Bestandsverwaltung im Einzelhandel mit Barcodes

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How retailers use barcode scanning for cycle counts, receiving, transfers, returns, and real-time inventory visibility across channels.

Retail Inventory Management with Barcodes

Barcodes transform retail inventory management from a manual counting exercise into an automated, real-time data system. Every scan at receiving, stocking, selling, and returning creates an event that updates inventory records.

The Inventory Lifecycle

Barcodes track products through every stage:

  1. Receiving: Scan GS1-128 or ITF-14 on incoming cases
  2. Putaway: Scan product and location barcodes when stocking shelves or back room
  3. Replenishment: Scan when moving stock from back room to sales floor
  4. Selling: POS scan decrements on-hand inventory
  5. Returns: Scan returned items to increment inventory
  6. Transfer: Scan when moving between stores or to warehouse
  7. Shrink/Adjustment: Scan during cycle counts to reconcile actual vs system

Perpetual Inventory

A perpetual inventory system maintains a running count of every SKU:

On Hand = Opening + Received - Sold - Transferred Out - Shrink + Adjustments

Every barcode scan updates this equation in real time. Accurate perpetual inventory enables:

  • Real-time stock visibility across all locations
  • Automatic replenishment triggers
  • Accurate promise dates for e-commerce orders
  • Optimized safety stock calculations

Cycle Counting

Rather than a full physical inventory count (disruptive and infrequent), cycle counting uses barcode scanners to count a subset of SKUs daily:

  1. System selects SKUs for today's count (based on ABC analysis, discrepancy history, or random selection)
  2. Staff scan location barcodes, then scan and count items at each location
  3. Handheld device compares counts to system records
  4. Discrepancies trigger investigation and adjustment
  5. Over time, every SKU is counted multiple times per year

Target accuracy: 99.5% of SKUs within tolerance (typically +/- 1 unit).

Receiving Best Practices

  • Scan every incoming case or pallet barcode against the purchase order
  • Verify quantities match ASN data
  • Apply internal barcodes to items not pre-barcoded
  • Record damage or shortage at scan time
  • Close the receipt in the system promptly (delays create phantom inventory)

Omnichannel Inventory Challenges

With online orders fulfilled from stores, inventory accuracy becomes critical:

  • Ship-from-store: Online order picks from store shelves require accurate on-hand counts
  • BOPIS: "Buy Online, Pick Up In Store" orders must not be allocated to out-of-stock items
  • Reserve: Online reservations must decrement available-to-promise inventory

Barcode scanning at every inventory movement maintains the accuracy needed for omnichannel fulfillment.

Shrink Reduction

Barcodes help identify and reduce shrink (inventory loss from theft, damage, or errors):

  • Exception reporting identifies unusual scan patterns
  • Receiving accuracy reduces vendor fraud
  • Point-of-sale scanning prevents cashier under-ringing
  • Cycle counting identifies discrepancies early