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Survival steps for retailers in today's economic environment
Written by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP   
March 24, 2009, Toronto - In order to help retail companies manage through the downturn, retail advisory firm Karabus Management, a subsidiary of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) Canada, today announced critical next steps retailers should take in order to meet the demands of this challenging economic environment. In order to help retail companies manage through the downturn, retail advisory firm Karabus Management, a subsidiary of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) Canada, today announced critical next steps retailers should take in order to meet the demands of this challenging economic environment.

“The majority of retailers have already taken initial actions to reduce overhead costs and eliminate most discretionary capital expenditures,” said Antony Karabus, CEO of Karabus Management. “Unfortunately, as the retail landscape continues to remain uncertain, this may not be enough to satisfy investors or compensate for the dramatic fall-off in consumer spending, coupled with the substantial debt many retailers have taken on as a result of leveraged financial transactions. To successfully navigate these unchartered waters, retailers must operate much differently than ever before and take the difficult next steps in order to succeed and grow in today’s environment.”

Christopher Kong, leader of the PwC Canada Retail and Consumer Practice further comments, “If retailers act quickly and review and address their operational and financial performance to reflect the changing economic environment, they will be better best positioned for survival.”

Recommended “next steps” for survival include:

Take costs even lower – Align costs with lower demand by establishing targets for reduction that total at least 10% - 15% of total cost infrastructure expenditure. Use approaches that ensure sustainability of a company’s ability once they emerge from this tough macro economic climate

There are three approaches retailers should consider:

Reduce costs with a bottom up view. Cost optimization can not be a reactive one-off initiative.  Operational excellence demands a bottom-up analysis of every cost in every area with no exceptions or sacred cows. This is an ideal time to re-assess real estate strategies and store portfolio profitability and then develop a strategy for renegotiating leases.

Eliminate all discretionary spend. In the key areas of marketing/advertising, travel, utilities, store wages and other areas, retailers should conduct a rigorous review of spend that is least tied to short term sales.

Consider firm-wide pay reductions for staff at certain compensation levels.  Significant savings can be realized without people losing their jobs.  This is a good short term move without losing sustainability of operations.

Reduce inventory strategically and improve gross margin return on inventory investment simultaneously:

Eliminate fringe businesses and merchandise items - Tough economic times require a definitive merchandising point of view. Retailers need to truly focus on their differentiation in a way that will drive traffic and sales. Further, they should explore and implement creative solutions with vendors to reduce their cost structure. Focusing on the most profitable areas of merchandise is probably more beneficial than wholesale cuts across the board.  

Manage Open-to-Buy (OTB) flexibly – Re-engineering the merchandise planning and OTB process to move a greater percentage of purchases closer to or even in season will help retailers manage risk. There are significant opportunities throughout the supply chain, which should afford retailers much greater flexibility in purchasing activities.

Impose greater markdown disciplines – While capital is tight, this is the time to apply science to markdowns to better manage inventory and margin risk. Markdown optimization technology, supported by changes to processes, provides Merchants with more accurate, timely and granular information about consumer demand. Retailers that are using this technology – and are changing age-old merchandising practices, further defining roles and skills and creating accountabilities – are getting impressive results.
 
As the difficult environment continues to demand that retailers seek new ways to improve cost-efficiencies, Karabus Management continues to assist numerous chain retailers in uncovering hidden value in their cost infrastructure, working capital and their merchandising margin and inventory optimization, coupled with getting most value from their installed application systems.