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ABC Rules & Prioritization

Not all products deserve equal attention. ABC analysis helps you focus on what matters: 20% of your products generate 80% of your revenue. Treat them differently.

What is ABC Analysis?

ABC analysis divides your products into three categories based on their revenue contribution:

Grade A: Top 20% of products
├─ Contribute: ~80% of revenue
├─ Priority: HIGHEST
└─ Treatment: Frequent checks, high safety stock, tight control

Grade B: Middle 30% of products
├─ Contribute: ~15% of revenue
├─ Priority: MEDIUM
└─ Treatment: Standard checks, normal safety stock, balanced

Grade C: Bottom 50% of products
├─ Contribute: ~5% of revenue
├─ Priority: LOW
└─ Treatment: Infrequent checks, low safety stock, minimal effort

How to Grade Your Products

Step 1: Calculate Annual Revenue per Product

Formula: Annual Units Sold × Unit Price = Annual Revenue

Example (apparel store):
├─ Winter Jacket: 500 units × €50 = €25,000
├─ Blue T-Shirt: 2,000 units × €15 = €30,000
├─ Niche Specialty: 100 units × €30 = €3,000
├─ Running Shoes: 800 units × €80 = €64,000
├─ Summer Shorts: 1,200 units × €12 = €14,400
└─ Total: €136,400

Step 2: Sort by Revenue (Highest to Lowest)

Rank | Product | Revenue | % of Total |
-----|---------|---------|-----------|
1 | Running Shoes | €64,000 | 46.9% |
2 | Blue T-Shirt | €30,000 | 22.0% |
3 | Winter Jacket | €25,000 | 18.3% |
4 | Summer Shorts | €14,400 | 10.6% |
5 | Niche Specialty | €3,000 | 2.2% |
| TOTAL | €136,400 | 100% |

Step 3: Assign Grades by Cumulative Percentage

Grade A: Until cumulative reaches ~80%
├─ Running Shoes: 46.9%
├─ Blue T-Shirt: 22.0% (cumulative: 68.9%)
└─ Winter Jacket: 18.3% (cumulative: 87.2%) ← STOP HERE
Count: 3 products = Grade A

Grade B: Until cumulative reaches ~95%
├─ Summer Shorts: 10.6% (cumulative: 97.8%) ← STOP HERE
Count: 1 product = Grade B

Grade C: Everything else
├─ Niche Specialty: 2.2%
Count: 1 product = Grade C

Result:

Grade A: 3 products (60% of items, 87% of revenue)
Grade B: 1 product (20% of items, 11% of revenue)
Grade C: 1 product (20% of items, 2% of revenue)

Policy by Grade

Grade A Products (High Priority)

Characteristics:

  • High revenue contributors
  • Must always be in stock
  • Customer satisfaction critical

Policies:

AspectSetting
Safety stock days12-15 days
Reorder frequencyWeekly (2-3 times/week)
Service level95%+ (allow 1-2 stockouts/year)
Reorder pointHigher (more buffer)
Order quantityFixed or conservative
Review methodReal-time or daily reports
Expedite costWilling to pay

Example: Running Shoes (Grade A)

Average daily sales: 2 units
Lead time: 30 days
Safety days: 14 days

Reorder point: (2 × 30) + (2 × 14) = 60 + 28 = 88 units
Reorder quantity: 2 × 7 × 4 weeks = 56 units
Maximum: 88 + 56 = 144 units

Action:
├─ Check inventory DAILY
├─ If below 88 units, order immediately
├─ Keep 88-144 units always
└─ Never allow stockout (critical product)

Grade B Products (Medium Priority)

Characteristics:

  • Core business products
  • Steady revenue
  • Some flexibility acceptable

Policies:

AspectSetting
Safety stock days8-10 days
Reorder frequencyBi-weekly (every 2 weeks)
Service level90%+ (allow 10-20 days stockout/year)
Reorder pointStandard (normal buffer)
Order quantityFlexible (adjust as needed)
Review methodBi-weekly reports
Expedite costNegotiate if needed

Example: Summer Shorts (Grade B)

Average daily sales: 3 units
Lead time: 30 days
Safety days: 9 days

Reorder point: (3 × 30) + (3 × 9) = 90 + 27 = 117 units
Reorder quantity: 3 × 7 × 5 weeks = 105 units
Maximum: 117 + 105 = 222 units

Action:
├─ Check inventory EVERY 2 WEEKS
├─ If below 117 units, order
├─ Keep 117-222 units typical
└─ Occasional stockout acceptable

Grade C Products (Low Priority)

Characteristics:

  • Low revenue, slow movers
  • Impulse buys or specialty items
  • Stock more only if zero cost

Policies:

