Gas Station Business 101 Podcast - How to Start, Run and Grow a Successful Gas Station Business

Gas Station Business 101 Podcast - How to Start, Run and Grow a Successful Gas Station Business


GSB-49: Buyers Be Aware - Listen Before Buying Your Next Gas Station Business

October 16, 2016

Did you just buy a gas station business and now finding out that even with high sales volume the business is not generating enough profit for you? Are you struggling to just meet your basic business expenses? Or are you about to buy a business that will put you in the red? Some of our listeners have just found themselves in that exact situation, so stay tuned and let's analyze all that in this episode. Welcome to Gas station business 101 podcast, I am Shabbir Hossain, and this is episode 49. This is the show where we discuss how to start, run and grow a gas station business successfully and give you an inside look at many real life case studies so you can follow and be successful in this business. This episode is a direct response to 3 of our podcast listeners and the issues they are facing about their new business venture. I won't mention them by name since I didn't ask for permission ahead of time, so I will just refer to them as person A, B, and C. Here is the situation, Person A recently sent me an email where he mentioned he recently bought a business but now a month and a half later he is still putting money into the bank just to meet his expenses. Person B sent me an email with a lot of sales data from a store he is thinking about buying and asked for my advice, and lastly person C just sent me an email which said he followed my advice that I gave on various podcast and bought a business but now he sees two of the categories in his new business has less profit margin than what I suggested. The two categories are automotive and cigarettes, where he said my suggestion was 15-17% on cigarettes but he found out his new business has only 5% margin, in the automotive category my suggestion was around 50%, but he sees around 18% margin. But what is alarming is that his cigarette sales are around 37% of his total merchandise sales while the automotive is only 3% Do any of you remember listening to episode #1 and #33, in these two episodes, I shared my own life story and how I failed miserably in my first gas station business venture, and how I was taken for a fool by the sellers. I am not suggesting that this is what is happening to this three gentleman, but as buyers, we do have to be aware and be very careful, so this does not happen to any of us, right? Let's start with Person A first, in his case, he is not sure why he is not making any money, in last two weeks we have shared a lot of sales and purchase data with me along with some of the selling prices on some of the products. Here are his numbers and since I am not sharing his name, I will share the numbers this way his privacy won't be compromised. Last month these were his sales: Fuel: 67,457.23 gallons Merchandise $71239.05 Out of the 67K gallons, he sold 61900 gallons of regular fuel and 5100 gallons of premium and plus grade fuel. The breakdown on merchandise were (I rounded the sales figure off) Cigarette $27,000 X 15% = $4050 Beer         $16000 X 23% =  $3680 Soda         $12000 X 33% =  $3960 Grocery   $9000 X 35% =   $3150 Tobacco   $3000 X 23% =   $690 Novelty   $2500 X 40% =   $1000 Auto         $1000 X 50% =   $500 Deli         $500 X 35% =   $175 __________________________________ Sales $71,000 Estimated Gross Profit $17,205. The gross profit margin here is $24% For the same month, he purchased $62,500 merchandise, which seems high for 71K total sales. If inventory level remained the same both at the beginning of the month and at the end of the month, then he should have ideally only replaced what he sold at cost right? If so then his purchase should have been$71,000 - $17,205 = $53,795, but he bought $62,500 which was $8705 more. But this is not always bad; this can also mean he may have $9,000 worth of extra inventory sitting on his shelves, but to find that out it is a good idea to have your inventory counted on the 1st day of every month. In his case, he hasn't but he told me he doesn't think he has that