Maybe it's just me, but it seems kind of weird to say you earned $8,200 in "profit" when there was no salary. Profit is typically the excess a business earns above its costs. For a solo founder, it can be a little tricky because the more you pay yourself in salary, the less you have in profit (and vice versa). But here, there was no salary. Maybe "earnings" or "income" would be a better term to use? Otherwise someone might (particularly for other years) think that the business earned $PROFIT dollars beyond all other costs, including presumably some sort of salary for all employees/contractors.
Yea. Perhaps a better metric to use would be Seller's Discretionary Earnings (SDE) which includes the owner's salary, benefits, and discretionary expenses, after adjusting for non-recurring, non-operating, and non-cash items. This metric is often used when one person wants to acquire another business.