inContact (SAAS)
Create an AlertinContact Gross Profit Margin Quarterly:
47.96% for March 31, 2013inContact Historical Gross Profit Margin Quarterly Data
Pro Data ExportThere is no data for the selected date range.
| Data for this Date Range | |
|---|---|
| March 31, 2013 | 47.96% |
| Dec. 31, 2012 | 46.98% |
| Sept. 30, 2012 | 46.82% |
| June 30, 2012 | 44.86% |
| March 31, 2012 | 43.98% |
| Dec. 31, 2011 | 40.51% |
| Sept. 30, 2011 | 38.89% |
| June 30, 2011 | 41.47% |
| March 31, 2011 | 41.47% |
| Dec. 31, 2010 | 41.80% |
| Sept. 30, 2010 | 43.43% |
| June 30, 2010 | 42.66% |
| March 31, 2010 | 43.95% |
| Dec. 31, 2009 | 43.17% |
| Sept. 30, 2009 | 41.50% |
| June 30, 2009 | 38.73% |
| March 31, 2009 | 39.02% |
| Dec. 31, 2008 | -4.34% |
| Sept. 30, 2008 | 48.28% |
| June 30, 2008 | 46.27% |
| March 31, 2008 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2007 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2007 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2007 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2007 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2006 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2006 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2006 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2006 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2005 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2005 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2005 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2005 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2004 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2004 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2004 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2004 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2003 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2003 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2003 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2003 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2002 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2002 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2002 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2002 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2001 | Go Pro |
| Sept. 30, 2001 | Go Pro |
| June 30, 2001 | Go Pro |
| March 31, 2001 | Go Pro |
| Dec. 31, 2000 | Go Pro |
About Gross Profit Margin
A gross profit margin is the difference between sales and the cost of goods sold divided by revenue. This represents the percentage of each dollar of a company's revenue available after accounting for cost of goods sold.
If a company produces phones and earns $32 million in sales but pays $24 million for the items sold, then the company's gross profit margin would be ($32M - $24M) / $32M = 25 percent.
Cutting costs result in higher gross profit margins. If a company sells phones for 500 dollars and the cost of the producing the phone is $250, the current gross profit margin is 50 percent ((500-250)/500). If the company is able to reduce production costs from $250 to $200, the gross profit margin is 60 percent ((500-200)/500).
Note : Profit margins are very dependent on sector. Companies that sell bland potato chips may not have very high margins, but will sell a sizable quantity of potato chips. A company that sells consulting services will likely have higher profit margins, but sell lower quantities.
Learn More
SAAS Gross Profit Margin Quarterly Rankings
| Overall |
85th percentile 2477 of 16782 |
| Sector |
74th percentile 520 of 2035 in Technology |
| Industry |
59th percentile 190 of 470 in Software - Application |
SAAS Gross Profit Margin Quarterly Range, Past 5 Years
| Minimum | -4.34% | Dec 2008 |
| Maximum | 48.28% | Sep 2008 |
| Average | 40.87% |
SAAS News
theflyonthewall.com May 21