We all invest for the same reason: to make money. And in order to make money investing, we need to know two key things: when to buy and when to sell.

If you can buy something for $1 and turn around and sell it for $2, then you've made money. If, on the other hand, you buy for a buck and can't find someone willing to buy it for more than $0.50, you've lost money. Clearly, to make money at investing, the goal is to buy low and sell high. More than half a century ago, Benjamin Graham, the pioneer of value investing, came up with a simple way to do just that -- a concept known as the "margin of safety." By deploying this technique, investors greatly increase the chance that they won't lose their hats and the likelihood that they'll trounce other investors.

Following in Graham's footsteps, Bill Miller, who runs Legg Mason Value Trust, has beaten the market for 14 consecutive years -- practically unheard of in the mutual fund industry. Miller's long-run performance pales in comparison to that of Warren Buffett, a former pupil of Graham's and current head of Berkshire Hathaway. What's more, Graham's margin of safety is something we put to good use here at the Motley Fool Inside Value newsletter service.

Know a company's true worth
The key to success is a clear understanding of a company's true worth. With that knowledge in hand, buying low and selling high becomes a simple matter of waiting, buying a stock only when it falls below the company's true worth by a tempting margin. Once you own it, you need to keep tracking the company's value. When the stock rises to an uncomfortably high premium to its true worth, sell it. Using this method, I managed to earn more than 31% in just over a year on an investment in real estate firm AMREIT (AMEX:AMY). During the same period, the S&P 500 index, as measured by the SPDRs (AMEX:SPY), managed to eke out a total return of around 7.1%. The central lesson: All buying and selling decisions should be guided by comparing a company's stock price to its true worth, not by some vague notion of what the hot stock of the moment is.

My friend and colleague Philip Durell follows that philosophy as chief analyst at Inside Value. His selections as a whole are handily beating the market's return since the newsletter's inception last year. His record is added proof that using a margin of safety truly does work.

Philip has beaten the market without help from the likes of commodity-driven firms like petroleum company Sunoco (NYSE:SUN), whose recent run-up has more to do with the rise of the price of oil and gasoline than with any particular improvement in its operations. Instead, Philip has relied on companies with competitive moats, like financial software firm Intuit (NASDAQ:INTU). Once customers set up with Intuit's Quicken, TurboTax, and QuickBooks programs, they don't tend to undertake the expense and time to switch to rivals' offerings. Thanks to those significant switching costs, Intuit has been one of the few firms capable of holding its own against larger and better capitalized software companies like behemoth Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT). Philip recommended Intuit in February, after the company's stock had taken a nose dive due to one of the market's periodic fits of panic. And sure enough, since his recommendation, Intuit has outperformed the market, up more than 17% during a period in which the S&P 500 barely budged 3%.

Buying low with the margin of safety
Every company has what Graham calls an "intrinsic value," a measure of what a company is really worth. Finding that value is part art and part analysis. One of the most powerful tools in a value investor's toolkit is a discounted cash flow calculator, into which you put your estimate of how much cash the company will generate in the ensuing years. The calculator then tells you how much the company is worth today. Inside Value has just such a calculator available to subscribers. If you're already a subscriber, click here to access it. If not, click here to take a free 30-day trial to the newsletter and play with the calculator to your heart's content.

Once you've figured out what the company is worth, you can use that information to determine whether or not it has enough of Graham's margin of safety to be worth buying. Last December, for example, my analysis of employment and income verifier TalxCorp (NASDAQ:TALX) indicated that the company was significantly undervalued. Less than 10 months later, the market has come to see things from my point of view, launching Talx about 90% above my purchase price.

Selling high with the margin of safety
Logically, if a company trading below its intrinsic value is worth buying, then a company trading at or above its intrinsic value just might be a candidate for selling. Take a former Inside Value watch-list firm, health-care services company Cardinal Health (NYSE:CAH). Following the company's relentless rise from his discovery price, Philip recently removed it from consideration, informing subscribers that the company had simply exceeded the level where he could consider it to be value-priced.

The Foolish bottom line
Once you've figured out what a company is really worth, its margin of safety will tell you when it's time to buy and when it's time to sell. The lower the company's price with respect to that intrinsic value, the stronger the margin of safety, and the better the chance that buying that company will lead to a profitable investment. The higher the company's price with respect to that intrinsic value, the more that margin of safety has been reversed, and the better the chance that it's time to sell your position and take the extra profits from your bargain-hunting trip.

Like the idea of finally knowing how to buy low and sell high? Want more value investing tips and techniques? Click here for a free 30-day trial to Inside Value, The Motley Fool's home of the margin of safety.

This article was originally published on July 13, 2005. It has been updated.

At the time of publication, Fool contributor and Inside Value team memberChuck Salettaowned shares of Microsoft and Talx. The Fool has adisclosure policy.