Inventory Management

Beyond ABC Analysis: Managing the Long Tail in an Omni-Channel World

Beyond ABC Analysis: Managing the Long Tail in an Omni-Channel World

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A common complaint among FMCG supply chain leaders today sounds something like this:

“Our inventory is higher than ever, warehouse space is under pressure, and yet we continue to face stock-outs on key digital channels.”

At first glance, these issues appear unrelated. However, in many organisations, they stem from the same underlying challenge: the growing long tail of SKUs created by e-commerce marketplaces, quick commerce, and Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) channels.

For decades, FMCG supply chains were built around a relatively concentrated product portfolio. General Trade (GT) and Modern Trade (MT) naturally filtered assortments. Shelf space was limited, distributors focused on fast-moving products, and planning teams could concentrate on a manageable set of high-volume SKUs.

The emergence of digital channels has changed that equation. Every flavour, pack size, variant, bundle, gift pack, regional assortment, and limited-edition product can now be listed online. Consumers expect choice, and digital platforms reward breadth of assortment. As a result, SKU counts have grown significantly across many FMCG categories.

The challenge is that while the revenue opportunity from the long tail is real, managing these SKUs using traditional planning and inventory policies can create substantial operational and financial inefficiencies.

The Problem is Not the Long Tail

Many organisations respond to growing SKU complexity by launching SKU rationalisation exercises. While rationalisation has its place, it is often an incomplete solution.

Not every low-volume SKU is a bad SKU. Some products play an important role in attracting consumers to digital platforms. Others serve niche but profitable customer segments. Certain SKUs support premium positioning, seasonal campaigns, or new product launches. Eliminating them purely because they have lower volumes may hurt growth more than it helps efficiency.

The real problem is not the existence of long-tail SKUs. The problem is managing them using the same planning, sourcing, inventory, and service policies as fast movers. In other words, the future of long-tail management is not aggressive SKU reduction. It is differentiated management.

Why Traditional ABC Analysis is No Longer Enough

Most supply chains still rely heavily on ABC analysis: Fast movers become A-items, Medium movers become B-items, and Slow movers become C-items.

While useful, this approach was designed for a simpler world. Today’s omni-channel environment requires a richer understanding of SKU behaviour. A slow-moving SKU can still be strategically important. A seasonal product may have low annual volume but extremely high demand concentration during specific periods. A marketplace-exclusive pack may contribute little revenue but help improve search visibility and consumer acquisition. Treating all slow-moving products the same often leads to poor decisions.

Traditional ABC analysis answers only one question: How much does a SKU sell? Unfortunately, modern supply chains need to answer several additional questions. Is demand predictable? Is the SKU strategically important? Does it carry high obsolescence risk? Does it move frequently enough to justify frequent replenishment? These questions require a broader classification framework than sales volume alone.

A More Practical Framework for Long-Tail Management

Instead of classifying products solely by volume, organisations should evaluate SKUs across five dimensions.

1. Business Contribution

How much does the SKU contribute to the revenue? This is a traditional ABC Pareto analysis, with A, B, and C category SKUs contributing 80%, 15%, and 5% of revenue, respectively. This classification helps the planner identify the SKUs that drive sales. The exact cut-off could be modified to 60-30-10 or 70-20-10 depending on the business. In some of the businesses, profit contribution is considered instead of revenue.

2. Velocity

How quickly does the SKU move? Velocity is usually measured using the frequency of the orders. Another term the industry uses is “runner,” “repeater,” or “stranger.” This remains important because velocity directly influences inventory turns, replenishment frequency, and warehouse handling requirements.

3. Predictability

How stable is demand? This is measured by the uniformity of the orders throughout the year. Some products exhibit consistent demand patterns while others are highly seasonal, promotion-driven, or event-driven. SKUs could be classified as regular, irregular, seasonal, or sporadic. Similarly, if the SKU is forecastable or non-forecastable. Two SKUs with identical annual volumes may require completely different inventory policies if their demand profiles differ.

