Stockouts are an unfortunate event that can affect consumers and businesses in any industry. In fact, 51% of businesses cited “out of stocks” as their biggest fulfillment challenge, according to research by Blue Yonder.
On retail ecommerce sites or even third-party ticketing sites, the dreaded “order fast – [insert small number quantity]” may provoke a certain level of unease, urgency, maybe even FOMO (fear of missing out) in customers and fans, leading them to quickly fill their carts and check out, while dissatisfaction and sadness may emerge if their rapid-fire clicks prove unsuccessful. A study reported in the Harvard Business Review, in fact, found that stockouts can lead to “walkouts” – with 21-43% of customers going to another, competitor store when faced with a stockout, costing businesses “nearly half of intended purchases.”
In construction, an evaporating materials supply has seen projects becoming more expensive, while a sluggish equipment management logistics network can lead to downtime on site, and worse, costly overruns.
So, what is a stockout, what are the common causes of stockouts, and how can you manage inventory to prevent stockout situations?
We answer these questions and more in this article.
Read on!
A stockout, as its name implies, refers to when a business runs out of inventory on certain items, the “state or instance of being out of stock of goods.” Similarly, the Cambridge University Dictionary definition for the term stockout is “a situation in which there are no goods of a particular kind available for sale.”
In construction, a stockout could refer to critical materials shortages upstream at the supplier-level, or at the project-level it could mean when tool crib shelves sit empty when highly circulated equipment is deployed to multiple projects, and in some cases, when low visibility to inventory in the field leads to equipment sitting onsite for extended periods unused.
Stockout synonyms may include unobtainable, unprocurable, and can be described simply with the phrase, “out of stock.” Furthermore, the term stockout may be considered an antonym (the opposite) of overstock, when businesses have too much inventory stock of certain items (i.e., more supply than customer demand).
While the terms “stockouts” and “shortages” are often used interchangeably, they have two distinct meanings, which may seem obvious but bears repeating.
The difference between a stockout and a shortage is stock versus no stock. In the case of a shortage, albeit dwindling, stock exists that can be carefully appropriated, while a stockout refers to the complete absence of stock in a particular category.
A shortage, Investopedia defines, refers to the “condition where the quantity demanded is greater than the quantity supplied at the market price.”
Examples of stockouts, we’ve previously reported, have been seen disrupting the supply chains of massive companies like Target, Nike, and Chipotle – stockouts emerging during the rollout of Target’s expansion into Canada, in fact, led to the chain pulling out of the Canadian market only two years after the American brand entered Canada.
The faint logo of a de-badged, former Target Canada location can barely be seen as this retail store sits empty. Image Source: WikiCommons
The COVID-19 pandemic, more recently, affected as many as 38.8% of U.S. small businesses, Zippia reports – with construction among the industries affected.
Materials shortages have driven prices up and risk stockouts, delaying projects as well as threatening infrastructure projects.
Stockouts can have an adverse impact on customers’ perception of businesses.
A 2011 psychological study (5) presented two experiments that revealed this to be true with results finding negative emotions caused by stockouts leading to degraded customer perception of store image, lowered decision satisfaction, and reduced behavioral intent. Similarly, a 2015 study (2) of high-risk product categories of 115 SKUs across 98 stores found, as you would imagine, detrimental impacts of stockouts, while it observed a positive outlook when ordering processes were performed using automated ordering systems.
One negative impact of stockouts: The looming stockout costs that tend to cause adverse, collateral damage on business performance.
One study (1) confirmed the adverse impact of a stockout extends to both current order as well as future orders, for example. These findings, the authors concluded, “can be used to provide input to inventory planning models and illustrate how failing to account for the long-run effects of a stockout will lead to suboptimal inventory decisions.”
Stockout costs generally refer to the lost income and associated expenses incurred due to events where inventories run out of stock.
As Shopify has noted, a stockout formula can be represented as follows:
Inputs for the above formula are as follows:
Stockout costs impact businesses across industries:
The causes of stockouts are many:
In the Harvard Business Review study, 72% of stockouts were “due to faulty in-store ordering and replenishing practices—retailers ordering too little or too late, generating inaccurate demand forecasts, or otherwise mismanaging inventory.”
Though stockouts vary widely organizationally, researchers for the International Journal of Physical Distribution & Logistics Management (4) noted that “Improvements to store operations and the coordination of store delivery and shelf replenishment are most effective in reducing stockouts.” They added, further, “Manual audits of stockouts and their causes benefit instore execution and provide the level of detail necessary for management to prioritize areas of improvement.”
A study published in the Journal of Business and Retail Management Research (7) reported “70-75% of out of stocks conditions happen because of poor management of merchandising and logistics function,” while wrong ordering and forecasting accounted for 50% of stockouts.
Research into inventory control in the construction industry (3) pointed to the lack and incompleteness of “up-to-date information regarding on-site stock” as cause for stockouts, in part due to “poor tracking and locating of materials in construction sites.”
Now that we’ve established what stockouts are and the impact they have on business, let’s discuss how to prevent them:
Safety stock is an inventory management concept referring to the extra quantity of supplies or resources deliberately set aside as a precaution against events that can’t otherwise be planned for.
Safety stock is the precaution against stockouts and can prevent sales losses and weather unforeseen events (like supply chain disruptions).
As we’ve previously written, safety stockpiling protocols may greatly differ from business to business, but a general rule-of-thumb for small businesses can be followed with the below safety stock formula.
Inventory tracking via a comprehensive system that combines software, tools, and integrated hardware can help create a “digital twin” of what’s on your shelves – that way, when you send inventory to the field, you have more than a verbal confirmation that these assets will return on a given day, but also you can create a digital bread crumb trail that follows them into the field, ensure assets don’t get lost in transit, as well as protecting against shrinkage via power tool theft protection, for example.
Common components to inventory tracking:
While it may sound counterintuitive to the “safety stock” procurement we discussed earlier, lean management principles such as “Just-in-Time” (popularized by Toyota in the 1970s and the basic tenet employed in grocery stores) ensure just what’s needed, no more, is procured and shipped to where it’s needed, as it’s needed.
Lean construction aims to reduce waste from the construction supply chain while increasing value for the customer.
Such an approach uses of offsite construction to industrialize construction and “productize” the build for greater consistency and quality assurance. It involves adopting cloud-based tools (such as BIM for design file management) and construction automation technology (such as 3D printing) to streamline processes and maximize output.
Finally, establishing benchmarks for success, such as inventory KPIs like lead time (time from order to delivery), is critical for ongoing success – they help you measure preestablished targets and make operational changes with agility, maximizing profitability.
Improving YoY construction forecasting, for example, may be a high-level organizational key performance indicator (KPI) – taking advantage of job costing, tool teams can ladder up to this organizational goal by better tying dollar amounts to equipment they’re renting out, preventing inventory sitting onsite for extended periods, unused.
Stockouts are an unfortunate event in any industry, especially construction where many moving parts make the job of a construction inventory manager that much harder. Proper planning and improving internal processes can help stave off these stockouts and keep you operationally lean (as always, reducing downtime).
Read more inventory strategies to empower your tool team!