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    Availability Vs inventory: One plan to rule them all

    A hand holding a blue pen points at a paper with colourful bar charts and a line graph, analysing business or financial data on a desk.

    = Summary: Ed Betts considers the importance of a central planning platform and AI-driven forecasting to ensure seasonal event success = 4min read

    The retail calendar year is a busy one. Whether fixed seasonal events or one-offs such as sporting occasions, the industry plays a pivotal role in setting the tone, creating the ambience and making every moment memorable. There is an expectation that stores will be stocked with an abundance of event-related products and branded merchandising to create the desired fanfare.

    Yet, for retail businesses, planning and executing such events is far from straight-forward. To differentiate themselves from the market and become the go-to destination for customers they must pull out all the stops with innovative approaches that are not just about price, but about the wider customer offer.

    Stock availability must be carefully managed to meet perceived demand and orders placed with multiple suppliers months in advance; while also simultaneously coordinating appropriate marketing activities to ensure interest and sell-through of an event’s related categories with minimal inventory left over to optimise profits. This is a difficult balancing act with financial targets on a knife edge.

    The challenge of events planning

    All too often, such planning is based on assumption and guesswork, making forecasting with any degree of accuracy incredibly problematic. While figures about the previous year’s performance might be available to some degree – and can’t always be relied on due to nuances that may have affected demand at the time – the use of legacy systems and the manual sharing of documents which is time consuming, cumbersome and unreliable, only serve to compound the problem.

    For retail businesses to be successful, better, clearer data-driven planning is needed to ensure cleaner seasonal-event entry and exit. They need a system that facilitates far closer collaboration with internal teams as well as external stakeholders to ensure that goods are delivered and promoted effectively; a system that allows greater visibility of historic and current sales data to increase their agility and be able to react quickly in real time to changes in customer purchasing habits.

    Data-driven or ‘intelligent’ merchandising enables greater tiller management of what is happening on the shop floor using data from customer baskets and trolleys, while it also removes the reliance on stifling legacy methods of operation that often involve a confusing mix of emails, calls and spreadsheets.

    Algorithmic retailing

    The digital transformation of retail is creating a growing appetite for ‘algorithmic retailing’ – or the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to create more intelligent merchandising practices, to drive automation and secure competitive advantage. Such solutions improve pricing, promotional planning and execution, media planning and collaboration with suppliers as a way to unlock improved vendor funding and enhance execution.

    Indeed, innovation can be driven by retailers or suppliers, so having a system in place that facilitates the sharing of relevant information allows constant communication and collaborative working. This enables obstacles to be overcome through a coordinated data-driven approach. Algorithmic retailing also frees up executive and staff time – critical in a situation where internal practices have become a direct hindrance to growth and market responsiveness.

    Retailers can now make use of new levels of visibility and insight previously out of reach. For example, by using AI to analyse current and historic data about particular event items, with the trading and merchandising conditions that underpinned the sales of those items, retail businesses can make accurate predictions about how pricing and promotional plans will impact future revenue and profits at both summary and granular levels, and what to do if an item over or under performs.

    Better events marketing planning

    Intelligent merchandising enables retailers to build up their plans for each event, including the creation of marketing collateral and determining appropriate promotional tactics. The system can be used to calculate the most optimal products based on customer basket analysis data, and therefore which products might perform best on a promotional flyer, or are more likely to generate the greatest buzz.

    Operations, sales and marketing teams, as well as suppliers, all need to be informed if plans change. Crucially, Retail Express’ system makes this process transparent, with all stakeholders able to see and react to alterations and amendments in real time. Critically, virtually calculating the P&L becomes easier due to the ability to consider past, present and future activity. The system enables retail businesses to go to market with a plan that has gained full stakeholder agreement before it goes live.

    Intelligent merchandising presents one version of the truth which is accessible to all stakeholders and can be utilised to plan and agree on tactics for event management. Previously, this intelligence could only be gained from implementing a plan and waiting to see its effect – essentially a process of trial and error. Now, the ability to gain such knowledge in advance is truly game-changing.

    Read our article featured in Grocery Trader.

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