Space Allocation REPORT
Space Allocation REPORT
Space Allocation REPORT
Retail Management
Contributing Members
Name
Avinash Murmu Amrit V Lakra Swapnil P Barjo Kunal Hansda Maxwell P Hembrom Arpit R Arthur
Roll No.
11 13 15 25 31 59
Retail Management
Table of Contents
Introduction to Topic .......................................................................................................... 3 What is Retail Space Allocation? ........................................................................................ 3 Importance of Retail Space Allocation ............................................................................... 4 Objectives in Retail space allocation ................................................................................... 4 Integrated retail space ......................................................................................................... 5 Matrix to understand retail space allocation strategy ........................................................ 5 Retail space allocation process............................................................................................ 6 Stage 1: Measuring retail space ....................................................................................... 6 Stage 2: Dividing the space into selling areas ................................................................. 6 Stage 3: Determine the layout ......................................................................................... 7 Stage 4: Determining the space allocation of the product lines ..................................... 7 Measuring retail space efficiency ........................................................................................ 7 Approaches to allocating space with respect to sales ......................................................... 8 Historical sales data......................................................................................................... 8
Advantages ..........................................................................................................................................8 Disadvantages .....................................................................................................................................8
Challenges of space planning and allocation ...................................................................... 9 Retail space allocation systems ......................................................................................... 10 Application of IT to Retail space allocation ....................................................................... 11
Retail Management
Introduction to Topic
According to recent study conducted by BOOZ and CO. as leading global management company firm The shelf may well be the most precious real estate in the consumer-retail value chain: In some categories, as much as 80 percent of all purchase decisions are made at the point of sale. According to them the shelf is the point where the consumer meets the retailer, the brand, and the product. In a retail format the crucial purchasing decision is taken at the point of retail contact. In the retail format where the consumers have the opportunities to browse the product and display of products on the shelf is crucial to help the consumer decide what to buy from the many alternative brands and complementary products. So display of product is of utmost importance. It is crucial for retailer to manage this product display space, as he has limited space and many products. Allocation of right amount of space to right product or right product category can help the retailer optimize his profits from sales
Retail Management
Retail Management
Retail Management
Retail Management
Retail Management
Market share
In this case the sales figures relate to the sales of that particular product in all retailers in the market. This approach is sometimes referred to as the level run down principle, and it assumes that individual products sell at the same rate in all retail outlets Advantages Easy to access (from published market reports) High demand products will be well supported, which is likely to appeal to the mass consumer Provides some indication of space allocation that is appropriate for the products that are new to a given retailer, although not new to market. Disadvantages New r emerging products and categories will not be given the space allocation that their potential could warrant
Retail Management
The product selection may appear mundane, or non-specialist, as it reflects the mass market rather than being tailored to individual store/outlet catchment profile Local preferences are not catered for It may be inappropriate to shrink the space of a declining category faster than sales would indicate to prevent the product selection looking outdated
Projected sales
Advantages Projected sales are likely to be based on historical sales as far as possible, and will therefore reflect individual outlet characteristics Incorporate (estimated) sales figures for new products and categories Historical figures may have been affected by stock control r quality problems, which can be accounted for in the projected sales figure Disadvantages Actual sales may not meet projected sales, resulting in space being devoted to slow sellers while the faster selling products are underrepresented
Retail Management
Hot Spot Analysis: Hot Spots are areas where the sales of merchandise are the highest in terms of volume... Similarly there are warm spots and cold spots in a retail store, where the sales of merchandise in terms of volume are low. An analysis of these hot spots, warm spots and cold spots are done periodically and steps taken to convert cold spots to warm spots to hot spots while retaining the best sales and turnover of the hot spots. Such audits reveal non-treaded space, where there is no customer traffic, and less treaded space which has low traffic. The possible reasons for these are analyzed and bottlenecks are identified and removed to ensure that there are no non-treaded and black whole areas. The bottlenecks can be with reference to the assortment, price of the product etc. Efficiency of Selling Space to Non-Selling Space: The utilization of selling and s=non-selling space - back area, facilities area etc. - are periodically monitored for their efficiency in deliveries. A good retailer always aims to optimize selling space to improve the bottom line while taking care not to compromise on the efficiency of deliveries of the non-selling space.
Retail Management
Ease of use: Space administrators can easily use our software enabling them to configure the system as well as to interpret, modify and save the solutions produced. A file set containing the required database information for the optimization problem must be loaded into the system. This file set splits the database into three groups: resources, rooms and constraints. Resources is the list of all resources to be considered in the optimization problem together with appropriate information such as name, level, owner, group, quantity, share, priority, space requirement and use. Rooms contains the available rooms to be used in the allocation problem together with the required data for each particular room such as label, size, resource, building, floor, adjacent rooms, owner, type and use. Constraints list all standard and problem specific constraints to be used in the optimization process. The specification and modification of constraints can be controlled using a specially designed window through which the user is able to define label, constraint, subject, target, type, weighting and priority for each constraint.
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Retail Management
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