retail demand planning and forecasting

How SA’s retailers can overcome stunted growth forecasts

Author: Rod Salmon : Source: Bizcommunity

 

Retail is a fast-paced, cut-throat industry; businesses that are not meeting their customers’ needs as and when they require, can quickly find themselves sidelined, while more responsive and innovative competitors fill the gap. In South Africa, which is currently a low growth market, the above challenges are being felt acutely by retailers.

 

With additional obstacles posed by negative consumer credit growth largely as a result of a decline in credit extended on store cards, there is a risk of South African retail stocks depreciating even further. Coupled with an increasingly competitive environment, caused by new international entrants and consumers with less disposable income (and therefore less spending power), there can be little doubt that the retail trading environment will continue to be tough for the foreseeable future.

What poses a particularly interesting conundrum for me right now is the number of retail managers that believe the cycle will turn, and that growth similar to the 2003-2013 period will be achieved. Based on our research though, what we are seeing is structural – as opposed to cyclical. Change is being driven by a demographic shift that has seen the expansion of a middle class not matched by savings or productivity increases. This mismatch means there has been a rise in the level of debt to disposable income from 52% to almost 90% in the space of only a few years.

This makes it unlikely that retailers will achieve the same levels of growth as the heydays of high credit growth. However, this is not to say that there are no opportunities for savvy and innovative retailers to find a niche in the market and benefit from it. Broadly, we have identified three key ways that industry players could potentially drive the growth they are seeking.

Increase market share

This is no doubt a difficult task in a climate where established retail giants such as Stuttafords have had to close their doors, and consumer companies that rely on growth and inflation to generate earnings growth will in our view find it increasingly difficult to survive in this market. But it is attainable. It will require creativity in looking beyond the traditional retail business model, and will even require looking into products and services already within their portfolio and how they can be re-imagined to add value and increase market share.

Become more operationally efficient and streamlined

Finding ways to improve operational efficiencies is by no means a new concept, and most businesses have already examined ways to streamline business processes from the supply chain right through to customer care. The rise and adoption of digital technologies in the last few years has, without doubt, assisted in improving cost efficiencies, but implementing the right technology has wider capabilities.

It can, for instance, contribute to more seamless demand planning and forecasting to help meet customers’ ever-evolving expectations, as well as improve productivity, reduce time-to-market of new products and drive revenue gains. This makes it critical for retailers to consistently evaluate how their current strategies and technology solutions are contributing to greater efficiency.

Expand – geographically or in product offering

Linked to the ability to increase market share is expansion – and the two main ways for retailers to expand are into new product markets and into new geographical markets. Of course, each comes with its own set of pros and cons; moving into new markets comes with regulatory and policy considerations, it typically provides an effective way of driving earnings growth by capturing new customer markets and opening up more opportunities.

Only those retailers that have clear and robust expansion and efficiency strategies will be able to achieve higher than average earnings growth. The important point to take away is that retailers who proactively look for gaps in the market and aim to create solutions to fill those spaces will most likely be the ones to achieve growth.

To Save Retail, Let It Die

The store of the future will become the most powerful media channel available to a brand, offering customer experiences that are the most profitable product a retailer can sell. But to get there, retail as we know it must die.

By Doug Stevens for Business Of Fashion

In 2011, in what has now become retail folklore, Ron Johnson, one of the brains behind the Apple Store, was hired to resuscitate the American department store chain JCPenney. At the time, I was asked to write an article for Advertising Age on whether Johnson would succeed or fail at this herculean task. My feeling at the time was that he would fail – not because he didn’t understand what needed to be done and certainly not because he lacked the creativity or knowledge to do it. He would fail, I believed, because customers, shareholders and ultimately the board of JCPenney wouldn’t have the stomach for what Johnson would ultimately have to do in order to revive the ailing retailer.

What Johnson understood was that in order for the new JCPenney to be born, the old JCPenney had to die. In order to pump oxygen into an entirely new era of department store retailing, he would have to once and for all turn off the respirator that was keeping this old brand barely alive.

And while we can quibble about Johnson’s approach to change management, (even he now admits he could have been gentler and more sensitive in his approach) the end result would have been the same. He failed because JCPenney felt more comfortable clinging to the corpse of their brand than working through a messy, uncertain and turbulent resurrection.

It’s six years later and a similar malaise poisons the broader retail industry. Everyone is talking about the need for disruption, innovation and change, yet most stop well short of actually doing anything about it. Many retail brands talk about game-changing innovation but what we see are lukewarm iterations of existing concepts and old ideas. Retailers, it seems, lack the will or sense of urgency to effect significant and radical change.