4. Strategic Importance

What role does the SKU play in the portfolio? Certain products may be critical despite low sales volumes. Examples include premium variants, marketplace exclusives, hero products, or strategic new launches. Revenue contribution alone does not determine business importance. Often, there are flagship products that define the company’s competitive position. Sometimes, the product needs to be planned as part of portfolio completion.

5. Obsolescence Risk

How likely is inventory to become unsellable? This is particularly relevant in FMCG categories with shelf-life constraints. Low-velocity products with short shelf life require very different planning policies than low-velocity products with long shelf life.

These five dimensions create a more meaningful basis for segmentation and decision-making than traditional ABC analysis alone.

The Hidden Cost of Long-Tail SKUs 

One of the most common mistakes organisations make is focusing exclusively on procurement economics. 

Procurement teams often seek larger purchase quantities to improve unit costs, secure volume discounts, or optimise freight economics. While this may reduce purchase costs, it can significantly increase inventory carrying costs, obsolescence risk, warehouse complexity, and working capital requirements. 

In many situations, the cheapest procurement decision becomes the most expensive inventory decision. In many situations, the cheapest procurement decision becomes the most expensive inventory decision.

Purchasing six or twelve months of inventory may appear attractive from a sourcing perspective. However, the resulting inventory exposure can lead to write-offs, liquidation discounts, excess warehouse occupancy, and capital locked in stock that may never be sold. 

Every additional long-tail SKU also consumes planning bandwidth through forecasting, exception management, parameter maintenance and master data administration. 


The economics of long-tail products must therefore be evaluated across the entire supply chain rather than within procurement alone.

Different SKUs Require Different Service Levels

Another common practice is applying similar service targets across the portfolio. Many organisations target 95% availability for virtually all products. While appropriate for core fast-moving products, this approach often creates unnecessary inventory investment for long-tail items.

Service levels should not be determined by sales volume alone. They should reflect the product’s business contribution, lifecycle stage, strategic importance and channel role.

A more effective approach is differentiated service management. Core products may warrant service levels above 90-95%. Growth products may require 95–98%. Strategic niche products may operate at slightly lower levels. Low-priority long-tail products may justify even more selective inventory policies. The product on exit will not even have service level targets and probably will have as low as 30-50% service levels. The objective is not to reduce service indiscriminately. It is to align service expectations with business value.

Lifecycle Management Matters

Perhaps the most overlooked aspect of long-tail management is lifecycle tracking. Products move through distinct phases: launch, growth, maturity, decline, and exit. Yet many organizations continue using the same planning parameters throughout the product’s life.

As products mature and demand patterns change, inventory policies, service levels, replenishment frequencies, and sourcing strategies should evolve accordingly. Lifecycle-driven planning helps organizations reduce obsolescence risk while maintaining availability where it matters most.

Lifecycle transitions should automatically trigger changes in planning parameters rather than relying on manual planner intervention.

What We Commonly Observe 

Across consumer goods, food and beverage, personal care, retail, fashion, and consumer durables sectors, a recurring pattern emerges. Although the exact numbers vary, we frequently observe that roughly 20–25% of SKUs generate most of the revenue, while the remaining long tail drives a disproportionate share of inventory, planning effort and warehouse complexity. 

However, the answer is rarely wholesale rationalisation. Organisations that achieve the best results are those that develop differentiated policies for different SKU segments balancing availability, working capital, service, and profitability according to the characteristics of each product. 

Conclusion 

The growth of e-commerce, quick commerce, and DTC channels has made the long tail a permanent feature of the modern FMCG landscape. Consumers expect choice, and digital platforms reward breadth of assortment. The question is no longer whether organisations should carry long-tail SKUs. The question is how intelligently they manage them. 

The future belongs to companies that move beyond traditional ABC analysis and adopt differentiated approaches to inventory, sourcing, service levels, and lifecycle management. Competitive advantage in an omni-channel world will not come from carrying fewer SKUs. It will come from understanding which SKUs deserve different supply chain policies—and having the discipline to execute them consistently. 

