Purposeful investment
Some retailers have more effectively managed trade-offs to achieve above-average results in both margin and cash management. However, with increases in supply chain costs and consumers wanting more choices than ever, keeping this advantage will be an ongoing challenge: one that will require innovation and investment.
Technology is at the heart of most retailer investment strategies, with store capital being redirected to accelerate the shift of omnichannel mix and flexibility for consumer choice and experience. But a key challenge will be how companies manage the change in strategy and determine that deployed capital will deliver upon the objectives and estimated returns. According to the EY-Parthenon 2022 Digital Investment Index, 71% of companies believe digital initiatives to be critical to the organization’s overall success in the next two years, particularly in enhanced customer experience, and expanded distribution and channel delivery.
Despite the need, not all investments are driving financial results. Only 28% of companies revealed a significant increase in financial returns (more than 5% ROI) in 2021 as a result of digital investment. This is, however, expected to increase in 2022 to 63%, driven by a focus on operational transformation. Interestingly, 60% of the planned investments result from canceling other internal initiatives to free up cash, suggesting trade-offs need to be made to redeploy capital.⁵
There are five retail performance improvement strategies that can help retailers capture untapped value and lay the foundation for long-term growth:
- Forecasting and demand sensing – Enhancing demand-planning tools with the data, functionality to integrate a greater array of demand signals, local consumer behaviors and external data sources, and artificial intelligence can provide more accurate scenario results. Inventory can be more effectively allocated within the distribution network. Implementing advanced forecasting technologies in retail could typically result in a 13%–16% reduction in store inventory, 18% reduction in out-of-stock situations and triple orders gaining momentum.⁶
- Real-time inventory analytics – Integrating front-end POS systems with inventory positions and replenishment functions, increasing internal and external indicators collected from across the value chain (including returns), and leveraging advanced analytics capabilities will improve agile decision-making. Incorporating predictive analytics in inventory management could result in inventory cost reduction of 25%–30% and boost sales by 11%–20%.⁷
- Expanding network infrastructure – Investing and partnering to expand network options and flexibility can accelerate product flow to customers, whether from the source or in the last mile. This allows for more purchase pickup options and effectively managing return flow. Given the rise in online shopping, retailers are investing in setting up micro-fulfillment centers that could lead to significant reduction in order fulfillment and real estate costs.
- Better supplier and vendor management – Enhancing supplier contractual arrangements will help to better align investments, whether in payment terms, discounting strategies or allowances tied to results. Retailers could leverage technology to centralize their vendor management, which could result in 25%–30% procurement cost savings on top of cash benefits.⁸
- Funding gap – Developing vendor strategies that incorporate the funding cost of inventory and enable flexible financing solutions will help to better balance supplier and retailer cash priorities. Funding gap metrics can be established by vendor, product family or even SKU. This will enable further breakdown of gross product return on investment to confirm that buyers are considering cash investment in purchasing decisions.
These priorities are not usually mutually exclusive, and the best performers will be those that can integrate these strategies.
Retailers may need to find the right balance when managing working capital
Leading companies can reimagine how they manage working capital. Cost and cash are not mutually exclusive, as many retailers are outperforming their peers in both metrics. Retailers also cannot fully rely on external funding to support their key initiatives. Long-term debt has increased 92% ($285b) between fiscal years 2018–21,⁹ and indications point to interest rates continuing to rise through the end of 2023 and beyond. Forty-six percent of retailers highlighted that access to capital to fund digital initiatives will be a challenge in the next two years.¹⁰ Working capital improvements can be a valuable source of self-funding for initiatives. And with a potential cash release of up to $225b across the sector, there is a lot of trapped cash that can fund transformations.
Beyond recognizing the need to improve working capital performance, proper execution is often the “Achilles’ heel” to unlock the cash benefits. For retailers that have traditionally been laser-focused on growth and margins, this may require a mindset change to take more deliberate steps to integrate a cash-focused culture into decision-making. This includes alignment across merchandising, planning and the supply chain; increased visibility to understand working capital balances and their consumption drivers; and challenging business leaders to justify above-budget investments. Applying a zero-based budgeting approach to working capital investment can help deliver above-average returns.