Placing Your Bets - Managing
Pre-Season Commit Percentages
Managing your pre-season
commit percentages is one of the keys to having a profitable
season
Originally
published by
By Ted Hurlbut
Hurlbut & Associates
With the Fourth of July now
gone by, and the dog days of summer settling in, the
attention of many small retailers turns to clearing out
their remaining spring and summer merchandise, and
finalizing initial shipments of back-to school and early
fall merchandise. While business may be slowing down at the
cash register, it's a busy time behind the scenes
transitioning from one selling season into the next.
It's also a very appropriate
time to review your fall sales plans and your pre-season
commit percentages. Developing your pre-season commit
percentages goes hand in hand with developing an accurate
sales plan. One without the other is a job only half done.
Pre-season commit
percentages??? A pre-season commit percentage is the percentage of the
season's sales plan that you have already committed to
before the season begins. It's the bets you've already
placed before the season has even opened up.
Every seasonal retailer has
to place these bets. Based on the prior year results, and
any new items or trends in the market since then, a seasonal
retailer has to commit to enough fresh merchandise to set
displays and cover early sales, sales which are a critical
early indicator of the season to come. Similarly, a retailer
frequently has to commit up front to merchandise scheduled
for delivery later in the season to assure they'll have core
stocks of key items and categories at that critical time.
On the other hand, the
greater the pre-season commit percentage the greater the
risk associated with those commitments. The best way to
think of this is in terms of the calendar. The higher the
pre-season commit percentage, the further out into the
selling season those commitments will cover, before any
sales have been made to indicate which way the season will
go. Will I run an increase or a decrease? Will the styles or
colors I've bought be the hot sellers? The further out the
commitments go the greater the risk that overall sales
volume may not be as high as planned, or that the fashion
trend may develop in a different direction than anticipated.
The risk is not just markdown
risk, although unwise pre-season commitments can easily lead
to markdowns that will quickly torpedo the profitability of
any season. It's also obsolescence risk, damage risk and
packaway risk. And its cash flow risk. As you go through a
season, your cash flow plans assume your sales will generate
enough cash to pay the bills as they come due. Too much
inventory brought in too soon runs the risk of payables
coming due without the cash to pay for it, as well as tying
up cash needed for critical purchases later in the season.
There's no hard and fast rule
for evaluating pre-season commit percentages, except to say
that 0% is almost always too low and 100% is to be avoided
unless absolutely necessary. Appropriate pre-season commit
percentages are unique to each retailer, their product
lines, merchandising strategy and vendor structure. That
said, here are a few thoughts to help you evaluate your
pre-season commit percentages:
When calculating your
pre-season commit percentage, be sure to include your
packaways from the prior year. Packaways represent the
very first of your purchases for the upcoming season
(not to mention the very last, unnecessary as it turned
out, purchases from the prior year, but that's a column
for another day?). Be sure to carefully review your
packaways. If they are at all dated, or they're the
least bit shopworn, plan on taking the necessary
markdowns early in the season to free up those inventory
dollars for additional purchases of your better sellers
and hotter items as you get deeper into the season.
Different categories of
merchandise by their nature are going to require higher
pre-season commit percentages than other categories.
Take a category like artificial Christmas trees. The
selling season is relatively short with little
opportunity to reorder hot sellers. In fact, this
market, made up entirely of imports, requires close to a
100% pre-season commit percentage, with those
commitments frequently due by February, a full nine
months before the selling season really kicks in.
Contrast that with a category like sweaters, which has a
much longer season and much greater opportunity for
in-season re-ordering. A pre-season commit percentage
between 50% and 75% would be more appropriate for a
category like this.
The key to minimizing
risk is to place commitments and schedule deliveries as
close as possible to the anticipated time of sale at
retail. If you can defer some commitments until you get
into the season, rather than placing those bets before
the season begins, the more knowledge you'll have on how
the season is developing, both in terms of sales volume
and fashion trends. You'll have a better understanding
of the marketplace as well, which vendor has the
merchandise you need, and if there are any deals
available.
If you allow it, your
vendors will impose purchase terms and minimum
quantities, which will require you to commit to all of
your seasonal needs upfront, and with it the inventory
risk. Don't allow it! If you're a buyer with dollars to
spend you have the leverage to negotiate purchase terms
that work for you. You probably won't get everything you
ask for, but that's more than if you don't ask.
Otherwise, you'll quickly find that you're looking at
100% pre-season commit percentages across the board, and
all of the inventory risk on your shoulders.
Don't let a deal tempt
you into making a commitment sooner than you really need
to. A 5.0% early-commit off-invoice discount may look
great, for example, but you may give those savings right
back in markdowns and inventory financing costs if the
quantity you have to commit to is much greater than what
you would have otherwise. An off-invoice discount in
exchange for an earlier commitment and a larger order is
the most common way a vendor will attempt to shift
inventory risk onto you. If the deal seems too good to
be true, it probably is.
At their most detailed,
pre-season commit percentages need to be evaluated not
just for the season as a whole but by delivery periods
as well. To illustrate, let's break the fall selling
season down into three delivery periods, Back-to-School,
September/October and Holiday. A pre-season commit
percentage of 66% might break out into 90% for
Back-to-School, 75% for September/October and 40% for
Holiday. Again, the key is to place commitments and
schedule deliveries as close as possible to the actual
point of retail sale.
The bottom line is that the
greater the pre-season commit percentage the greater the
inventory risk associated with those commitments.
Understanding the nature of this risk, and managing your
pre-season commit percentages accordingly is one of the keys
to having a successful season, in terms of sales, gross
profits and cash flow.