Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Forward Thinking

The problem with new products

An annual study from Terra Technology finds that product proliferation is having a negative impact on demand forecasting accuracy.

According to Terra Technology's "2014 Forecasting Benchmark Study," demand planning and forecasting is only getting harder, and the reason is the increase in new product introductions.

The study, which is now in its fifth year, covers the North American and European businesses of 13 multinational consumer products companies, totaling almost $200 billion in annual sales. This year, the study found that demand planners are struggling to keep up with product proliferation. The number of items for sale has increased by 30 percent since 2009, the first year of the study. The study also reveals a high rate of product "churn"; in other words, while products are being quickly introduced, they also are being quickly discontinued. According to the study, more than twice as many new items have been introduced in the past five years as existed in 2009, and on average 85 percent of those new product introductions have since been discontinued.


This increase in products has substantially increased the complexity of demand planners' jobs, says Terra Technology. Demand planners no longer have enough time and resources to create good forecasts for all the items that their companies are now selling. Additionally, new products are notoriously more challenging to forecast than existing ones. According to the study, the average weekly forecasting error for new items is 81 percent, 50 percent higher than the error rate for already existing items.

Not surprisingly for a company that creates demand-planning solutions, Terra Technology believes that technology may be able to help. The study argues that automated tools can perform more of the mundane "number-crunching" activities that demand planners do, freeing them up to focus on more high-value, strategic issues.

The full report can be found here.

Recent

More Stories

AI tops digital supply chain investment priorities

AI tops digital supply chain investment priorities

Investing in artificial intelligence (AI) is a top priority for supply chain leaders as they develop their organization’s technology roadmap, according to data from research and consulting firm Gartner.

AI—including machine learning—and Generative AI (GenAI) ranked as the top two priorities for digital supply chain investments globally among more than 400 supply chain leaders surveyed earlier this year. But key differences apply regionally and by job responsibility, according to the research.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

shopper survey holiday peak

Rakuten: shoppers do not plan to increase their 2024 holiday spend

An overwhelming majority (81%) of shoppers do not plan to increase their holiday spend this year over last year, revealing a significant disconnect between retail marketers and shoppers in the weeks before peak season, according to online shopping platform provider Rakuten.

That result flies in the face of high confidence levels from retailers who have been delaying their marketing spend, as 79% of marketers are optimistic they will reach holiday sales objectives, and 65% are timing their spend as late as November.

Keep ReadingShow less
voting stickers for election results analysis

Report: Manufacturing leaders should think beyond November election

U.S. manufacturing leaders should think beyond November and focus on responsiveness for building long-term success regardless of who occupies the Oval Office in 2025, according to a report from Propel Software about uncertainty on business conditions as the presidential election approaches.

Regardless of the elected administration, the future likely holds significant changes for trade, taxes, and regulatory compliance. As a result, it’s crucial that U.S. businesses avoid making decisions contingent on election outcomes, and instead focus on resilience, agility, and growth, according to California-based Propel, which provides a product value management (PVM) platform for manufacturing, medical device, and consumer electronics industries.

Keep ReadingShow less
fuel cell truck EPA port grant zero emissions

EPA awards $3 billion through Clean Ports Program

Port authorities across the country will get help in purchasing zero-emission equipment thanks to $3 billion in federal funding to decarbonize their operations, the American Association of Port Authorities (AAPA) said today.

Provided by the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Clean Ports Program, the money will flow through 55 grants across 27 states and territories.

Keep ReadingShow less
person shopping for relex holiday trends survey

Survey: retailers face a “highly challenging” holiday season

The majority of American consumers (86%) plan to reduce their holiday shopping budgets this year, with nearly half (47%) expecting to cut spending by more than 50% compared to last year, according to consumer research from Relex Solutions.

The forecast runs against some other studies that predict the upcoming holiday shopping season will be stronger than last year, with higher sales and earlier shopping than 2023.

Keep ReadingShow less