FINDING A HOME FOR YOUR MICRO-FACTORY
The Forecast Gap
Remarkable advances in the technology of
design and visualization have allowed apparel designers, brands and product
developers to reduce the time required to visualize and prepare a new apparel
design or decoration. However, these advances even though they are portrayed as
reducing time-to-market really only reduce time to production. Coloring/printing
the fabric, the cutting, sewing and transportation/distribution of product
still creates a huge time gap between the initial concept and the presentation
of the product for consumer sale. Decisions about color and print that occur
this far in advance represent the huge risk that a market shift will cause a
volume stocking order to go mostly unsold at retail price. Unfortunately, that
retail price is what planning and profits are often based on. This gap in time
and money is what we call the “forecast gap”. Placing an integrated micro-factory
directly in the supply chain as a replenishment source after a minimal initial
stocking order can reduce risk and in fact guarantee both profits and
appropriate product stocking. Using a micro-factory for direct point-of-sale
replenishment allows each retailer or online site in the distribution system to
match their product availability with local demand. This means that on hand
inventory can be calibrated to avoid inventory clearances but still provide
accurate product availability.
Merchandising Agility
Placing the
integrated micro-factory in position between the general production sources and
the consumer creates a level of sourcing agility that allows merchandising to
react to out of stock situations by size, gender or color and to avoid overstock
clearances by location. For the highest efficient use of the integrated
micro-factory in a replenishment role, the factory (which produces no
pollution) should be placed in or near the appropriate distribution center. It
is important to remember that the physical space taken up by the factory can be
designed to match the space that was previously taken up by the physical
inventory. As a rule of thumb, hundred thousand square foot of inventory
storage equals about 1 TB of space in the virtual inventory. It is also
important to remember that the cost of the micro-factory is probably less than
the initial stocking cost and discount losses on product in a period of less
than a year. So, if you’re going to employ and integrated micro-factory to fill
the forecast gap the sourcing paradigm for some products may have to change
from forecasting to demand sourcing.
Demand Sourcing
The key ingredients of demand sourcing are:
product profit index, risk assessment, real-time POS replenishment and
negotiating a flexible style contract. Positive real-time control of on-hand
inventory by linking it directly to the demand driven Micro-Factory is the
fundamental feature of demand sourcing. In order to construct and demand
sourcing infrastructure the selling entity whether it is retail or e-tail needs
to complete three basic pre-activation tasks.
Establish real time profit risk analysis tools
ü
Profit
velocity index (PVI): point score based on gross profit times turns per
week
ü
Profit Lifecycle track: Average selling price per unit sold vs total
units contracted plotted by week.
Establish period sales production for high-risk silhouettes
ü
Build or source an Integrated Micro-Factory that
can provide no minimum replenishment of targeted silhouettes with variable
decoration on demand.
ü
Negotiate a “Style Contract” for the on demand delivery of the total period
volume of the targeted silhouette based on SKU’s from the Virtual Inventory. Establish
a Virtual Inventory (VI)
ü
Using high definition visual design software
build a silhouette construction and decoration TekPak inventory for the choices
available in store and online for the SKU’s. (Note: 10,000 different decoration
VI SKU’s will consume less than a TB of digital storage vs over 100,000 sq. ft.
of physical SKU inventory warehouse space.)
ü
Test the selected greige fabric fit pattern
construction of the offered sizes and/or shapes of the physical production
silhouette.
ü
Install the software, communication
and transportation links to facilitate POS based product lifecycle replenishment.
Profit Velocity Index (PVI)
Profit Velocity Index
(PVI)
Two of the newest elements in creating a demand-sourcing
paradigm are the Profit Velocity Index
(PVI) and the flexible Style Contract.
The PVI is a competitive point index between products, which determines both
the replenishment level, and ultimately SKU stocking life. In merchandising
whether online or in-store the velocity of product movement is the key
ingredient in determining on-hand inventory, product lifecycle and ultimately
product profitability. The PVI is calculated by simply multiplying the concurrent
percentage of gross profit times the turns of on-hand inventory over the period
of the week. Comparing the PVI to the scores of other like product or products
in a particular size or lifestyle area will determine the risk and ultimately
the level of replenishment required to realize the highest possible profit
levels from that particular SKU. When the PVI for a particular product dips
below a predetermined minimum score the product is replaced or discontinued.
Style Contract
The flexible Style Contract
works directly with a progression of products that are driven by the
replenishment lifecycle described by the PVI. The flexible Style Contract
depends on digital coloration or printing which allows the integrated
micro-factory to change color and/or decoration without any additional cost. In
its simplest form the flexible style contract is a total volume of a particular
silhouette, regardless of color or print, the brand, the retailer or the
e-tailer is contracting for over a specific period of time. Once the contract
is in place the buyer can determine a progression of decorations based on a
real time evaluation of current trends. Whenever a product is determined by the
PVI to be ready for replacement, the micro-factory moves to the next decoration
or colors in the progressive list and replaces the product in the store that
requires the new product. This allows the buyer and the merchandisers to work
together to offer the appropriate product with the maximum PVI store by store
within the distribution area. In the case of online since the product may not
be made in the micro factory until after it is been purchased all of the
products in the priority list of decorations can be displayed for sale since
they only reside in the virtual inventory.
Where can brands and retailers learn more?
All of these applications technologies and merchandising
tools will be on display and detailed in the Fashion Technology section of
SOURCING at MAGIC in the unified MAGIG show August 11-14 in Las Vegas.