IT Spending Priorities
When the economy is way down, catalog/Internet companies may
be tempted to suspend all IT investments until business picks up again.
But some IT investments are more critical than others – so you should focus on prioritizing
your technical spending rather than suspending it altogether. Because most IT
projects take months or years to fully implement, you don’t want to stop a
project that your company will profit from in the not-too-distant future.
Here’s a quick guide to help you prioritize your tech spend:
Focus on features/functions to increase
sales
Naturally your top priority should be any projects that generate an increase in
sales. The most likely candidates are in e-commerce, marketing, merchandising
or e-mail marketing.
I’ve seen clients giving the highest priority to marketing and merchandising,
in terms of additional analysis tools and programming of special requests to
assist in analysis. Several of our clients are increasing their traditional promotional
post-mortem analysis.
Two of our multichannel retail clients are implementing analysis of net
contribution to profit, to identify (at the classification level) how to expand
or contract the number of items in each category. This analysis fully loads
fulfillment and overhead costs rather than stopping at square-inch
profitability.
Another multichannel client with 35 stores has been collecting customer
purchase by category and address information, and they are now in a position to
mail circulars to retail customers. (Many retailers still lack the ability to
better promote in-store sales and events through such customer marketing.)
Manage your biggest asset
Any IT spending that improves managing inventory—the largest balance sheet
asset in most companies—is bound to pay off. Mistakes made here have a direct
affect on customer sales and satisfaction, with increased cost of back orders,
lost sales and the liquidation of overstocks sharply reducing profitability.
To determine what changes and systems could help to improve inventory
performance, do an assessment of your inventory strategies including planning,
forecasting, purchasing, end of season analysis and liquidation.
A standalone internal inventory system and exception reporting can increase
merchandise turnover, reduce back orders, improve initial customer order fill
rates and allow you to take action on overstock more quickly. This type of
system may have a 12- to 18-month ROI.
Use a WMS to tame complex operations
Picking, packing and shipping processes have to be efficient for both small
orders in e-commerce/catalog and larger store replenishment and wholesale
orders. The chief thing you can do to become efficient is to implement a
full-function warehouse management system (WMS), which provides benefits in
labor productivity, space utilization and inbound and outbound transportation.
Proper inventory slotting and full barcoding of the total inventory process is
key. And multilevel bill of materials and kitting of products are handled more
completely in WMS than many order management systems.
Schedule personnel efficiently
Labor is a huge expense, so consider any technology that can help you be more
efficient here. Scheduling software is most prevalent in the call center: Our
experience is that direct merchants can save as much as 10% to 15% in call
center labor with more sophisticated scheduling software. The major benefits
are improving schedule adherence and occupancy, and adding flexibility to the
scheduling process.
Use business intelligence (BI) tools
intelligently
Many companies are implementing executive dashboards and OLAP (online
analytical processing) analysis across the enterprise. Senior management rarely
gets more than 10% of their critical data from any one system; they rely on
spreadsheets and analysis of others to get their information.
BI tools are now available with templates for the direct industry and can
incorporate data from any and all systems, including fulfillment, call center
and telephony systems, merchandising, marketing, inventory control, finance and
spreadsheets. These BI tools also allow importing plans, history and other key
performance indicators that have not been available in transactional systems.
There’s no doubt that with some creativity, IT can come up with many different
possibilities for prioritizing and redirecting your company’s IT spend. The key
lies in being objective, looking at everything from a fresh perspective, and
having the ability to recognize potential.
Curt Barry is president of F. Curtis
Barry & Co. (www.fcbco.com), a multichannel operations and fulfillment
consultancy.
To read the full article, check the December issue of Multichannel Merchant
magazine. Don’t have a subscription yet? Then click here.
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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
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