Sell
through (or sell-thru) is
a very useful metric for
vendors to use in evaluating
item performance because
it provides a composite measure
of sales and inventory. But
like many business measures
there is more than one method
of calculating sell through.
The most
common calculation is: Sell
Thru % = Units Sold / (Units
on-Hand + Units Sold). Sell
thru is typically evaluated
on a daily basis for fast
moving products or weekly
for slower moving or replenishment
based products. A higher value
is better indicating your
sales velocity is good and
your inventory is appropriately
forecasted. If sell thru is
low this indicates either
poor sales or too much inventory.
In most cases sell-thru for
an item is compared in recent
periods like current week
and last week, as well as
in aggregate across several
months or even a year.
When evaluating
sell-through it is also useful
to group together products
which have been selling for
a similar period of time
and/or which are sold into
the similar store types.
For example comparing sell-thru
for a product with 5 weeks
of selling activity against
a product with 20 weeks of
selling activity most likely
will not produce a useful
comparison. In the same way
comparing sell-thru for a
product in a group of stores
in a highly affluent area
is not likely to compare
favorably to a group of stores
with a low income level.
Most retail
buyers have a set sell-through
percentage they use to judge
vendors based on product category
or department. It is important
for vendors to discuss the
sell-thru expectations with
the buyer in order to align
with those objectives.
For more
information spend a few minutes
looking at our sample merchandising
reports here
>
return to Blog home |