A comprehensive reference for understanding the financial metrics, concepts, and terminology used in e-commerce inventory management and capital allocation.
Each term includes its definition, why it matters, and how it connects to capital efficiency.
ABC Analysis classifies SKUs based on their relative contribution to sales, revenue, or profit, grouping them into A (highest impact), B (medium impact), and C (lowest impact).
Read moreABC-XYZ Analysis combines sales, revenue, or profitability classification (ABC) with demand variability classification (XYZ).
Read moreAllocation of capital is the process of deciding how limited working capital is deployed across competing investment options.
Read moreAnnualized return converts profit from one inventory cycle into a yearly rate, allowing direct comparison between products.
Read moreCapital constraints refer to limits on how much money can be invested in inventory at a given time.
Read moreCapital efficiency describes how effectively invested working capital generates profit.
Read moreCapital lock is the period during which money invested into inventory is unavailable for other uses.
Read moreA cash flow forecast estimates expected inflows and outflows of cash based on projected sales and payments.
Read moreCash net proceeds represent the actual cash received from each sale after all adjustments.
Read moreThe Cash Conversion Cycle measures the days between paying for inventory and receiving cash from sales.
Read moreCOGS is the direct cost of purchasing or producing goods sold during a period.
Read moreContribution margin is contribution profit expressed as a percentage of revenue.
Read moreContribution profit is the profit remaining after subtracting all variable costs tied to each sale.
Read moreCost of capital is the minimum return required to justify investing money into inventory.
Read moreInventory cycle time is the duration from placing a purchase order until the inventory is sold.
Read moreDays of Supply indicates how many days existing inventory will last at the current sales rate.
Read moreA demand forecast estimates how much customers want to buy during a given period.
Read moreDIO measures how long, on average, inventory stays in the business before being sold.
Read moreDPO measures how many days pass between receiving goods and paying suppliers.
Read moreDSO measures the time between selling a product and receiving the cash.
Read moreFBA is a service in which Amazon stores inventory and handles fulfillment on behalf of sellers.
Read moreThe feasible solution is the set of all order combinations that satisfy constraints.
Read moreForecast granularity refers to the time interval used in forecasting (daily, weekly, monthly).
Read moreThe forecast horizon is the length of time into the future a forecast attempts to predict.
Read moreGMV represents the total value of all items sold at their full listed price.
Read moreGross margin is gross profit expressed as a percentage of revenue.
Read moreGross profit is the revenue remaining after deducting the cost of goods sold.
Read moreA synonym for gross margin, representing gross profit as a percentage of revenue.
Read moreLead time is the total duration from placing a purchase order until inventory is available for sale.
Read moreLiquidity is the availability of cash or assets quickly convertible to cash.
Read moreA liquidity forecast evaluates whether available cash will be sufficient to meet obligations.
Read moreThe objective function defines what an optimization model is trying to maximize or minimize.
Read moreOpportunity cost is the return you give up by investing capital in one SKU instead of another.
Read moreAn optimization problem is finding the best possible outcome under a set of constraints.
Read moreReplenishment is the process of deciding when to order and how much inventory to purchase.
Read moreSystems that generate restock recommendations using rules, forecasts, or heuristics.
Read moreRevenue is the amount earned from product sales excluding VAT.
Read moreROWC measures how effectively a company generates profit relative to working capital.
Read moreA sales forecast predicts how many units the business will actually sell.
Read moreSales velocity measures the rate at which a SKU sells over time.
Read moreSeasonality reflects predictable, recurring fluctuations in demand.
Read moreSell-through measures the proportion of inventory sold during a given period.
Read moreSettlement cycle is the time between a sale and when the marketplace releases cash.
Read moreA SKU is a unique product identifier used to track inventory and sales.
Read moreA stockout occurs when demand cannot be fulfilled due to insufficient inventory.
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