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Seasonal Planning
End-of-Season Planning Even in the rush and crush of the season, it's essential to do the end-of-season planning necessary not just to maximize sales but also to protect margins and cash flow. By Ted Hurlbut Hurlbut & Associates Let the craziness begin! If you're a small retailer, Thanksgiving represents the starting line of a one month sprint to the finish of the holiday selling season. This is make or break time. 'Tis the season to Ring the Register and Fill the Till! But in the exhausting dash to the end, it's important to keep your sights not just on sales but also on profit margins and cash flow. December is also the time to focus on managing your seasonal markdowns. This includes identifying items and categories that will need to be marked down, quantifying your potential markdown exposure and scheduling your markdowns by item and category to minimize their financial impact. This is the time to take early markdowns on those seasonal items and/or categories with heavier than anticipated inventory levels. Taking action now rather than later accomplishes several important goals. First, taking these markdowns now will bring heavy inventories into line now when customer traffic is at its heaviest and smaller discounts are necessary than in January and February, when traffic is lighter and customers expect deeper markdowns, thus protecting margins. Second, taking these markdowns now will help to clear floor space that can be used during the last few weeks of the selling season to provide greater focus on the bestselling items. Third, by bringing December ending inventories into line now, the overall volume of inventory requiring markdowns in January and February is lessened, thus preventing deeper than planned markdowns during those months, not just on the unplanned additional inventories but also on the inventory planned to sell during January and February. The critical point to keep in mind is that when traffic is at its heaviest, as it is in December, smaller markdowns will be required to induce customers to buy than in January and February. Deferring all of your markdowns into those months may allow you to focus your energies on (full priced) sales, but could end up resulting in much heavier, and costlier markdowns later. In those instances, the cash in hand now is greater than the potential cash in hand later. Here is a step by step approach you can take now to minimize your markdowns, and maximize your cash flow:
At this time of year, it may seem as though no matter how fast you run it's still not fast enough. There's not enough time to think about tomorrow much less next month. But even in the rush and crush of the season, it's essential to do the end-of-season planning necessary not just to maximize sales but also to protect margins and cash flow. Having a clear understanding of what to mark down, when to mark it down and how much to mark it down is critical to the success of any small retailer at this time of year.
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