Title: MERCHANDISE PLANNING & MANAGEMENT
1MERCHANDISE PLANNING MANAGEMENT
- Chapters 12 13
- by Levy Weitz
2Buying Decision Process
From whom to buy?
What to Buy?
How much to When to buy?
buy?
Store Image Satisfy Cust. Wants
Suppliers The Market Negotiations Unit
Price Terms
Financial Obj.
Open-to-buy
Type of Merchandise
Mdse. Budget
Estimated Sales Beginning Inv. Ending
Inv.
Control Systems
Sales
Reductions
Merchandise
Inventories
Policies
Purchases
Shortages
3Merchandise Management
- The planning and control of merchandise
inventories to meet desired sales and
product-related objectives. - Also includes the planning of the size and
composition of the merchandise inventories, as
well as a variety of functions dealing with the
purchase, display, pricing, promotion, and sale
of merchandise.
4Merchandise Planning
- Involves those activities which are needed to
ensure a balance between inventories and sales. - Marketing the right merchandise at the right
place at the right time in the right quantities
at the right price. - Management of the product component of the
marketing mix.
5Essential Terms
- Product what retailer is selling (or service)
- Product line all products/services offered by
retail firm - Category assortment of items that the customer
sees as reasonable substitutes for each other
- Assortment range of choices/selection in a
given product line ( of SKUs in a category) - Inventory turnover of times the avg.
inventory of an item or SKU is sold, usually in
annual terms
6Category Management at Borders
LO3
In early 2001 Borders group reorganized to
emphasize category management. As a result,
Borders has broken down its business into
specialized categorizes of books, childrens,
multimedia, gifts and stationary, periodicals,
calendars and café. Before the change, sales,
marketing and merchandising functions were
aligned by type of outlet, i.e., Borders,
Walden and Borders.com.
7Merchandise Assortment
- Width (Breadth) refers to assortment factors
necessary to meet needs of target market and
competition - Brand of Beer Types Sizes
- Coors reg., light 6-pk, 12-pk
- Miller
- Budweiser
- Michelob
- SKUs 16
8Assortment contd.
- Support (Depth) Determination of how many units
of merchandise are needed to support expected
sales of each assortment factor (e.g. brand,
type, size, color, etc.) - Rely on customer needs, past sales trends, image
of department and store, etc.
9Why plan stock levels?
- Meet sales expectations
- Avoid out-of-stock conditions
- Guard against overstock
- Keep inventory investment at acceptable level
10Merchandise Planning Objective
- Ensure that both the customers merchandise needs
and the retailers financial requirements are
satisfied by creating an acceptable balance
between merchandise inventories and sales
11Merchandise Budgeting
- Planning Annual Sales
- Annual sales estimates
- time series
- judgmental forecasting
- Make monthly sales estimates
12Forecasting Sales
- Staples demand year-round (appliances,
hardware, etc.). Consider sales trends,
profitability, quantity discounts - Seasonal Merchandise use past knowledge, info.
from vendors, length of season, planned sales,
selling price - Style and perishable items
13How much to order?
- Lead time length of time between order
placement and receipt of goods - Importance of safety or cushion stock
protection against strikes, delays - Base or cycle stock amount sufficient to
accomodate regular sales - Lead time Safety stock Basic stock
Inventory Level
14Example
- Als Party Shop wants to maintain a 3-week supply
of domestic beer in inventory and average sales
of Miller Lite beer are 500 6-packs per week.
The order point is 1500 (500 X 3 weeks). When
inventory drops below 1500, more beer should be
ordered.
15Example contd.
- Suppose the order interval is 2 weeks. We must
consider to include stock to maintain during the
order interval and add to our order point -- in
order to determine our order ceiling. Order
ceilingOrder pointOrder interval sales. - 1500 (500 X 2) 2500
16Example contd.
- We can then determine our order quantity by
subtracting stock on hand from order ceiling. - Order Quantity Order ceiling - stock on hand
17Inventory Turnover
- Turnover _at_ retail
- Retail sales/Avg. inv. in retail
- Turnover _at_ cost
- Cost of goods sold/avg. inv. at cost
- Total Available for Sale BI Purchases
- COGSTotal available for sale - Ending
inventory - Turnover based in units
- of units sold/Avg. inv. in units
18Determining Stock-to-Sales Ratio
- Divide the turnover figure into 12 (months in
year) to determine the number of times of
merchandise needed to support the desired sales
based on turnover - Examples
- Turnover 4 Stock-to-sales 3.0
- Turnover 2.8 Stock-to-sales 4.28
- Turnover 10 Stock-to-sales 1.2
- Lower the turnover, the higher the stock-to-sales
ratio
19Calculating BOM Stock-to-Sales Ratios
- Step 1 Calculate sales-to-stock ratio
- GMROIgross margin sales-to-stock ratio
- Step 2 Convert sales-to-stock ratio to
inventory turnover - Inventory turnover sales-to-stock ratio (100
- Gross margin , expressed as decimal) - Calculate average stock-to-sales ratio
- Average stock-to-sales ratio months/inventory
turnover - Calculate monthly stock-to-sales ratios
20Stock ratios considerations
- Dont confuse stock-to-sales ratio with the
sales-to-stock ratio - Sales are the same in both ratios
- Stock in the sales-to-stock ratio is the average
inventory at cost over all days in the period - Stock in the average stock-to-sales ratio is the
average BOM inventory at retail - BOM stock-to-sales ratio is an average for all
months
21Determining Planned Purchases
- BOM stock monthly sales BOM stock-to-sales
ratio - EOM stock (BOM stock for current period is the
same as the end-of-month for the previous period) - Monthly Additions to stock Sales Reductions
EOM inventory - BOM inventory
22GMROI Sales-to-Stock
- GMROI gross margin return on inventory
investment measures how many gross margin dollars
are earned on every dollar of inventory
investment - Sales-to-stock ratio net sales/avg. inv.
- GMROI gross margin/avg. inv.
- GMROI combines the effects of profits and turnover
23Calculating Open-to-Buy for Current Period
- Calculate Projected EOM stock
- Actual BOM stock monthly additions order
amount - Planned monthly sales - planned monthly
reductions - Open-to-buy Planned EOM stock - Projected EOM
stock
24Calculating Open-to-Buy for Future Periods
- Calculate projected EOM stock
- Projected BOM stock actual order - monthly
sales - planned reductions - Open-to-buy Planned EOM stock - Projected EOM
stock
25Analyzing Merchandise Performance
- ABC Analysis
- Rank order merchandise categories (SKUs) by some
performance measure - Contribution margin
- Sales Dollars/Units
- Gross margin
- Gross margin return on investment
- Sales or gross margin per square foot
- Determine optimal stocking formulas based on
performance measures
26Analyzing Performance continued
- Sell-Through Analysis
- Comparison between actual and planned sales to
determine whether early markdowns are required or
whether more merchandise is needed to satisfy
demand - Multiple-Attribute Method
- Used to evaluate vendors using a weighted average
score for each vendor (current or proposed).