About the Authors

Qwixpert is a boutique management consulting firm focused on building Future-Fit Supply Chains. The firm works with organisations across consumer goods, retail, fashion, industrial products, and aftermarket sectors to improve agility, inventory productivity, fulfilment performance, and supply chain decision-making.

Through more than 100 consulting engagements across 16 industries, the team has observed how digital channels, changing consumer behaviour, and rising service expectations are redefining the role of supply chains.

This article is part of a broader series exploring the implications of these shifts in trade channels and the capabilities organisations need to build for the future.

FMCG Supply Chains and the Rise of New-Age Sales Channels

FMCG Supply Chains and the Rise of New-Age Sales Channels

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A Supply Chain Head of an FMCG company recently shared three seemingly unrelated concerns. Inventory levels were at a record high, yet key SKUs continued to go out of stock on quick commerce platforms. Marketplace sales were growing rapidly, but fulfilment costs and returns were eroding margins faster than anticipated. Meanwhile, warehouse teams that had successfully supported General Trade and Modern Trade for years were struggling to cope with the growing volume of small, fragmented orders from e-commerce and DTC channels.

If these challenges sound familiar, you are not alone.

For decades, FMCG supply chains were designed around a relatively predictable operating model. Products moved from factories to warehouses, distributors, retailers, and finally consumers. Success depended on manufacturing efficiency, distribution reach, inventory availability, and cost control. General Trade (GT) and, later, Modern Trade (MT) became the backbone of this model, enabling companies to scale through standardised planning and replenishment processes. That world is rapidly changing.

The rise of e-commerce marketplaces, quick commerce, B2B e-commerce platforms, and Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) channels has fundamentally altered how products are sold, fulfilled, and replenished. While these channels have opened new avenues for growth, they have also introduced a level of supply chain complexity that many FMCG organisations are struggling to manage.

The challenge is no longer about moving large quantities of products efficiently. It is about fulfilling thousands of fragmented demand signals accurately, quickly, and profitably across an increasingly complex channel ecosystem.

Why New-Age Channels Are Different

Traditional GT and MT channels operate on aggregated demand. Orders are typically placed in case quantities, replenishment cycles are predictable, and distributors often absorb inventory and demand variability.

New-age channels operate very differently. Demand is visible in real time, service failures are immediately measured, and supply chain performance directly impacts sales visibility. A stock-out on a marketplace listing can reduce search rankings. A missed replenishment to a quick commerce dark store can result in lost sales within hours. A delayed DTC order can negatively affect customer ratings and repeat purchases.

In effect, FMCG supply chains are evolving from bulk logistics networks to precision fulfilment networks.

The Emerging Supply Chain Challenges

Inventory Fragmentation

One of the most significant challenges is inventory fragmentation. Inventory is no longer concentrated within plants, depots, and distributor networks. It is spread across marketplace fulfilment centres, quick commerce partner distribution centres, dark stores, DTC warehouses, and traditional trade channels.

This creates multiple inventory pools with limited visibility across the network. Many companies simultaneously experience excess inventory in one channel and stock-outs in another, resulting in higher working capital and lower service levels.

Long Catalogue Complexity

Digital channels encourage broader assortments, channel-exclusive packs, bundles, premium variants, and regional offerings. While this improves consumer choice, it significantly increases forecasting complexity. Slow-moving and long-tail SKUs consume working capital, create warehouse inefficiencies, and increase obsolescence risk. Managing thousands of digital SKUs requires a very different planning capability compared to managing a focused GT portfolio.

Warehouse Operations Designed for the Wrong World

Most FMCG warehouses were built for pallet and case movement. New-age channels demand piece picking, kitting, bundling, labelling, and high order accuracy. Quick commerce further increases complexity through high-frequency replenishment cycles and smaller order quantities. Warehouses must now balance throughput with flexibility, speed, and accuracy.

Appointment Management and Compliance

Marketplace fulfilment centres and quick commerce distribution hubs operate through tightly controlled appointment systems. Missing a delivery slot can delay inventory availability by days or even weeks. In addition, channel-specific requirements around labelling, packaging, barcoding, and documentation create operational complexity that did not exist in traditional trade models.

