Absolute Performance

You're Winner!

Here’s some data on a major U.S.-based retailer used an example in The Halo Effect:

According to the report of independent industry analyst, Alex. Brown & Sons, during the early 1990s, “Qual-Mart” did these things:

  • Installed point-of-sale terminals in its stores, which provided better information on sales by item and improved the inventory planning process.
  • Expanded central buying to 75 percent of its merchandise, helping to reduce the costs of procurement.
  • Modernized its inventory management and thereby significantly improved its “in-stock position.” One result: better management of seasonal inventory, boosting Christmas and Halloween sakes by 60 percent.
  • Conducted physical inventory counts more frequently, not just once at year-end, resulting in greater accuracy and efficiency.
  • Reduced its expense levels as a percentage of sales.
  • Improved its merchandise assortment to match current demand trends, helping to raise sales.
  • Installed a toll-free customer service number which led to a sharp improvement in customer satisfaction.
  • Implemented a sophisticated client/server technology that led to better merchandise management and savings of $240 million.

Thanks to these many steps, “Qual-Mart” saw an improvement in inventory turns–that is, how many times in a year it sold its inventory, a key measure of retailing efficiently–from 3.45 in 1994 all the way to 4.56 in 2002. That’s a jump of 32 percent, not bad at all.

Then the book asks:

Would you say “Qual-Mart” improved its performance?

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