Friday, September 4, 2009

HANDLING SCHEMES - I

Handling schemes

Sujith called Ramesh in his cabin and informed him that as sales were very low in his department he wants to put up some good schemes for the weekend. He wanted to put up two schemes-
Avail 25% off on all tops in the ladies wear,
Buy 2 trousers and avail 50% off on the third. It had given tremendous response last year.
During the weekend as usual there were lot of customers on the flow and everybody was busy purchasing. Sujith noticed that most of the customers were not aware of the offer being run in his store. Also the billing process was slow at the cash counters as most of the customers were verifying with the cashiers if there was any offer on the specific product purchased by them.
At the customer service desk he noticed that some customers were complaining that they were billed wrong on the products they purchased and they wanted a refund. On attending to one of the customer the staff at the CSD noticed that some schemes that was available on the ladies products were not updated in the system, even though signages were placed on these products informing about the scheme.
Sujith also noticed Ramesh running to and fro from the cash desk to the IT room along with some merchandise. He also noticed that some customers were also shouting at him.

What was the major problem in Sujith’s store and what was the reason for the same. What should have Ramesh done to avoid this?

Scheme Preparation
In retail stores to satisfy customers as well as to improve sales and liquidate stocks exciting schemes and offers are often put up in the stores. To put up the right scheme on the right product at the right time is in itself a skill which the retailer or the store in-charge needs to have.
The store in-charge needs to have a thorough understanding of the products in terms of sale, age of the stock that is the period between the time it has hit the store till date, stock-in-hand, performance of the stock related to profitability, the best sellers and the slow sellers, customer profile, and market trend.

To make it simpler let us take take an example of a departmental store dealing with apparels. In the mens formal section there exists 5 lines of shirts which have been received in the store at various intervals. Assume that the cost price of the shirts is Rs.300/- and selling price of the all the shirts are 750/-.The category has informed to maintain a 60% margin on all the lines. The sales performance of the shirts also varies. Now two more new lines of shirts have reached the warehouse and need to be accommodated in the formal section. Hence to create space for these two new lines the department manager needs to come up with a good scheme so as clear the existing stocks and create space for the new stocks.

Below chart shows the data of the stock-in-hand of the five lines of shirts

SHIRT 1 2 3 4 5 New New
Line 1 Line 2
Stock-in-hand 575 425 567 250 565 750 750

Arrival Date Nov- 07 Dec- 07 Nov- 07 Jan- 08 Jan- 08 in-transit in-transit

Sales qty. till 175 325 183 500 185 NA NA
Mar-08

MRP 750/- 750/- 750/- 750/- 750/-

From the above data it is clear shirt 1 was a slow seller with lot of dead stock and also shirt 3. Shirt 4 is the best seller. To introduce the two new lines schemes have to be put on shirts 1, 2 and 3 with maximum offers on shirts 1 and 3.

Let us consider shirt 1
Total no. of shirts ordered is 750
Cost price = 300/-
MRP= 750/-
Profit Margin= 150%
Margin to be maintained= 60% i.e. can relax the discount maximum to 480/-
No. of pieces sold= 175

This means the shirts can be sold under two conditions:
1. 125 more shirts need to be sold for break even if sold at maintained MRP of 750/- and open to maximum schemes on the balance 450 shirts.
· For ex: Avail 50% off or 60% off and so on. Can also use a scheme which will benefit the sale of other lines.
· For ex: To promote the sales of shirt 5 which is a new entrant compared to the rest of the stocks an offer can be put where one can avail shirt 1 for free. This will help clear the dead stock, increase the sale of the new entrant as well as make space for the new lines.


2. Sell the rest of the shirts (575pcs.) at 480/- (35% off) maximum and still make a profit.
· Shirts 1 and 3 can also be sold as “Buy 2 for 999/-” and clear maximum stocks and also maintain the required margin.

While putting such offers care should be taken to maintain the margins as expected by the category team, to achieve top line and bottom line.

To make it a success the employees within the store need to plan and prepare well in advance so as no goof up takes place during the schemes being operational within stores.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

OR--
The retailer could change the selling environment and the sales plan. Create a selling environment that projects to the customer an everyday low selling price on all shirts, well below the competition. Then the retailer would see accelerated item sales, hence a quicker turn. But at the same time the retailer would experience a lower sales margin of course. But the retailers sales volume would slowly increase based on word of mouth or advertising that he had the lowest prices.
(It is also possible to leverage the manufacturer for coop monies that assist the retailer in paying for additional adverstising.) The buyers of the merchandise would have to buy many more shirts, giving them leverage to obtain reduced costs based on the increased sales units. This would lead to a margin that would slowly rebound from the initial promotion, but would continue to increase even more as sales build based on the increased store traffic generated by the concept of having the lowest everyday price. What do you think--change it up and go for more sales and increased volume or stay with tht status quo and lose customers to competition?