Merchandising Activities (2)
>> Sunday, December 27, 2009
Inventory Shrinkage
If you throw a good wool sweater in a washing machine full of hot water, what will happen? You ladies already know the answer to that question. If you're a guy you may need to ask you wife, girlfriend, sister, or mother. Go ahead.... we'll wait.......
OK, now that you know the sweater will shrink, or get smaller. Guys, if you do this to your wife's favorite cashmere sweater we'll be forwarding your mail to the doghouse for the next month or so.
Well, inventory also shrinks. But not because we washed it in hot water. In fact inventory shrinkage occurs for a number of reasons, and it is just as it sound - inventory gets smaller. But how should this happen? Things happen to merchandise while the store has it available for sale. Here are some of the things:
Theft - by employees or customers
Spoilage - milk, meat, vegetables, past the expiration date
Obsolescence - computers, software, clothing (last year's styles)
Display - merchandise put on display often can't be sold later or must be discounted
Grazing - customers or employees eating food available for sale
Damage - broken bottles, bent cans, frozen foods left out of the freezer
The sum total of all these items contributes to the difference between the Inventory account and the physical count. There might also have been errors made in the Inventory account during the year, adding to the difference.
Merchandisers use a few special accounts. When a sale is made, sometimes the customer returns merchandise for a refund. We do not reduce the sales revenue account. We enter the refund in a different account. This is done to help track the number and dollar amount of these types of transactions.
Sales accounts deal with customers and sale transactions
- Sales Returns and Refunds
- Sales Allowances
- Sales Discounts
- Purchase Returns and Refunds
- Purchase Allowances
- Purchase Discounts
By tracking these types of transactions in their own account managers have the opportunity to better understand their business. Are too many refunds being given? Why? Are we buying defective merchandise from a certain supplier? Are Sales Allowances cutting into our gross profit too much? Are we taking advantage of our Purchase Discounts when available?
The key to business profits is to identify each and every item that can be improved, and then improve it. Managers can raise prices. But they can also cut costs, reduce waste, increase efficiency, take discounts when available, and many other things to improve the profitability of their business.
Freight In vs Delivery Expense
Freight In is the cost to have merchandise shipped to your store. Freight In is a cost of purchasing merchandise, and becomes part of Cost of Goods Sold in the Income Statement. Sometimes a company has to pay a separate charge for Freight In. At other times the cost may be included in the cost of merchandise from the supplier. In any case, the cost of Freight In is added to the cost of the merchandise.
example:
XYZ, Co. buys 100 units of Product R for $7500. The trucking company charges $500 for the shipment. The total cost of the merchandise is $8000. Each unit costs $8000 / 100 = $80. They should set their selling price based on a cost of $80.
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