What is Revenue?
Revenue (also called sales or “the top line”) is the total amount of money a company earns from selling its products or services before any expenses are deducted. It’s the starting point for calculating all profitability metrics.
Revenue Formula
$$\text{Revenue} = \text{Price} \times \text{Quantity Sold}$$
For subscription businesses:
$$\text{Revenue} = \text{Subscribers} \times \text{Average Revenue Per User (ARPU)}$$
Types of Revenue
By Nature
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Product Revenue | Sales of physical goods |
| Service Revenue | Fees for services provided |
| Subscription Revenue | Recurring payments (SaaS, streaming) |
| Advertising Revenue | Income from displaying ads |
| Licensing Revenue | Fees for intellectual property use |
By Timing
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Recurring Revenue | Repeats regularly (subscriptions) |
| Non-Recurring Revenue | One-time sales or transactions |
Why Revenue Matters
1. Growth Indicator
Revenue growth shows if a business is expanding.
2. Market Share
Increasing revenue often indicates gaining market share.
3. Top-Line Health
Even profitable companies need revenue growth for long-term value creation.
4. Valuation Basis
Some companies (especially unprofitable ones) are valued on revenue multiples.
Revenue vs. Profit
| Metric | Description |
|---|---|
| Revenue | Total sales (before costs) |
| Gross Profit | Revenue - Cost of Goods Sold |
| Operating Income | Gross Profit - Operating Expenses |
| Net Income | All profit after all costs |
A company can have high revenue but low (or negative) profit if costs are too high.
Revenue Recognition
Revenue recognition rules determine when a company can count revenue:
| Method | Rule |
|---|---|
| Point in Time | When goods are delivered or service is complete |
| Over Time | As service is performed (subscriptions, construction) |
Example: A subscription paid annually is recognized monthly (1/12 each month).
Real Company Revenue Examples
| Company | Annual Revenue | Primary Source |
|---|---|---|
| Walmart | $681B | Product sales |
| Apple | $391B | Products + Services |
| Amazon | $637B | E-commerce + AWS |
| Alphabet | $340B | Advertising |
| Microsoft | $245B | Software + Cloud |
Revenue Growth Analysis
Year-over-Year (YoY) Growth
$$\text{YoY Growth} = \frac{\text{Current Year Revenue} - \text{Prior Year Revenue}}{\text{Prior Year Revenue}} \times 100%$$
Revenue CAGR
Compound Annual Growth Rate shows average annual growth over multiple years:
$$\text{CAGR} = \left(\frac{\text{Ending Value}}{\text{Beginning Value}}\right)^{\frac{1}{n}} - 1$$
Analyzing Revenue Quality
High-Quality Revenue:
- Recurring and predictable
- Diversified across customers
- Growing organically
- High margins
Low-Quality Revenue:
- One-time or lumpy
- Concentrated in few customers
- Acquisition-driven
- Low margins
Price-to-Sales (P/S) Ratio
For companies without profits, investors use P/S:
$$\text{P/S Ratio} = \frac{\text{Market Cap}}{\text{Annual Revenue}}$$
| P/S Ratio | Typical Use |
|---|---|
| Under 1 | Value stocks |
| 1-5 | Average |
| 5-15 | Growth stocks |
| 15+ | High-growth tech |
Limitations
- Doesn’t show profit: High revenue doesn’t mean making money
- Accounting flexibility: Revenue recognition timing varies
- Quality varies: Not all revenue is equal (recurring vs. one-time)
- Industry differences: Some industries have naturally lower revenue but higher margins
Related Financial Terms
This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.