CAO is one of the most misunderstood and underutilized weapons
available to retailers today. International consultant Barbara
Anderson makes clear that in only a limited sense does CAO replace
manual ordering. In its full sense it is much more--the
optimization of manufacturer, supplier, and retailer distribution
to the retail store-- based on consumer and store data and
corporate policy. Anderson thus provides a framework and checklist
for implementing CAO, and understanding of key terminology,
solutions to likely problems, and ways to make CAO implementation
successful, and in doing so she covers the full spectrum of
retailing. A readable, easily grasped, comprehensive, unique book
for retailing management and for their colleagues teaching it in
colleges and universities.
Anderson points out that CAO is not an off-the-shelf system but
an ongoing project, each phase with its own unique set of benefits
and cost justification. Retail systems must support a vision where
a product may bypass the store on the way to the consumer, or even
the distribution center on the way to the stores. Consumers have a
wide range of choices, not only of where to shop, but how to shop,
and this demands ever greater levels of service. CAO systems help
assure that the correct product is available at the store, that it
can be located throughout the supply chain, and that it can be
moved easily from any location. In CAO, all levels of operation
work with real-time information, using decision-making tools that
react and learn from new information. Her book thus shows there is
no one right system, product, or approach for successful CAO. It's
too big a leap to make in one step but consists of modules and
functions that can grow in sophistication over time, and that not
all retailers nor all categories within one retailer will use the
same methods for forecasting and ordering. She also shows that the
distinct separation of replenishment product from planning product
is artifically imposed and that the separation of head-quarters
from stores is also artificial. Indeed, integration does not mean
the integration of separate systems; rather, of business functions
themselves. Readers will thus get not only a knowledgeable
discussion of what CAO should be, what it is and how it works, but
an immediately useful understanding of how to make it work in their
own companies.
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