In a nutshell: Structural break

In sales forecasting, a structural break is defined as a sudden and significant change in demand behavior for an item. The cause of structural breaks is generally an abrupt change in market behavior or the behavior of individual customers who account for a large proportion of market demand. The critical thing about structural breaks is that, without further measures, forecasts only react to them with a certain delay, as very few items can immediately recognize a spontaneous, significant change in demand as a lasting change.

Our tip:

An STU analysis helps to identify the risk of structural breaks for items where the main quantities are purchased by a small number of customers. It shows the sensitive articles for this.

A large number of structural breaks are known in advance in practice, but do not reach the responsible planners, as sometimes no systematic communication channels are in place. When a major customer threatens to break away, this rarely happens out of the blue. If the distributor withdraws from a market, you can prepare for the impending slump in demand, provided you are informed. The same applies to positive structural breaks, which spontaneously lead to significantly higher demand.

However, experience also shows that a good sales forecasting system reacts faster to both negative and positive structural changes than many human planners. So if you have had good experiences with your software-supported sales forecasts, you should trust the forecasting system in case of doubt instead of going against the system’s suggestions.

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Prof. Dr. Andreas Kemmner
Prof Dr Kemmner is Co-CEO of the Abels & Kemmner Group and has carried out well over 200 national and international projects in 30 years of consulting work in supply chain management and restructuring and was the only publicly appointed expert for the profitability assessment of industrial companies in Germany for over 10 years. In 2012, he was appointed Honorary Professor of Logistics and Supply Chain Management by the WHZ. The results of his projects have already received several awards.
Picture of Prof. Dr. Andreas Kemmner

Prof. Dr. Andreas Kemmner

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