Why Retail Businesses Fail
People who get their understanding about retailing from the popular press or from political rhetoric often believe that declining sales - “Comp store sales are down” - is the death knell of retailing. While that is a popular view, it is not accurate.
In reverse order, here are the Top Five principal killers of retail businesses. We will examine each of them. While they all need the respect of you, the owner or CEO, your highest priority always must be the #1 slayer. And it just might surprise you to learn what it is.
In reverse order, here are the Top Five principal killers of retail businesses. We will examine each of them. While they all need the respect of you, the owner or CEO, your highest priority always must be the #1 slayer. And it just might surprise you to learn what it is.
Retail Business Killer #5
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Out-of-Control Balance Sheet
If you are considering expansion into new lines, new departments or new locations, you must not ignore the management of your Balance Sheet. Expansion is successful only when your balance sheet gets stronger.
What is your debt-to-worth ratio now? What will it be a year or two from now? Growth will be an affordable option only when it is the result of careful financial planning. Growth of any kind means an increase in assets, which can be purchased either with excess profits or an increase in debt. Projecting those changes will get a projected debt-to-worth ratio, the best measurement of financial strength that exists. (Note: If you must shrink your business, the same ratio should be your guide.) |
Retail Business Killer #4
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Out-of-Control Expenses
Productivity. Making each dollar count. Getting the greatest return on each dollar spent. Yes, we’re talking about expense management—the #4 killer of retail businesses. Expense management may sound like an old idea, but today, it’s more important than ever. Ignore it at your business’ risk!
In retailing, your major expenses may seem fixed (i.e., premises, permanent staff salaries, etc.) These costs must be covered by margin dollars, whether sales are strong or weak. But there are areas in your business with variable expenses where you likely can cut costs. Be creative! Ask your staff for help on cost-saving ideas. Put special attention on “the creepers”; what a menace those are! Budgeting, of course, will be your main tool for keeping expenses down. A pro forma (projected) Income Statement is a necessity. You must forecast expenses and adhere to budget guidelines. Then tie that discipline to dealing with the #3 killer: Gross Margin. |
Retail Business Killer #3
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Failing to Manage Gross Margin
The #3 “killer” of retail business is inadequate gross margin management. As a retailer, you must not ignore the message of your gross margin. Don't ask, “How are my sales?” but rather, the more important question, “How are my Gross Margin dollars contributing to operating profit?” By department, by vendor, even by SKU, what are the trends? And what are my options?
As a general rule in retailing today, Gross Margins are dropping. (Just take a moment to look at the Gross Margin trends of the 55 Retail Segments found in Store Benchmarks on The Retail Owners Institute® site, RetailOwner.com.) This is caused by the largest retailers incessantly cutting their operating expenses, then lowering their needed margins so they can lower their retail prices and better compete with the other retail monsters. Sadly, many independent retailers get caught in this spiral. You must not! Specialty retailers who remain “special” can actually raise their margins in many cases. The key is, “Better buying for your better customers.” Another key to managing Gross Margin is using a tool called GMROI – Gross Margin Return on (Inventory) Investment – to compare departments, lines, or products. GMROI should be in every retailer’s arsenal. Take a year’s gross margin dollars for a particular line of product and divide by the average cost value of inventory in that product line. Compare this dollar return with other product lines. |
Retail Business Killer #2
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Out-of-Control Inventory
All retail businesses that carry inventory have special problems. Inventory is the “engine” of the business; it generates all of the Gross Margin dollars and it is responsible for customer satisfaction (or the lack of it.) But inventory also soaks up cash, often lots of it.
Inventory has one more unique feature: the pressures to buy more and more of it. Just think about this: pressures to buy more and/or different stock come from...
How to offset all this pressure to over-buy or buy the wrong thing? The pros always budget their inventory buying with an Open-to-Buy system set up by department or classification or by store. Then, they follow the budget! The real pros in retailing respect their OTB plan as highly as any responsibility they have. |
#1 Killer of Retail Businesses
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Being Out of Cash
“Profit cures a lot of ills, but cash flow pays the banker’s bills.”
Poor cash management is the #1 killer of retail businesses today. Producing profits may be the sign of a good business, but profits matter little if a business runs out of cash. What keeps retail businesses running is enough cash coming in so that purchases can be made and obligations met at all times. Mismanaging cash can quickly lead to the following problems:
Bankers are hesitant to deal with retailers who cannot indicate a working knowledge, on paper, of their cash flow. These owners generally haven’t prepared and used a cash-flow budget, which is a plan for forecasting cash balances, cash receipts and cash disbursements. It is simple, but essential. It helps you anticipate how much money you will need to borrow, and when. Most critically, it enables you to tell the lender when you will pay back the loan. A cash-flow budget is the best tool for keeping a tight rein on the flow of funds into and out of your store. Unfortunately, many retailers don’t consider this budgeting a top priority for themselves. The consequence can be, and too often is, a business failure. Keep this in mind: over one third of the retail businesses that fail are actually profitable(!) They simply run out of cash when their creditors have run out of patience. |