AspectSetting
Safety stock days3-5 days
Reorder frequencyMonthly or as needed
Service level80%+ (allow 30-60 days stockout/year)
Reorder pointLower (minimal buffer)
Order quantityFlexible, batch with others
Review methodMonthly reports
Expedite costNever pay premium

Example: Niche Specialty (Grade C)

Average daily sales: 0.3 units
Lead time: 30 days
Safety days: 4 days

Reorder point: (0.3 × 30) + (0.3 × 4) = 9 + 1 = 10 units
Reorder quantity: 0.3 × 7 × 4 weeks = 8 units
Maximum: 10 + 8 = 18 units

Action:
├─ Check inventory MONTHLY
├─ If below 10 units, order when convenient
├─ Keep 10-18 units typical
├─ Stockout acceptable, batch orders to save cost
└─ Never expedite (not worth it)

Real-World Grading Example

Company: Multi-location fashion retailer
Period: Last 12 months
Products: 85 SKUs total

Top 20% by Revenue (Grade A)

Product | Units | Unit Price | Revenue | % of Total |
--------|-------|-----------|---------|-----------|
Winter Jacket | 1,200 | €45 | €54,000 | 18.5% |
Jeans (Blue) | 2,400 | €35 | €84,000 | 28.8% |
Boots | 600 | €60 | €36,000 | 12.3% |
T-Shirt (basic) | 3,500 | €12 | €42,000 | 14.4% |
Sweater | 800 | €28 | €22,400 | 7.7% |
| | | €238,400 | 81.7% |

Grade A: 5 products (6% of SKUs) = 82% of revenue

Middle 30% (Grade B)

Summer Shorts | 1,200 | €15 | €18,000 | 6.2% |
Shirt (dress) | 800 | €25 | €20,000 | 6.9% |
Skirt | 600 | €30 | €18,000 | 6.2% |
| | | €56,000 | 19.2% |

Grade B: 3 products (3.5% of SKUs) = 19% of revenue

Bottom 50% (Grade C)

Accessories (various) | 2,400 total | €3-8 | €11,200 | average
Specialty items | 1,200 total | €5-15 | €8,000 | average
Clearance/Old | 800 total | €2-10 | €4,600 | average
| | | €23,800 | 8.1% |

Grade C: 77 products (91% of SKUs) = 8% of revenue

Summary

Grade A: 5 SKUs (6%) → 82% revenue → HIGHEST PRIORITY
Grade B: 3 SKUs (3.5%) → 19% revenue → MEDIUM PRIORITY
Grade C: 77 SKUs (91%) → 8% revenue → LOW PRIORITY

Focus: Spend 80% of your time on 9 SKUs
Result: Manage 92% of business value

Regrading (Annual Review)

Products change importance over time. Review quarterly, regrade annually.

November 30: Calculate last 12 months
├─ Which products grew? (might move from C→B or B→A)
├─ Which declined? (might move from A→B or B→C)
├─ Any new launches? (where do they fall?)
└─ Any discontinued? (remove from list)

December 1: Update your grading
├─ Adjust policies for moved products
├─ Celebrate improvements
└─ Monitor declines

Example movement:
Old: Niche Item = Grade C, €3,000/year
New: Niche Item = Grade B, €25,000/year
Action: Increase safety stock, check more frequently, higher reorder point

Using Grades in Multi-Location

When you have multiple warehouses, each location can have different grades:

Head office view:
Product: Winter Jacket
├─ Berlin warehouse (Grade A) — Popular in north
├─ Munich warehouse (Grade B) — Less popular
└─ Hamburg warehouse (Grade C) — Slow in coastal area

Policies by location:
├─ Berlin: High safety stock, weekly checks
├─ Munich: Medium safety stock, bi-weekly checks
└─ Hamburg: Low safety stock, monthly checks

FAQ

Q: How often should I regrade?

A: Annually minimum. For growing companies, quarterly. Fast-moving fashion: monthly.

Q: What if a Grade C becomes popular suddenly?

A: Check for trend. If sustained > 1 month, regrade to B. Update policies. No need to wait until next official review.

Q: Can a product be Grade A in one location and C in another?

A: Yes! Excellent point. That's why multi-location policies exist. Treat each location separately.

Q: What percentage should I use for cutoffs?

A: Standard is 80/15/5. Adjust for your business. Slow-moving inventory might be 70/20/10. Fast-fashion might be 90/8/2.

Q: Should I grade by revenue or profit?

A: Revenue is standard (simpler). If high-margin Grade C items exist, use profit instead. Usually same ranking anyway.


Next Steps

  1. List your top 20 products by revenue
  2. Calculate revenue contribution for each
  3. Sort and assign grades (A/B/C)
  4. Set policies per grade (from Policy Fundamentals)
  5. Implement in your system


Questions?

Contact support@synplex.io for help with your ABC analysis.