Adding to the numbness is a continuous chorus of bloggers and retail pundits saying the “retail apocalypse” is overblown. They acknowledge that 8,642 retail stores will close in 2017 in North America alone, but somehow always work their way back to telling us the sky isn’t falling and we need not be overly concerned. Well, I’m here to tell you that the time for concern has passed. We’re well into “shit-yourself” territory.

They say change happens slowly and then suddenly. Here’s a glimpse of what suddenly is going to look like. My hope in sharing this is simple; that it may spark new conversations in your organization and initiate the action your business so desperately needs to take. Here we go.

E-commerce will soon drive the majority of sales.
You don’t need to multiply a small number by a big number too many times before the result is a huge number. Online retail is currently compounding globally at a rate somewhere between 12 and 35 percent, depending on where you do business. In the US, for example, even if nothing else changes, e-commerce will comprise 25 percent of total retail within 6 short years. In the UK that figure may exceed 30 percent. Perhaps most staggering of all is that within 3 years, three companies — Amazon, Alibaba and eBay — will control 40 percent of planet earth’s e-commerce. And this is just a warm-up. Within 15 years, e-commerce will overtake conventional retail sales in developed nations, as a new wave of pervasive technologies take hold.

Products will replenish themselves.
The next profound revolution in e-commerce will come as our connected homes, cars, appliances, product packaging and even the products themselves begin connecting, communicating and transacting on our behalf. The three quarters empty bag of dog food in your home will suddenly have the capability to re-order itself. Using the third-to-last diaper in the carton will trigger the order of 40 new diapers delivered to your door. The light bulb that’s going to burn out will order its own replacement, taking into account shipping times from your online provider. Sensors in your running shoes will measure tread depth and trigger a reorder when necessary. These and hundreds of other items will manage their own replenishment. All will be done with minimal intervention from consumers.

Stop thinking ‘product’ and start thinking productions.

Amazon is already offering free in-home consultations for connected home technology because they know all too well that the company that connects the home owns the consumers that live in it. Whether we opt to subscribe to Amazon, Google, Walmart or some other provider, we will choose a meta-service to manage most of our routine, regular purchases. E-commerce will no longer be something we do but rather something that just is. Within 20 years the idea of pushing a buggy through the centre aisles of a grocery store and lugging toilet tissue home will seem laughable.

Amazon will become the Sears catalogue of the future
The days of pointing and clicking at pictures on a screen will come to an end within a decade. Amazon already knows this, hence its push to develop its Alexa Voice Services platform and Echo devices. But while seemingly invincible today, Amazon, likes Sears before it, will eventually be overtaken by new platforms that completely redefine what shopping is. Technologies like Magic Leap’s mixed reality (in which Alibaba is a major investor) will open a new chapter in experiential e-commerce. We will meet with designers in the virtual world who will style and fit us with clothes that we can see and feel. Fitting will be achieved with almost perfect accuracy as zettabytes of manufacturer data feed sophisticated fitting algorithms. We will “travel” to virtual places where we can contextually and viscerally trial the products we’re looking for. We will not buy from online “stores,” as we do today, but rather from within online experiences that are exciting, entertaining and fun. If you’re a retailer struggling to keep pace with Amazon, you’re going to have a hell of a time with the company that puts them out of business.

Physical retail will no longer be a channel for buying
With the vast majority of our daily and weekly needs simply coming to us as necessary, the role and purpose of retail space will no longer be principally to sell products. Rather, these spaces will act as living, breathing physical portals into brand and product experiences. They will become places we go to learn, be inspired, see and try new things, experiment and co-create. Beyond mere consumption, we’ll go to these spaces for entertainment, education, connection and community. This is not to suggest that there will be no products for sale in these physical spaces, only that the emphasis will not be sales but rather on catalysing a relationship with the consumer that transcends the store. The way these spaces are planned, built, staffed, managed and measured will look and act nothing like the retail operations of today. My advice to retailers is to stop thinking “stores” and start thinking stories. Stop thinking “product” and start thinking productions.

There will be a retail refugee crisis.
Nearly 4.6 million Americans work in retail, making it the country’s number one employer. Indeed, in many developed countries retail represents one of the most, if not the most populous of industries. Amazon has already proven that it can build a store without cashiers. And cashiers are just the beginning. Robotic customer service staff, fully automated warehouses, bot-staffed call centres, driverless delivery trucks and even the displacement of store management by artificial intelligence are all clear and present realities. Any human being that doesn’t generate added value, either through creativity, expertise or intuition will be expendable. We can debate the morality and ethics of this endlessly but the certainty remains that retail workers will become the blacksmiths of their era.

As a retailer you need to decide now which side of this line you’re going to stand on. If it’s with the robots, start investing in the technology now. If you choose people, prepare to pay for the very best in the market. There will be no alternative between the two.

