Assortment Planning + Convenience Retail: Built for Director Store Ops
Convenience operators find Assortment problems in post-mortems and quarterly reviews. Ward catches them daily — with root causes and recommended actions. Your Store Operations team has the data. What they don't have is bandwidth to find what's buried in it.
What is Assortment Planning for Convenience & C-Store?
Assortment Planning is the process of ward analyzes sell-through by store cluster to recommend which skus to add, drop, or reallocate.
For Convenience & C-Store retailers specifically, this means monitoring 3,000+ SKUs across locations. High-frequency, low-SKU environments where every facing counts. Ward monitors impulse categories and daypart demand patterns around the clock.
How Ward delivers Assortment insight cards: Ward clusters stores by demographic, traffic, and sales patterns, then measures SKU performance against cluster benchmarks.
Key capabilities
- Store cluster segmentation
- SKU rationalization recommendations
- Whitespace opportunity detection
- Planogram optimization inputs
Why Assortment matters for Convenience retail
With 3,000 SKUs on a compact selling floor, every product must earn its place — and the right assortment is hyper-local. Ward clusters stores by traffic profile, daypart mix, and surrounding demographics to recommend variations that maximize revenue per square foot at each location.
Managing 800 stores from a spreadsheet is insane.
- ×Morning check-ins rely on phone calls and email chains
- ×No single view of which stores need attention today
- ×Labor scheduling is disconnected from demand signals
- ×Planogram compliance is checked manually, quarterly
- ×Exception management is reactive and inconsistent
- ✓Morning brief delivered at 06:47 with prioritized action list
- ✓Estate-wide heat map of store performance, updated hourly
- ✓Staffing recommendations correlated with predicted traffic
- ✓Planogram compliance anomalies detected and flagged
- ✓Consistent exception handling with recommended actions
Poor labor allocation and inconsistent execution cost multi-store retailers 3–5% in lost sales. — RSR Research
Planogram localization, 500-store operator
A standardized planogram runs across all 500 locations. Ward identifies distinct store clusters — highway/travel, urban commuter, residential, university-adjacent — each overindexing on different categories. Ward recommends reallocating shelf space per cluster to match actual demand. Pilot stores show meaningful revenue uplift from better product-location matching with zero cost increase: same SKU count, just the right ones in the right stores.
What a Ward insight card looks like
Cluster B stores (urban, high-traffic) underperforming on premium snacks vs Cluster A by 34%. Assortment gap: 12 SKUs missing.
Convenience KPI impact
Frequently asked questions
Ward analyzes sell-through by store cluster to recommend which SKUs to add, drop, or reallocate. For Convenience retail specifically, Ward monitors 3,000+ SKUs across your locations and delivers automated insight cards with root cause analysis and recommended actions.
Ward tracks Transactions/hour, Attach rate, Basket size, Planogram compliance, Daypart mix at the store-category level. Ward clusters stores by demographic, traffic, and sales patterns, then measures SKU performance against cluster benchmarks.
Managing 800 stores from a spreadsheet is insane. Ward solves this with automated insight cards: Morning brief delivered at 06:47 with prioritized action list. Estate-wide heat map of store performance, updated hourly. Staffing recommendations correlated with predicted traffic.
Ward delivers daily insight cards covering Transactions/hour, Attach rate, Basket size — tailored for Store Operations decision-making. Each card includes what changed, why it matters, and what to do next.
Ward tracks revenue per facing, velocity by daypart and cluster, redundancy analysis, and attach-rate contribution. It also monitors new-item performance against the displaced SKU to measure true assortment productivity.
A standardized planogram runs across all 500 locations. Ward identifies distinct store clusters — highway/travel, urban commuter, residential, university-adjacent — each overindexing on different categories. Ward recommends reallocating shelf space per cluster to match actual demand. Pilot stores show meaningful revenue uplift from better product-location matching with zero cost increase: same SKU count, just the right ones in the right stores.
First insight cards arrive within 48 hours of data connection. Ward needs approximately 2 weeks to establish robust baselines for your specific operation.
No. Ward sits on top of your existing stack. It is the proactive intelligence layer that watches your data continuously and delivers insight cards — so your team acts on findings instead of hunting for them.
Related solutions
Insights surface
Ward’s agents detect what changed, why it matters, and what to do about it. Every insight includes a recommended action—not just a chart to interpret.
Insights become actions
Any insight card can be turned into a tracked ticket or task. Dispatched to the right person, on the right channel—mobile push, text, or email. Not every insight needs a ticket. But when one does, it has an owner.
Your team responds
Insights get voted up or down with reasoning. Tickets get completed or rejected. Every response is a signal—Ward learns what worked, what missed, and why.
Outcomes measured
Ward evaluates real results: revenue, margin, fill rate, labor cost. Did the action actually improve the number it targeted? Measured outcomes, not assumptions.
Agents get sharper
Every vote, every completed ticket, every measured outcome feeds back in. Ward learns from your team’s judgment and real-world results. Each cycle sharpens the next. Then it starts again.
See what Convenience assortment problems Ward catches.
Root causes, not just alerts. See it on your data.
Find out what your data has been hiding.
Tell us about your operation. We’ll show you the problems Ward catches — and the ones your current tools miss.