The Stockvyne Blog

Planning guides for omnichannel operators

Practical articles on demand forecasting, SKU-level allocation, safety stock, sell-through analysis, and inventory planning decisions for brands managing 50–500 active SKUs across DTC and wholesale.

Featured article

All articles

Planning

SKU Rationalization Playbook for Growing Brands

How to identify which SKUs to kill, which to accelerate, and which to let run out at full margin. The sell-through, velocity, and margin signals that make the decision defensible.

Wholesale

Wholesale vs DTC Stock Split Decisions: A Framework

When a Faire PO arrives the same week your DTC velocity spikes and you only have 80 units, how do you decide where the stock goes? A framework for the stock split decision that doesn't require gut instinct to justify.

Fundamentals

Safety Stock Calculations Explained for Non-Analysts

The math behind safety stock formulas — min-max, Z-score, and demand variability methods — explained without assuming you have a data science background. When to use each and what breaks down at higher SKU counts.

Benchmarks

Sell-Through Rate Benchmarks for Apparel Brands

What 65% sell-through means in apparel — whether it signals healthy open-to-buy discipline or structural inventory imbalance. Benchmarks by category, timing, and channel.

Classification

ABC-XYZ Inventory Classification: The Practical Guide

How to segment your catalog by revenue contribution (ABC) and demand predictability (XYZ) — and why the XYZ axis determines your safety stock strategy more than any other single variable.

Allocation

DC-to-Store Allocation Timing: The 48-Hour Opportunity

Why Thursday morning is the single most consequential window in your DC-to-store allocation calendar — and what it costs when that decision gets pushed to Friday afternoon after the truck has already left.

New products

Product Launch Inventory Planning Without the Guesswork

How to set opening order quantities when you have no sales history for a new SKU — using analog product comparisons, channel velocity benchmarks, and structured assumptions that you can defend to a buyer.