Dutching in its simple form allows you to back several selections (lets assume horse racing) to guarantee the same profit regardless which one wins. When you place your dutch bet do you think they all have an equal chance of winning? I don't think so. Most likely you decide which horses may be a contender and include them in your dutch. The more horses you include the lower the profit. Wouldn't it be better to vary the amount of profit each selection provides? The most likely winners provide maximum profit and the horses with a lower chance a smaller profit or just break even.
Searching for 'dutching' on the internet will give loads of results for dutching calculators. However, try searching for 'variable profit dutching' and you will struggle to find anything relevant, mostly the same results as your 'dutching' search provided. The maths involved for variable profit dutching is certainly more complex.
This spreadsheet provides it. It is very simple to use, in cell M3 enter your total stake or in cell M4 enter your profit target for 1% profit. So if you enter a profit target of 0.50 then you will gain 50.00 units for a 100% stake, 25 units for a 50% stake and so on. With this type of staking there is no ceiling to your liability, so keep an eye on it. To use the total stake in M3 the M4 cell must be empty, target staking will be used if there is a value in M4. There are checkboxes beside each horse, just select each horse you would like to back and adjust the slider bar to choose the amount of profit. The default profit value is scratch so when you select horse(s) nothing will happen until you choose a profit for at least one horse. It can also be used for conventional dutching (just set the profit slider to 100% for each selection.) Once you are done just click the 'Submit Bets' button
It is also possible to move the profit slider to produce negative values. You maybe think a horse has an outside chance so you can set it to lose half your stake. However there is a problem when using negative values. The spreadsheet works by calculating the amount of stake needed to provide 1% profit and multiplys that by your profit setting, so say 100% profit generates 200.00 then 10% will give 20.00, but negative values still use the potential profit for its calculations so in the above scenario a 10% loss would mean a loss of 20.00 when our stake is 100.00 so it is actually a 20% loss of stake. When using negative values ignore the percentage setting and be guided by the profit/loss, which is correct. The other problem is you can move the profit slider too far which produces negative bets, This will cause an error if you attempt to submit bets.
So please try it out, it certainly works fine when you don't use negative profit. Any suggestions for improvements or how I can fix the negative values problem are welcome.
As always, demo mode only until you are confident it works as you expect.