![]() |
Incentive Spreadsheet Problem
On the top tier of my incentive spread sheet, any number that
surpasses $35,000 should be given a 10% bonus. The problem I am having is when more than two sums are present, and taking a percentage of each individual number given and not the lump sum. The problem: Entry 1) $45,000 -35,000= 10,000*.1 = $1,000 Entry 2) $55,000 -35,000= 20,000*.1 = $2,000 Since, 45,000 is already entered, only $10,000 needs to be multiplied by 10%, giving $1,000 instead of $2,000. How can I make a tier formula that would subtract the second number (55,000) from the first number (45,000) to give me the $10,000 difference and a $1,000 dollar incentive without giving me a negative number if a single entry is present. |
Incentive Spreadsheet Problem
On Jan 30, 10:01 am, "
wrote: On the top tier of my incentive spread sheet, any number that surpasses $35,000 should be given a 10% bonus. The problem I am having is when more than two sums are present, and taking a percentage of each individual number given and not the lump sum. The problem: Entry 1) $45,000 -35,000= 10,000*.1 = $1,000 Entry 2) $55,000 -35,000= 20,000*.1 = $2,000 Since, 45,000 is already entered, only $10,000 needs to be multiplied by 10%, giving $1,000 instead of $2,000. How can I make a tier formula that would subtract the second number (55,000) from the first number (45,000) to give me the $10,000 difference and a $1,000 dollar incentive without giving me a negative number if a single entry is present. Michael, It depends on what the two numbers mean. Generally you add IF statements in the output cells in which the calculations on contingent on the input values. But again one would have to know what the underlying calculation logic is before you could formulate the equation. SteveM |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:19 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com