Pruning for Profit
In my experience the most fruitful first step to take in developing an inventory strategy is to remove non-value added SKUs; SKUs that are more trouble than they are worth. With those SKUs removed, the same or less inventory is much more profitably allocated to the remaining SKUs. Forecasting becomes more accurate because the same forecasting resources are focused on fewer, more forecastable SKUs. Fill rate and market share increase as a result.
The forecast accuracy for a SKU you don’t have is perfect. The leadtime for a SKU you don’t have is 0. The inventory investment in a SKU you don’t have is $0. The cube occupied by an SKU you don’t have is 0. The length of the pick line for a SKU you don’t have is 0. The planning time required for a SKU you don’t have is 0.
According to Webster, pruning means “to reduce especially by eliminating superfluous matter, to remove as superfluous, to cut off or cut back parts of for better shape or more fruitful growth, to cut away what is unwanted or superfluous.” Pruning focuses available resources on the healthiest limbs and branches in order to maximize the quantity and the quality of the fruit.
One of the best examples of the profitability of pruning comes from an unexpected source… We have a franchise of our business in Japan through a joint venture with a division of Mitsubishi. I travel there once or twice a year to teach a series of seminars, consult with clients, and check up on the business. During one of my first trips, my Japanese partner promised to take me to one of the best places to eat in Tokyo – the basement of a department store near our Tokyo office. I didn’t understand until I got to the produce section. He showed me some of the most beautiful fruit and vegetables I have ever seen. They were also the most expensive I have ever seen. A small bunch of grapes was $14.00. One cantaloupe was $120.00. A single strawberry was $5.00. Three peaches were $9.00. I asked my partner why the fruit was so expensive. He explained that when the fruit is just budding on a plant, the farmers identify the most promising 10% and prune the other 90%. The full resources of the plant are then focused on the best 10% of the fruit.
You can read the rest of the excerpt on Supply Chain Management Review.