New CI&T Report Looks Closely At Demand Forecasting Opportunities

CI&T published Solving CPG & Retailer Demand Forecasting Dilemmas, which examines the demand forecasting relationship between retailers and suppliers. The report highlights pain points and opportunities for both parties, revealing a misalignment of data strategies causing ineffective forecasting. Demand forecasting, using data and insights to predict how much of a kind of product consumers will […]

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  • CI&T published Solving CPG & Retailer Demand Forecasting Dilemmas, which examines the demand forecasting relationship between retailers and suppliers. The report highlights pain points and opportunities for both parties, revealing a misalignment of data strategies causing ineffective forecasting.

    Demand forecasting, using data and insights to predict how much of a kind of product consumers will want to purchase during a defined time period, is often a unique process to the retailer-supplier relationship and historically limited in its data-sharing capabilities. The purchase pattern unpredictability accelerated by the pandemic, combined with the rise in suppliers heading towards DTC makes the case to re-examine this outdated relationship.

    In this report, CI&T asserts that the best way to ensure improved demand forecasting is for retailers and suppliers to share consumer, sales and basket data with each other, and for both parties to push for upgrading their processes.  

    Also Read: The Rise of Advanced Personalisation in Marketing Strategies

    Key findings from the report include:

    • Suppliers’ highest-ranking challenge related to forecasting demand was visibility and access to data. Retailers’ highest-ranking challenge related to demand forecasting was scaling the data platform.
    • Suppliers reported they were most likely to break demand forecasting down by geography, while retailers were most likely to report breaking down demand forecasting by channel.
    • The majority of suppliers reported looking at sales data from the same month over years prior as their predictive approach, while the majority of retailers reported referencing the previous month’s sales to predict the following month.
    • Both suppliers and retailers overwhelmingly reported that consumer-level data (gender, age, household size) is the most likely type of data leveraged for demand forecasting.

    “Demand forecasting is the foundation of the retail industry. Recalibrating the retailer-supplier relationship to ensure more accurate forecasting will lead to a wide range of benefits for all parties involved in the supply chain,” added Melissa Minkow, Retail Industry Lead at CI&T.

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