonstrates this.

xLipper.xls 14kb

http://cjoint.com/?jhxhP57sAb

--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
It worked!

I tried to build a table and then reference cells in the table inside the
formula, but it wouldn't work for me. Do I need to enclose the cell
reference with "" or some other method?

Thanks very much for your help so far. If I can't get the cell reference
figured out it still saves me a ton of time.

Lipper

"T. Valko" wrote:

Where did I go wrong?

You left out the first interval boundary which is 0.

=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;80 00}),
(A1-{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000}) ,
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

I would create the table! When you use a table it's a lot easier to make
changes to the table than it is to edit the formula if /when the price
structure changes. (and we know prices always change!).


--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the helpful suggestions. The products I'm dealing with
have
11
tiers for price, so I decided to try what appeared to be the simplest
method.
Unfortunately, I can't get it to provide the correct answer!

Here is my fx:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000 ;99999}),
(A1-{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000;999 99}),
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

This is the actual data I'm trying to build the fx to:

Volume Range Price/Unit
1-100 $21.64
101-300 $21.21
301-500 $20.80
501-800 $20.58
801-1100 $19.99
1101-1500 $19.60
1501-5000 $18.26
5001-6000 $17.60
6001-7000 $17.43
7001-8000 $17.25
8001 $17.08

The fx above gives me a total cost of $18,926 for 1000 units. Manually
calculating the price, it should be $20,738 ($20.74 / unit average) -
(100*21.64)+(200*$21.21)+(200*$20.80)+(300*$20.58) +(200*$19.99).

Where did I go wrong?

Lipper

"Lipper" wrote:

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on
volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units I
intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit for
the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325 units
I
would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the next
100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!






  #7   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
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Posts: 15,768
Default Not sure how to do this...

You're welcome. Thanks for the feedback!

--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
That did the trick!

I wish I could explain to you the amount of work you saved myself and my
team on this! I'm almost embarrased at how simple the fx is. Thanks
again -
you've made alot of folks happy today!

Lipper

"T. Valko" wrote:

Here's a small sample file that demonstrates this.

xLipper.xls 14kb

http://cjoint.com/?jhxhP57sAb

--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
It worked!

I tried to build a table and then reference cells in the table inside
the
formula, but it wouldn't work for me. Do I need to enclose the cell
reference with "" or some other method?

Thanks very much for your help so far. If I can't get the cell
reference
figured out it still saves me a ton of time.

Lipper

"T. Valko" wrote:

Where did I go wrong?

You left out the first interval boundary which is 0.

=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;80 00}),
(A1-{0;100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000}) ,
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

I would create the table! When you use a table it's a lot easier to
make
changes to the table than it is to edit the formula if /when the price
structure changes. (and we know prices always change!).


--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP


"Lipper" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the helpful suggestions. The products I'm dealing
with
have
11
tiers for price, so I decided to try what appeared to be the
simplest
method.
Unfortunately, I can't get it to provide the correct answer!

Here is my fx:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(A1{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000 ;99999}),
(A1-{100;300;500;800;1100;1500;5000;6000;7000;8000;999 99}),
{21.64;-0.43;-0.41;-0.22;-0.59;-0.39;-1.34;-0.66;-0.17;-0.18;-0.17})

This is the actual data I'm trying to build the fx to:

Volume Range Price/Unit
1-100 $21.64
101-300 $21.21
301-500 $20.80
501-800 $20.58
801-1100 $19.99
1101-1500 $19.60
1501-5000 $18.26
5001-6000 $17.60
6001-7000 $17.43
7001-8000 $17.25
8001 $17.08

The fx above gives me a total cost of $18,926 for 1000 units.
Manually
calculating the price, it should be $20,738 ($20.74 / unit
average) -
(100*21.64)+(200*$21.21)+(200*$20.80)+(300*$20.58) +(200*$19.99).

Where did I go wrong?

Lipper

"Lipper" wrote:

I have multiple products that have multiple price tiers based on
volume
ranges. For example, Product A may have the following:

1-100 units @ $10/unit
101-200 units @ $9.50/unit
201-400 units @ $9.00/unit

etc.

I need to be able to enter one number for the total volume of units
I
intend
to purchase per year and then calculate the average price per unit
for
the
year. Using the example above, if my annual requirement is 325
units
I
would
be charged $10/unit for the first 100 units, $9.50/unit for the
next
100
units and $9.00/unit for the remaining 125 units.

What is the best way to calculate this?

Thanks in advance for any help!








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