Before we jump in, meet your crew! Each guide has a different superpower:
You decide to make friendship bracelets and sell them at school. You need to buy supplies first — beads, string, clasps. That costs money before you sell a single bracelet.
Let's say your supplies cost $30. Each bracelet sells for $5, and the beads for each one cost you $2.
Now — quick thought experiment before we do any math:
How many bracelets do you think you'd need to sell to earn back that $30?
Let's break that down into plain English:
Quick check: In the formula B = I ÷ (1 − R), what does "R" represent?
Every single business person you've ever heard of — every one — got their breakeven number wrong at least once. The formula gives you a starting point, not a crystal ball. And that's totally fine.
Scenario time: You started your business, but it rained all week and nobody came to your stand. You only sold 4 items instead of the 10 you needed. What do you do?
One more question — and this one has no wrong answer:
If you could use the breakeven formula for ONE thing in your life right now, what would it be?