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What KPIs to Track for Inventory Control Strategies for High-Turnover Products

In the building materials industry, high-turnover products—like cement bags, lumber, fasteners, drywall, and roofing shingles—move fast and in high volume. Managing them efficiently is essential to profitability and service quality.

But without clear, data-driven visibility into how these materials are performing, it’s easy to fall into one of two traps:

Overstocking, which ties up cash and yard space

Stockouts, which delay job-site deliveries and frustrate customers

To avoid these issues, you need to track the right key performance indicators (KPIs) tailored specifically to high-turnover inventory.

Here are the most important KPIs to monitor—and how your ERP system should support them.

What it measures:

How many times a SKU is sold and replaced in a given time period.

Formula:

Inventory Turnover = Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) ÷ Average Inventory

Why it matters:

It tells you if you’re stocking just enough—or too much. High-turnover items should move quickly, but if you’re replenishing too slowly, you may run out.

✅ ERP Tip: Segment this KPI by product category, location, or customer type.

What it measures:

The percentage of customer orders that are fulfilled completely and accurately on the first attempt.

Why it matters:

High-turnover items must be available when needed. A low fill rate indicates poor stock planning, leading to partial shipments or delays.

✅ Target: 95%+ for your top 50 high-velocity SKUs.

What it measures:

How often a SKU is unavailable when needed—either for customer orders or internal transfers.

Why it matters:

Frequent stockouts can cripple your delivery performance, increase backorders, and force costly last-minute purchases.

✅ ERP Tip: Set automated alerts when high-turnover SKUs fall below minimum thresholds.

What it measures:

How many days of sales you can support with current stock levels.

Formula:

Days of Supply = Current Inventory ÷ Average Daily Usage

Why it matters:

This KPI helps you stay lean. Carrying 90 days of supply for a product that sells out weekly is a red flag.

✅ Best Practice: Monitor DoS weekly for your fastest-moving SKUs, especially during peak seasons.

What it measures:

The percentage of items counted that match what your ERP system says is on hand.

Why it matters:

Inaccurate stock data leads to stockouts, delays, and poor replenishment decisions—especially when product is moving fast.

✅ Tip: Use barcode scanning or RFID to automate high-frequency cycle counts on high-velocity products.

What it measures:

How much gross margin you earn for every dollar invested in inventory.

Formula:

GMROII = Gross Margin ÷ Average Inventory Cost

Why it matters:

Even if a product moves fast, it may not be profitable. GMROII helps you balance velocity with margin.

✅ Use it to prioritize your most profitable fast movers—not just the ones that sell quickly.

What it measures:

How effective your reorder thresholds are at preventing stockouts without overstocking.

Why it matters:

Inaccurate reorder points = too much safety stock or too many rush orders.

✅ ERP Integration: Your system should calculate dynamic reorder points based on real-time sales velocity and lead time.

What it measures:

The consistency of supplier delivery timelines for high-demand SKUs.

Why it matters:

Inconsistent lead times increase the risk of stockouts, especially when product turns rapidly.

✅ Pro tip: Flag suppliers with erratic lead times in your ERP and adjust buffer stock accordingly.

Final Thoughts

Managing high-turnover inventory isn’t about guessing—it’s about tracking the right metrics and using them to guide daily operations. With the right KPIs and ERP-driven alerts, you’ll avoid overstocks, reduce waste, and keep customers satisfied with on-time, complete deliveries.

📊 Need help building dashboards for high-turnover product KPIs? We’ll set up real-time reporting inside your ERP to track what matters—without drowning in data.

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