A discussion about Home merchandise. The discussion started after I previously shared the following "Class Of" table.
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From: sloane.montgomery@beans.com
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 3:19 PM
To: Paisley Ingram <paisley.ingram@beans.com>
Subject: RE: FW: Rebuilding Plan
I can't believe I'm saying this ... maybe.
But I can't be the only one accountable here. If the solution is my team cranking out a bunch of new styles/skus and then the marketing team executes their standard ten batch-and-blast campaigns each week with a subject line that says "88 new items!!" paired with a Facebook post showing a new towel then I'd just as soon do nothing. That's not marketing, that's coloring by the numbers.
Our marketing team cannot keep pretending it is 2011. They're going to have to work as hard as my team works. I need your support on this one.
From: paisley.ingram@beans.com
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 2:47 PM
To: Sloane Montgomery <sloane.montgomery@beans.com>
Subject: RE: FW: Rebuilding Plan
Does he have a point that many of our Categories need to be "rebuilt"? It looks to me like he identified a credible problem.
From: sloane.montgomery@beans.com
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 2:33 PM
To: Paisley Ingram <paisley.imgram@beans.com>
Subject: RE: FW: Rebuilding Plan
Goober the Linguist used the word "dearth".
Mutton Head is kind of missing the point. This is a problem that can be solved by the Marketing Team. Prospects who never purchased from us don't know what is new and what is existing. They don't! If we only had three products, it would be up to Marketing to either find a market for the three products or they could do the hard work to create a market for the three products. Ideally they'd do both. It's not like Apple has tens of thousands of products, some would suggest they have a "dearth" of products. And yet, they're just fine.
It is wrong to suggest that the size of my assortment is a problem. Size matters, to a point.
From: Paisley Ingram <paisley.ingram@beans.com>
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 2:03 PM
To: Sloane.Montgomery@beans.com
Subject: FW: Rebuilding Plan
FYI.
Best,
Paisley
From: Kevin Hillstrom <kevinh@minethatdata.com>
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2026 1:15 PM
To: paisley.ingram@beans.com
Subject: Rebuilding Plan
We've talked about the importance of "rebuilding" your assortment. There are many categories where existing items were scaled back. Take Home for instance. Two years ago only $650,000 of $1,889,000 of new merchandise from the year prior was carried forward. The dearth of existing items results in the customer having too little to choose from. As new items were scaled back from 542 to 525 to 388 to 368 per year, too little demand was generated from new items, causing subsequent year existing merchandise to suffer. To have a great existing class of merchandise, you have to have plenty of new items the year(s) prior.
This is a cycle that is very hard to pull out of unless your Merchandising Team spends 2-3 years "rebuilding" the assortment. If I were in your shoes, I'd require a "rebuilding plan" from your Merchandising Team and a "Merchandise Awareness Plan" from your Marketing Team. Both teams would work together for the next three years to build a foundation for success. Your Marketing Team should be able to clearly articulate how they will create awareness for new items.
I'm happy to share examples from non-competitive clients if you are interested.
Thanks,
Kevin

