The Retail Doctor Blog

Preparing For Christmas: How To Unclutter Your Retail Store

Written by Bob Phibbs | November 19, 2020

Updated November 21, 2024

Merchandise ... like food ... like alcohol ... like a lot of things ... can be good. 

Until you have too much.

I’m seeing too much merchandise in all types of retailers, and just merchandising it around the store won't solve the problem.

Catherine Lindner, a Walgreen’s VP said it best, “All that go-go 1990s where we were adding items in and adding items in, and people wanted more, more, more, more choice... just didn't pay off. Now people say, 'Whoa, you're bombarding me. Help me figure out what I need.'"

If the big guys know that, you should, too.

You need to limit your selection of merchandise.

Think culling your SKUs, not choosing more SKUs

Too much choice overwhelms a customer’s mind, and it shuts down. If you’re trying to improve conversion rates – and who isn’t, much like a writer, you need to edit.

Start with the easy things. Plan for a fall sale so you can move out these customer distractions.

Here's how to begin:

  • Look at your inventory categories' sales figures by month and year-to-date.
  • Within each category, look at your bottom 20% - the ones not moving
  • Pull all orders to replenish and put them on your desk.

Once you’ve done those three things, scour your merchandise to find:

The clones. A lot of times we order items at a trade show because we think they are so cool. What we may not realize, unless we have photographed every item in our store and categorized it accordingly, is that we already have something similar.

The orphans. It’s great to have a must-have toy, accessory, or tool – until you sell all but the last one. Before re-ordering, critically look to see if the market has moved on. Then slash the price of the last one – even if you sold a ton of them at full price.

The misfits. Do you have a demo product or one that was opened, but a piece was missing? Sure, you could go and order the part so you can sell it whole, or you could put it on your sale table with a sign that says "missing a part." You could even be generous and print out how to get the missing part from the manufacturer.

The returns. Didn’t get that otherwise perfectly fine item returned to the vendor on time for credit? No worries. Even without the cellophane or in a ripped box, slap a price on it and get it to the bargain table. You have nothing to lose here.

The dogs.  Are you sitting on complete lines that you ordered in the wrong color? Competitors blew them out at a low price? Who cares? Now’s the time to make them sound like gold and strike their price. If you have to, clean up the boxes, polish the chrome or do whatever it takes to make them look new again. Put up a sign that says, Special Purchase 60% off, and move them out.

Help out a vendor and see if they have something you could offer at a meager, doorbuster price. We’re not talking a container load, but enough to help you round out your other items.

Now go through your reorder pile and critically edit if you should bring them back in.  We’ve all had that experience of going back to the well too often and discovering you carried an item at the peak of its popularity, only to have a reorder burden you with dead weight. So be picky.

Once you’ve cleared out all of that merchandise, don’t fill it up again with more stuff!

Give your edited collection of merchandise more space for customers to move in and around items so they stand out. Use smaller round tables nested around each other to create dramatic display areas for high-profit items throughout your store.

In Sum

Preparing for the holidays is a fun time as impulse buying and customer traffic increase. Use your time to put your best face on your store with lower SKUs and higher sales because you edited your selection of merchandise.