HIDDEN
COSTS OF HOLIDAY RETURNS CAN WREAK
HAVOC ON THE BOTTOMLINE
Seven Surprising Ways Retailers are Losing
Money
at the Return Counter
Retailers around the world are gearing up for the hustle and bustle of
the
busiest time of year. Experts are projecting consumers will spend $602 billion
this holiday season. And with billions in sales, there’s bound to be billions in
merchandise returns, which can cause retailers to lose a significant profit
margin.
However, the monetary drain of these lost sales does not end there. Additional
“hidden” losses accrue when you factor in the time employees spend processing
returns, evaluating the item’s resale potential, and restocking the returns.
When an item must be discounted or, even worse, discarded after a return, it
further compounds the company’s losses. There are also the administrative
expenses of accounting for returns and managing the entire return system. For
major chains, the costs can reach into the millions of dollars annually. Below
are the top seven hidden costs of returns:
1. Labor time and cost. Besides the staffing of the customer
service role
at the return counter, there are other aspects of labor including the time spent
assessing the item’s condition, making it ready for re-sale (cleaning, tagging,
folding, packaging), and placing it back on the selling floor or dispositioning
it for other processes.
2. Credit/debit or other transaction fees. A retailer may
typically see
credit card interchange refunded, but not necessarily their transaction fees for
authorization and settlement. So while the retailer may get back the majority of
what they paid in fees, it is not every penny nor is a return a free transaction
to them.
3. Restocking with markdowns. Even if an item is returned in re-
sellable
condition, it may be past its prime selling time. This might relate to the
seasonality of the fashion or the status of the current model of the item. In
many cases, items in this semi-out-of-date situation are subject to markdown
discounts to clear the inventory from the selling floor, lowering the margin on
that returned item.
4. Disposition of a non-sellable item. In many cases, the
merchandise
returned must have some extra action performed to determine whether it can be
resold. Often this falls into a retailer’s reverse logistics process. The item
may need to be sent to an interim location for inspection and testing. It may
need to be re-packaged. It may need some or all of its accessories and manuals
replaced. It may need to be returned to vendor for credit. It may need to be
disposed. In all cases, it is removed from the selling floor, eliminating the
possibility for the revenue and margin from the purchase.
5. Administrative costs. Depending on the destination of the
returned
item – back to the selling floor or out the back door – there are inventory and
logging requirements to account for the item’s status and location. While modern
supply chain systems help, tracking returned merchandise still requires
attention to detail.
6. Shrink. Return rates and shrink are strongly correlated. The
higher
the store’s return rate, the higher its shrink. Studies show if a retailer takes
actions to better control returns, shrink can be reduced by a significant
amount.
7. The Customer Experience. While not a measurable cost like
those above,
the retailer’s relationship with their customer in this potentially negative
encounter is paramount and, in fact, trumps all other costs. A fast, friendly,
and flexible return experience is worth the retailer’s investment to ensure best
customers keep their trust, and their spending, in the store’s brand.
The Retail Equation’s experience indicates that an individual consumer
with
a long-term pattern of return rates greater than 30 percent may negatively
affect a retailer’s operating profit. In addition, as a retailer’s gross margins
fall, the breakeven return rate also falls. The obvious implication is that
profitability is directly connected to return rate and the total cost of returns
should not be overlooked as the holiday season and peak return time period
approaches. Smart return management leads to even smarter consumer relationship
management, which leads to happy customers and a merrier bottom line this
holiday.
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