Retailers have long struggled to minimize shrink. The term itself has been around for more than 150 years, but in that time, the ways that we buy and sell have changed drastically. As new technologies, formats, and digital shopping options gain popularity, is shrink enough to protect dwindling profits?
At a time of tightening margins and new ways of shopping, it may be time to broaden the ways in which we think about shrink and loss.
In simplest terms, retail shrink or shrinkage refers to any unknown or unaccounted for loss of inventory. It is the difference between the optimal sales profit from the expected inventory and the actual profit earned from sold goods.
Damages on the other hand refer to any loss of inventory that can be explained, including returned, broken, or damaged items. While shrink and damages may overlap slightly, it often makes sense to differentiate the two for reporting purposes (more on that later).
Retail Shrink Value = (Optimal retail value of products) – (Actual retail value of products)
Retail Shrink Percentage = (Retail Shrink Value) / (Optimal retail value of products)
For instance, if a retailer bought $1,000 worth of goods, but could only sell $975, shrink would be:
Shrink Value: $1,000 - $975 = $25
Shrink Rate: $25 / $1,000 = 2.5%
However, because of this broad definition of shrink, categorization is often confusing and relies on catch-all phrases that can lack clarity. Over the years, some forms of loss have been “hard-baked” into retail as an acceptable cost of doing business. Acceptable shrink rates often fall between 1-2%, with the average for all retailers being about 1.6% in 2020, costing the entire industry about $61.7 billion annually according to the National Retail Security Survey.
In 2016, Professor Adrian Beck, in association with the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) released a report criticizing the concept of shrink as a measure of loss, and proposing a new concept called “Total Retail Loss.” The report is titled Beyond Shrinkage, Introducing Total Retail Loss, and was followed up in 2020 with “Total Retail Loss 2.0: Moving Beyond the Theory”.
Some of the criticism and limitations of shrink outlined in the report include:
Total Retail Loss (TRL) is a concept that helps retailers understand existing and future risks and make targeted investments to improve their bottom line.
Some of the high-level benefits include:
The concept of shrink isn’t going anywhere. The Total Retail Loss framework isn’t going to replace shrink, but it can help to align loss prevention, asset protection, and other retail leaders on what is and isn’t considered shrink. Retailers must clearly define shrink as referring to unknown inventory loss and create a clear distinction between that and the broader concept of retail loss in their loss prevention strategies.
Today’s advances in analytics, AI/ML, video tracking and recognition, inventory, and sensor technologies, can help retailers better categorize different types of loss, limiting - but not eliminating - the number of unknown losses that occur.
Recently, Agilence teamed up with Loss Prevention Magazine on a research report aimed at measuring the changing perceptions and value of Loss Prevention teams. Responses were collected from a hundred LP professionals at every level, operating in various industries. Download your free copy of the full report today to see the results.
Read more about Shrink here.