We live in an age of immediacy. Customer expectations are difficult to meet, and customer loyalty is highly fragile. If you do not have the right product on the right shelf at the right time, you give your customer the right to try elsewhere.
To combat this, retailers should ensure that their product availability is maintained to the highest standard, not only to satisfy the challenge of the physical store customer, but to ensure maximum satisfaction for their online customer too.
This is no small challenge, especially when you layer other operational considerations into an increasingly complex ecosystem. Supply chains, store processes, labor, technology, and domestic economies all affect your store operations.
It is essential to understand that how to deliver on-shelf availability (OSA) is a question with several answers. Retailers will most likely use a mixture of internal and external solutions to measure and improve OSA, for their business.
In this blog, we will evaluate the potential choices that a retailer can make when evaluating an OSA solution, looking to provide you with all the information you need to make an informed decision for your business. Each solution assessment will address the strengths, weaknesses, capital investment, costs, and return on investment (ROI).
As a disclaimer, we make some assumptions that you already understand which metrics you are looking to track, but if not, there is a great blog here that will help you to define these.
TLDR: this blog goes into a lot of detail, but we also have a useful summary that you can download and share internally.
Download here
We will start by reviewing the traditional, internal measures that retailers have adopted to address the OSA challenge.
This approach uses in-store teams to provide a simple yet manual solution. Retailers will often deploy their associates to manually check and count store out of stocks, providing you with information on what is and is not available.
Pros:
Cons:
Data accuracy: Moderate
Capital investment required: Yes
Costs: $$$$
ROI: 2X
First and foremost, store colleagues are responsible for accurately maintaining inventory based values. They take on-hand data, adjusted by deliveries and sales through the checkout, to assess what is in and out of stock.
Pros:
Cons:
Data accuracy: Low
Capital investment required: Yes
Costs: $$$
ROI: 3X
A nil pick is the outcome of an online customer not receiving an item they ordered. Retailers leverage this data to determine their OSA, with the assumption that if an item is nil picked, then it must not be available to purchase.
Pros:
Cons:
Data accuracy: Moderate
Capital investment required: None
Costs: $ - $$$ (the increased cost comes from the investment in an inventory management system)
ROI: Unknown, as it is not a standard methodology
Internal solutions, while functional, typically require high capital expenditure and carry data quality risks. Therefore, retailers have begun to explore specialized, external solutions to tackle the OSA challenge.
Cameras are ceiling or shelf-edge mounted to provide a real-time view of product availability. They are typically accompanied by computer vision software that interprets the images, providing actionable insights to in-store associates.
Pros:
Cons:
Data accuracy: Very High
Capital investment required: Yes
Costs: $$$$
ROI: 5X
These solutions provide a robot that patrols the shop floor scanning the shelves as they go. Typically, they are combined with a software solution that provides data and insights to a store team and allows actions to be taken manually and automatically.
Pros:
Cons:
Data accuracy: Moderate
Capital investment required: Yes
Costs: $$$$$
ROI: 2.5X
SaaS solutions will utilize readily available retailer data, processed through proprietary algorithms, to detect and alert on real-time out-of-stocks. They are typically agile and can be tailored to the client’s needs, delivered as standalone apps, or integrated into a retailer’s existing system.
Pros:
Cons:
Data accuracy: Very high
Capital investment required: None
Costs: $$
ROI: >30X
The options available are varied, both in capability and investment. They are also not binary, meaning that retailers will typically leverage several of these solutions simultaneously within their estate.
Ultimately, it comes down to your business position and budget. Still, with rising inflation, online and omnichannel fulfillment, and new customer expectations, existing razor-thin margins will come under increasing pressure.
As a result, CapEx budgets will be scrutinized, so we predict that retailers will need to look to technology and insights to adapt and evolve, with internal solutions becoming support mechanisms instead of standalone solutions.
Wherever your business lands, we recommend you consider the following:
As a business, we process 10% of the world’s grocery sales data every day. We support some of the world’s largest retailers and CPG brands to access the insights they need from their existing data at an unparalleled scale. We provide an end-to-end solution that can be rolled out across your entire estate, tackling waste, availability, online, and more. It integrates with multiple data sources and can ingest camera and robotics data with ease. Most importantly, at a time when budgets are under scrutiny, our track record of transformation means we can deliver >30X ROI with a modest investment.
We would be happy to speak with you and explain how our solution works; equally, if you are facing some of the challenges that have been mentioned above, we would be happy to discuss these further.