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One Size Does Not Fit All. Using Size Analytics to Drive Sales Gale Weisenfeld VP, Planning / MIO Federated Department Stores April 28, 2006. Agenda. Introduction Company Overview Business Challenge Business Solution Role of Technology Implementation Critical Success Factors
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One Size Does Not Fit All Using Size Analytics to Drive Sales Gale Weisenfeld VP, Planning / MIO Federated Department Stores April 28, 2006
Agenda • Introduction • Company Overview • Business Challenge • Business Solution • Role of Technology • Implementation • Critical Success Factors • Collaboration • Change in the Supply Chain • CPFR • The Numbers Tell The Story • Business Example • Lessons Learned • Future Plans
About Federated Department Stores • One of the nation’s leading department store retailers • Acquisition of May Company will create 800+ store operation with projected retail sales in excess of $27 billion in 48 states, Guam, & Puerto Rico • Operates under the names of Macy’s, Bloomingdale’s, Macys.com, Bloomingdale’s By Mail • Support operation of Macy’s Merchandising Group is responsible for all aspects of Federated Private Label & management of FDS merchandising systems
Business Challenge Accelerate Federated Department Stores comp-store sales growth and increase the company’s profitability levels
Why Customers Don’t Buy • Have you ever gone shopping and found the perfect blouse / sweater / pants / shoes only to be told ‘sorry, we don’t have your size’ • This is a missed sales opportunity of the worst kind when the customer is in our stores, wants to make a purchase, and can’t because we don’t have her size • While alternate product offerings at the style or color level might be substituted to complete a sale, this is seldom the case for size stockouts
Business Solution Federated’s Size Selling Initiative was launched in 2002 to develop and implement solutions that resolve the issue of size stockouts • Drive regular price sales • Reduce markdowns • Improve margins • Create a better shopping experience
Using Technology to Analyze Sales Phase 1: Best Single Prepack • Size Profiling Application (SPA) developed by Macy’s Merchandising Group & Federated Systems Group • Adjust Fashion Prepacks to better match customer demand • Track rate of sale on items to the size level
Size Measurement Calculations Improve ‘match rate’ between orders & sales • Analyze % of sales by size • Analyze % of stock by size • Objective: Determine how did we sell the product when it first came in to our stores BEFORE we began to run out of sizes (Fresh Sales)
Variance = Stock % - Sales % Match Rate = 100% - Absolute Value of the Variance Example: 100% - 20% = 80% Match Rate Calculating Match Rates
Applying Match Rates to Fashion Prepacks Fashion Prepack quantity = 12 units
Using Technology to Analyze Sales Phase 2: Multi-Prepack • Create location level clusters based on historical sales patterns • Every store doesn’t need ‘the same 12 pack’ but how many prepacks is the ‘right number’ • Every store isn’t an equal contributor to sales • Consider sales contribution by door cluster, volume of program, & overall cost to supply chain when determining optimum number of prepacks
Why 12? • Who was it that said 12 was the right number anyway? • 12 is an even number • As children, we learn to count by two’s • 12 hangars fits on a straight arm of a 4-way • ‘The box holds 12 pieces’ • Sometimes a slightly smaller (10 or 11) or slightly larger (13 or 14) prepack quantity can yield a significantly better match rate
Using Technology to Analyze Sales Phase 3: ROI – Return on Investment Reporting • Questions we were asking ourselves • Did we make the right changes? • Do we have additional opportunities? • Are we making a difference? • Evaluate sales performance against new prepacks • Determine if further prepack refinement is necessary
Using Technology to Analyze Sales • ROI Reporting includes WAS / IS comparison to gauge ongoing impact of pack changes to key business metrics: • Regular Price Sales & Sell Thru by Size • Average Unit Retail by Size • Stockout at X % by Size • Markdowns by Size • By Location results are also available
System Development & Implementation • Phase 1: Best Single Prepack (S’02) • Phase 2: Multi Prepack w/Location Clustering (S ’03) • Phase 3: ROI Reporting (S’04) • Application currently deployed to approximately 100 users across all Federated divisions
Critical Success Factors • Incorporation of size analysis into the daily business process • Senior Sponsor (President, MMG) • Size analysis is not a special one-time project • Timing, coordination with market schedule • Increased workload before market meetings • Change Management culture change with significant impact to business process • Clear definition of roles / responsibilities
Critical Success Factors • Collaboration • After gaining experience with Private Label and having ‘wins’ to talk about, Federated is actively analyzing size selling for branded vendors and sharing our findings with our vendors • Buying and allocating the right sizes is only the beginning of the process • A genuine partnership between retailer and supplier is critical in order to maximize sales by size
Collaboration • Introducing Change to the Supply Chain • Vendors need to evaluate their ability to implement change in the supply chain to support multi-prepack offerings • Resistance & Obstacles to Change • ‘This is hard’ • ‘This is expensive’ • ‘I’m not the right person to make this happen’ • ‘Can my company execute this accurately?’
Collaboration • Achieving Change in the Supply Chain • Vendors are migrating to a multi-prepack business model • Vendors offering multi-prepacks have made modifications to reflect different / additional packs • If there is only a ‘national pack’ (best single prepack), FDS is defining the pack • Mutual Benefits • Our vendors will share in the benefits of the work being done with size analytics via increased regular price sales and improved margins
CPFRCollaboration-Planning-Forecasting-Replenishment CPFR diagrams & slides are courtesy of Russ Brown, Russell Corporation Fall 2005 AAFA ISC Presentation
CPFR encompasses review and understanding of strategies & data on both sides of the partnership
The forecast starts it all.Is size analytics part of this process?
CPFR - - Manage the exceptions • Identify and resolve exceptions to the forecasts • Orders • Receipts • Fill rates • Sales
What have we learned? • Our work with size analytics is ongoing • Customers’ sizes are ever-changing • Size Specs matter • When is a large not a large? • Know your fit model • Things to consider • Vendor • Lifestyle • Price Point • Personality of the product • It’s not just about the numbers • Collaboration is key
Current Sizing Priorities • Collaboration with our market vendors • Now more than ever, as Macy’s becomes a national department store, we need ‘right product,right place, right time, AND right size’ • The lead time to implement change in the supply chain is long, frequently 9-12 months. We need to work together to implement change faster. • Integration of size analytics into Federated merchandising systems in order to gain workload efficiencies • Ordering • Allocation
Discussion / Questions Gale Weisenfeld VP, Planning / MIO Federated Department Stores Email: gale.weisenfeld@macys.com