The economic model for retail will implode
If you’re fortunate enough to sell something no one else on earth sells you might dodge this bullet. If not, you better find a new way of making money. This is because the wholesale-to-retail model is coming to an inglorious end. Firstly, brands are fleeing the confines of wholesale distribution in unprecedented numbers, largely because they can and secondly because it just makes business sense to do so. Technology has advanced to the point where the ability for brands to reach consumers directly is not only possible, it’s preferable. Through vertical integration brands cannot only better manage their margins but also their brand image and customer experience.

This will put retailers in a position where the brands they call “vendors” are also competitors for the same shopper. In essence, even if they win, they lose. By selling more products they only feed the enemy’s war chest. This sets up an untenable situation that private labelling can only partially remedy. Simply, the economic model for retail will require a complete reimagining.

Some smart retail start-ups are already doing precisely this. California-based electronics retailer b8ta treats retail as data and sells consumer engagement analytics back to the brands they represent, offering insights they wouldn’t otherwise get, and giving b8ta a unique and recurring revenue stream. New York’s Story sells experiences, working with brands to curate and produce beautifully executed, in-store events and they’re paid handsomely to do so. These are the sorts of pioneers that I feel will lead an entirely new class of experiential retailers over the next decade; retailers that use their physical stores not to sell products but to sell experiences that involve products. These new experiential merchants will be intensely creative masters of retail stagecraft, and experts at executing and measuring consumer experiences.

The physical store will become the most powerful and measurable media channel available to a brand, and the customer experiences that take place there will be the most profitable product a retailer can sell.

So, it’s true that retail may not be dead. But therein lies exactly the problem. Until we let go of the old era we can never fully move forward into a bright new age. If we really want to save retail, we’ve got to let it die.

Apparel Retail: its inevitable demise in Botswana

Author : Nomsa Makgabenyane  Source : Weekend Post

The death of retail is a hot topic on the minds of business and economic thought leaders. What does this mean for our local apparel Retail scene and business environment? 

Superstars of Retail, Mr Price Group, accounted a drop in headline earnings for the first time in 16 years. In the year to April 1 2017, Mr Price reported a fall of 10.4% in earnings per share. Before our eyes we saw the 159 year old Stuttafords dissolve despite its efforts.  It’s a tough time for the Retail sector.

Unless you have been living under a rock, it should be of no mystery to you, the way shopping is being done by the urban population in Botswana is changing.  For illustrations sake, several weeks ago, I witnessed a very interesting phenomena, I saw shopping happen, but outside the store. What I witnessed was a delivery being made to a client who had purchased a garment of clothing from a “facebook vendor”. More recently a friend of mine found her dream wedding dress on well-known Ali Express, there will be no need for consumers like her to search through a plethora of retailers.

Retail has been taking place outside the conventional store for some time, however with digital platforms like Facebook, simple Online shopping and Instagram, shopping for apparel has been transformed forever. It arouses great enthusiasm to see young individuals take advantage of this to better their lives, it is a welcomed disruption. On the other hand, does this signify a bleak future for apparel Retail stores as we know them? Yes and no.

Yes because, what we are seeing is a death of a traditional channel.  The “facebook store”, for lack of a better term,  in its nature is more convenient, from the browsing and comparing,  to paying and ultimately  receiving  your desires goods,  its fluid and less strenuous, time wise and on the pocket (although further analysis is necessary to prove the latter). These entities offer free delivery either in Gaborone or in the country, an upper hand in terms of value adding processes, even some of the most popular Botswana owned retailer slack in this aspect.  A consumer browsing through a facebook store during work hours needn’t plan for a trip to a physical brick and mortar store for something he or she likes. If say consumer lives in Serowe / Palapye, the vendor being in Gaborone is not a cause for concern.

Payments are done through varying mobile platforms. The seamlessness of the shopping experience goes a long way in building greater loyalty to these enterprises. With the rise of increased connectivity and consequently a rising number of facebook users in Botswana these shopping experiences  are going to be a noticeable challenge to  conventional apparel Retailers in our economy.

The death of retail will not occur that hastily in Botswana, qualifying the ‘no’ side of things.  Africa has a good 2082 shopping centers, and in Botswana there seems to be a one popping up often.  We can explain this by highlighting a few factors, one of which is the “eating out” experience, which is an irreplaceable and sustains “mall culture”.  Needless to say as long as there is a mall we will see an apparel retailer, but not in the volumes we have always known.

A study* in 2015 indexed Botswana as number two in retail potential, I  believe there is room to question this where apparel retail is concerned. If advanced economies are anything to go by, even peering into neighboring South Africa, apparel shopping at these locations, shopping for clothes at brick and mortar stores is not here to stay. Several stores are not only downsizing but some have totally exited the South African market.

