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Insights
on Excellence | "Insights
on Excellence" Archive
Using labor data to increase retail
sales
Last week: How labor management technology can
help bring a company into the 21st century
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
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Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
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by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
Oct. 31, 2006
An outdoor equipment retailer with headquarters in the
northwestern United States and dozens of stores located
across the county, sells recreational and extreme sports
equipment such as hang gliding, skiing, cycling, camping,
hiking, backpacking and mountain climbing gear. Not long
ago the company's management team recognized a connection
between individual store sales and staffing. So they
decided to go to an automated time and attendance labor
management system with the objective of increasing sales.
The ability to use this new system was made a mandatory
core competency of its store managers.
The management team of this outfit "knew what they
knew." They knew their numbers and understood their
customer traffic patterns and sales trends. They also
had a good feel for the "soft side" of the
sales process. Their marketing approach included employing
sales people who enjoyed and participated in the outdoor
sporting activities for which the equipment being sold
was designed. So they hired guys who like to rock climb
and rappel and hang-glide and put them in the department
that sold these goods. They knew their customers were
enthusiastic about such purchases and reacted positively
to staff who shared their interests. A certain "match" existed
between sales staff, the products, and the customers.
When everything was aligned, the perfect "sales
chemistry" was created. The goal was to create this
chemistry and to staff at a level that would return the
maximum ROI.
They also knew that customers eventually get tired of
waiting for someone to help them and will go somewhere
else if they don't get service within a reasonable length
of time, which made the right number of sales personnel
for the amount of traffic on a given day a must.
Along with knowledge about what
made the cash registers ring was an appreciation for
how difficult it was to
create this perfect chemistry without assistance. The
team also realized that not every store manager was a
natural "chemist." Some were better than others
at conjuring up this staffing magic. So they studied
what the best managers did and figured out why they were
successful.
In this way, the management team
came up with its own "best
practices" based on what had worked in the past.
Coupling statistical data on customer traffic along with
sales and best practices, they were able to build a model
for staffing. They knew what types of workers to schedule
during specific seasons and during special sales events.
They viewed labor from the standpoint of supply and demand.
The team could predict with a fair degree of accuracy
what store traffic would be at different times of year
and on different days of the week. For example, management
knew what could be expected during a sales event such
as a ski equipment sale, or a mountain climbing bonanza.
And they knew which people and what the characteristics
were of the people who sold the most of different types
of goods.
This business tool became a part of the daily routine
-- a front-end business driver. It became a tuning instrument
to channel each store manger's use of labor through a
system with built-in standards, allowing the company
to institutionalize best practices and produce the desired
sales results.
Not only did the company achieve
success reaching operational goals, the technology
also resulted in smarter, more
cost effective use of labor resources. If they scheduled
the "kayaking king" to work despite being paid
a higher wage than the local novice, they expected better
results. Better results meant more money, and enough
more money meant more value for the labor dollars expended
-- in other words, a better return on investment.
This may sound like rocket science, but it isn't. For
example, ski enthusiasts who are passionate about the
equipment they use are going to sell more skis and ski
equipment than someone who has never been on the slopes.
The key was to have the optimum number of such salespeople
available to take customers by the hand during a sales
event. Let's say a family is going skiing this year on
spring break. The man of the house has found a pair of
skis he likes, and he's talking with a sales rep about
the skis and about the trip.
The salesman says, "Wow!
You're going skiing for a week at Steamboat Springs?
Fabulous! Snows practically
every day there 'cause it's right next to the continental
divide -- best powder in the Rockies -- 'champagne' powder
they call it because it's so light and fluffy. Tell you
what, you're going to need some powder skis in addition
to those Salomons. Take a look at these. See, they're
a lot wider. Otherwise, on a big powder day, you're going
to sink up to your knees."
The management of this operation had its store managers
match the right people in the right numbers to anticipated
store traffic at the right time. They also wanted to
get the supervisors and managers out of the back office
-- away from doing scheduling and checking time cards
-- and out on the floor where they, too, could sell.
And you know what? The strategy worked. The company
is growing like kudzu and profits have never been better
-- hard evidence that the collection and creative use
of labor data can make a big difference even in the area
of retail sales.
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Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
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