The Procurement Glossary » SKU Rationalization
SKU Rationalization
Inventory & Logistics
Definition
Reviewing and reducing the range of SKUs to eliminate redundant, slow-moving or unprofitable items.
Explanation
Too many SKUs raise inventory, complexity and cost. Rationalization prunes duplicates and slow-movers and standardises where possible, cutting carrying cost and simplifying sourcing while protecting genuine variety customers need.
Example
Rationalization cuts 12 near-identical pen SKUs to 3, reducing stock without losing choice.
Related terms
- Stock Keeping Unit (SKU) — A unique identifier for a distinct product or item, used to track inventory and sales.
- Inventory — The goods and materials a business holds for use, sale or production.
- Obsolescence — The loss of value when inventory becomes outdated, unusable or unsellable.
- Demand Management — Influencing what and how much the business buys — challenging need, standardising specs and curbing over-consumption — to reduce spend at the source.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is SKU Rationalization?
Reviewing and reducing the range of SKUs to eliminate redundant, slow-moving or unprofitable items. Too many SKUs raise inventory, complexity and cost. Rationalization prunes duplicates and slow-movers and standardises where possible, cutting carrying cost and simplifying sourcing while protecting genuine variety customers need.
Can you give an example of SKU Rationalization?
Rationalization cuts 12 near-identical pen SKUs to 3, reducing stock without losing choice.
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