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE TWO CHANNELS

In the digital age, consumers use online stores as a reference point and more often than not know what they are looking for when they visit a store, curbing down unplanned purchases, in this case the channel remains the same.  Yet an interesting counter notion is that physical stores serve as points of reference and comparison, but actual trade occurs with various online vendors, local or international, at a later stage.

Either way, consumer behavior has been altered, and in Botswana it is the social media stores which we can use to an extent when explaining these dynamics. What then for Botswana owned apparel retailers, how do they avoid having a white sheet of paper spread out on what would have been their store front? The death of retail is slow one, but that is no reason for comfort. It’s slow but also inevitable.

To survive, retailers in Botswana should make adequate advances towards R&D for appropriate Channel Strategies, suitable to our changing market. R &D firm Seriti Insights is undertaking the generation of these strategies, the outcomes of which should be interesting. Once again these disruptions are welcome in my view, disruption to things as we know them allows for great opportunities for development and growth of new ideas. Young people behind social media stores do deserve consideration and support. It will not be instant but the apparel retail environment needs surveillance, as does the overall death of Retail.

 

By Nomsa Makgabenyane  for Weekend Post

A fair wage for global garment industry workers?

Michelle Russell for Just in Style

Western European garment industry workers in BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India , China and South Africa ) earn only half a living wage, according to new research.

The study, carried out by Surrey’s Centre for Environment and Sustainability (CES) and published in The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment , shows that while globalisation has made the Western European clothing supply chain fairer by increasing employment opportunities and income for workers in BRIC countries, their income is still insufficient to support a decent standard of living.

The research paper, ‘Investigating fairness in global supply chains: applying an extension of the living wage to the Western European clothing supply chain’ , was conducted using a Social Life Cycle Assessment (SLCA) approach, in which impacts across the whole lifecycle of the product are considered. This means that rather than focusing solely on factory workers, the researchers considered all of those involved in the garment industry supply chain – including cotton growers and miners providing metal to make machinery.

The researchers estimated how much workers would need to be paid in order to be able to afford a decent, but not luxurious life: a living wage. The study found that garment factory workers are only paid around half the living wage, and agricultural workers even less.

Also taking into account financial demands on workers – income tax and social security contributions – in addition to wages, researchers found that in real terms, workers would need to be paid, on average, an additional 35% to offset these factors.

“Despite some improvements to workers’ income and employment opportunities through globalisation over the last 20 years, this research has demonstrated that workers are still not paid a living wage, so the supply chain cannot be described as ‘fair’,” said Research Fellow Dr Simon Mair.

“The next step is to look at the potential impact on companies and consumers if BRIC workers were paid a living wage. For example, a company may choose to absorb the additional cost, or might pass the cost onto consumers. Faced with a higher priced product, consumers might choose to buy less, which could in turn have a positive impact on the environment (by reducing carbon emissions) but possibly a negative social impact (by reducing employment).”

Angela Druckman, Professor of Sustainable Consumption and Production, added: “This research has implications for all those who are concerned about social justice along clothing supply chains.”

Article Sourced from Just In Style

How Rex Trueform feels the pinch

By Marc Hasenfuss for Business Live

Operating margins were ripped to shreds at Rex Trueform — the owner of niche fashion retailing chain Queenspark — in the year to end-June.

Results released on Friday showed Rex Trueform’s operating margin at a threadbare 0.13% compared with 2% in the previous financial year.

This is well below the margins achieved by larger listed fashion retailers like TFG, Truworths and Mr Price.

Operating profit came in at just R755,000, well down on 2016’s R11.5m figure.

The effect on the bottom line was cushioned by interest received of R4.4m — earned from Rex Trueform’s cash pile, which started the financial year at R81m but ended the trading period at R58m.

Rex Trueform CEO Catherine Radowsky said that additional operating costs were incurred with the opening of a Queenspark store in Namibia.

The Queenspark division recorded an operating loss of R1.9m, compared with a R9.4m operating profit in the previous year, Radowsky said.

There was better news from the company’s property division — for which its Rex Trueform Office Park complex located in Salt River, Cape Town, is the main income-generating operation.

Radowsky said the property segment managed to generate operating profits of this segment amounted to R8m, falling from R8.5m in 2016. The drop in profit stemmed mainly from one-off maintenance costs, she said.

Rex Trueform intended to develop two more Cape Town-based properties in the medium term, she said.

Radowsky noted one of the properties was classified as a heritage site.

“This limits the development opportunities and has caused a delay in the development process,” she said.

On Friday, Rex Trueform and its holding company, African & Overseas Enterprises, announced the appointment of empowerment pioneer Marcel Golding, formerly chairman of Hosken Consolidated Investments, as chairman.

Golding is part of an investment consortium that has effectively taken control of Rex Trueform and African & Overseas Enterprises.

Article sourced from Business Live