Returns and Reverse Logistics

Returns were historically limited within FMCG supply chains. Digital channels have changed this reality. Consumer returns, rejected deliveries, expiry returns, and damaged shipments have become meaningful cost drivers. Reverse logistics processes often lack visibility, creating additional write-offs and operational effort.

OTIF as a Commercial Lever

On-Time-In-Full (OTIF) performance has moved beyond an operational metric. It has become a commercial requirement. Poor service levels can result in penalties, listing suppression, reduced visibility, chargebacks, and even SKU delisting. Unlike traditional trade, where relationships often provide flexibility, digital platforms operate through automated scorecards and service-level agreements.

How Mature Is Your Omni-Channel Supply Chain?

The shift in channel mix is forcing organisations to rethink the very purpose of supply chain management. Historically, the channels have evolved as given below:

EraDominant Business ModelSupply Chain Objective
1990–2010General TradeReach and Availability
2010–2020Modern TradeAvailability and Efficiency
2020–PresentOmni-ChannelAvailability, Speed and Accuracy
EmergingQuick Commerce & DTCAvailability, Speed, Accuracy and Agility

As channels evolve, supply chains must evolve with them. Organisations that continue to manage digital channels using GT-era processes will increasingly struggle with service levels, inventory productivity, and profitability.

Qwixpert has classified the supply chain maturity of the FMCG industry from level 1 to level 5 as follows:

LevelCharacteristicsTypical Symptoms
Level 1:
Channel-Specific Operations
GT, MT, E-commerce and Q-Commerce managed independentlyInventory duplication, firefighting, frequent stock-outs
Level 2:
Coordinated Planning
Shared forecasting and periodic inventory reviewsImproved visibility but still reactive
Level 3:
Integrated Fulfilment Network
Common inventory view, channel allocation rules, standard OTIF governanceBetter service and lower working capital
Level 4:
Demand-Driven Supply Chain
Near real-time replenishment, dynamic inventory balancing, demand sensingFaster response to channel volatility
Level 5:
Demand Driven Enterprise
Promise dates driven by inventory, capacity, constraints and service prioritiesCompetitive advantage through service, speed and working capital efficiency

Many companies are still in the early stages of this transformation.

The most successful organisations are increasingly moving beyond inventory planning toward integrated decision-making across inventory, capacity, fulfilment, and customer service. The most advanced Demand-Driven Enterprises are increasingly adopting Available-to-Promise (ATP) and Capable-to-Promise (CTP) capabilities to make inventory and capacity commitments dynamically across channels.

What We Commonly Observe

Across consumer goods, food and beverages, personal care, fashion, consumer durables, retail, and aftermarket supply chains, several recurring themes emerge. GT-centric planning continues to dominate despite rapid growth in digital channels. Inventory visibility remains fragmented across multiple nodes. Warehouses struggle to support unit-level fulfilment. OTIF measurement differs across channels. Most importantly, organisations often lack a clear understanding of the true cost-to-serve each channel. These challenges are not operational exceptions—they are becoming structural realities of the modern FMCG landscape.

Conclusion

The next decade of FMCG supply chains will not be won by organisations that simply move the most inventory. It will be won by those who can orchestrate inventory, fulfilment, capacity, and service seamlessly across an increasingly fragmented channel ecosystem.

As new-age channels continue to grow, supply chain excellence will increasingly be defined not by scale alone, but by the ability to balance availability, speed, accuracy, agility, and profitability simultaneously.

About the Authors

Qwixpert is a boutique management consulting firm focused on supply chain and operations transformation. The team has worked across FMCG, food and beverages, personal care, retail, fashion, consumer durables, automotive aftermarket, industrial products, and e-commerce sectors, helping organisations improve planning, inventory, warehousing, logistics, network design, and fulfilment performance.

Through engagements spanning traditional trade, modern trade, e-commerce marketplaces, quick commerce, DTC, and B2B channels, the team has observed first-hand how channel evolution is reshaping supply chain operating models and creating new demands on planning, inventory, warehousing, and service execution.