| Nordstrom's Perpetual Inventory System |  | 
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 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : OPER025
 Case Length : 16 Pages
 Period : 1994 - 2003
 Organization : Nordstrom
 Pub Date : 2004
 Teaching Note :Not Available
 Countries : USA
 Retail
 
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 << Previous The Downslide Begins
	
		| 
In the early 1990s, the third generation of Nordstroms was ready to retire, but 
they did not feel that the fourth generation (most of them aged below 30) was 
quite ready to take over the company's reins. In a major departure from company 
norms, a few outsiders (not belonging to the Nordstrom family) were brought in 
to handle the business as Co-Presidents. Bruce Nordstrom remained Chairman along 
with the other two Nordstroms, John and Jim.
 Meanwhile, the company got entangled in a series of controversies due to its 
strained relationships with employee unions. The tussle with the United Food and 
Commercial Workers Union that had begun in the late 1980s picked up momentum...
 |   
 |  Inventory Management - A Key to Retailing Success
	In the highly competitive US retailing industry, efficient supply chain 
	management practices are not considered just a tool for deriving competitive 
	advantage. Rather, putting in place a structure to manage the entire supply 
	chain as effectively as possible is seen as a key for survival itself.
 Since 
	margins happen to be low for any typical retailer, cost control is 
	considered another crucial issue. As costs related to the management of 
	inventories are in the hands of the retailer to a large extent, inventory 
	management has emerged as one of the key attributes that help derive a 
	competitive advantage in the industry...
 
	
		|  | Taking the First Steps
		Nordstrom made its first move towards modernizing its inventory 
		management practices in the form of a new Windows NT based inventory 
		management system, launched in November 1993. It was a very basic 
		initiative that offered information to buyers as to the items that were 
		to be stocked. Since all the stores were networked using this solution, 
		sellers could find out the exact position of a particular item across 
		the Nordstrom system.
		The effects of this initiative were felt within a year. The company 
		reported an increase in net earnings from $141 million for the financial 
		year 1994 to $202 million for 1995. |  While this could be attributed to the overall improvement in 
the US economy, company sources agreed that the new system had played a major 
role in increasing the sales. Nordstrom's CFO, John Goesling said, "It is too 
early to measure the full impact of the system, but we like what we have seen 
thus far. We are going to continue to invest in merchandising information 
systems." Industry observers felt that Nordstrom had still not done enough to 
sustain this performance in the long run. As compared to the industry norms, its 
inventory management practices left a lot to be desired... 
Excerpts Contd...>> 
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