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SKU Rationalization for CPG Brands: How to Cut Your Portfolio Without Killing Revenue

Most food brands have too many SKUs. Each one carries hidden costs — inventory complexity, production changeovers, forecasting errors, and working capital. Here is a data-driven framework for deciding what to cut.

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Slater Caskey
CEO, Claros Farm & Founder, Guidance · July 6, 2026

The instinct in CPG is to add SKUs. A new flavor, a new size, a new format for a new retailer. Each launch feels like growth. But every SKU you add increases the complexity of your operations — more ingredients to manage, more production runs to schedule, more forecasting errors to absorb, more working capital tied up in slow-moving inventory.

SKU rationalization is the deliberate process of evaluating your portfolio and eliminating the SKUs that cost more to maintain than they contribute. Done correctly, it frees up cash, simplifies operations, and often improves total revenue by concentrating resources on your best performers.

Why SKU Proliferation Happens

SKU proliferation is usually driven by retail pressure, not consumer demand. A buyer at a major retailer asks for an exclusive flavor. A distributor wants a club store pack size. A co-packer has minimum run quantities that make it easy to add a variant. Each individual decision seems reasonable. The cumulative effect is a portfolio with 40 SKUs where 8 generate 80% of the revenue.

The Four-Quadrant SKU Analysis

The most useful framework for SKU rationalization plots each SKU on two dimensions: contribution margin and volume. This creates four quadrants:

QuadrantCharacteristicsDecision
StarsHigh margin, high volumeProtect and invest. These are your core business.
Cash CowsLower margin, high volumeMaintain but do not invest heavily. Optimize cost.
Question MarksHigh margin, low volumeInvestigate. Is this a new product with growth potential, or a niche SKU that will never scale?
DogsLow margin, low volumeCut. These SKUs are destroying value.

The challenge is that most brands do not have accurate contribution margin data at the SKU level. They know revenue. They may know standard COGS. But they rarely know the true net margin per SKU per channel after all deductions, freight, and trade spend — which means they are making rationalization decisions with incomplete information.

The Hidden Costs That Make a SKU Unprofitable

A SKU that looks marginally profitable on a standard cost basis is often deeply unprofitable when you account for all the costs it generates:

Production Changeover Cost

Every time you switch from one SKU to another in production, you incur a changeover cost — cleaning, setup, quality checks, and the first-off-line waste. For a SKU that runs once per quarter in a small batch, the changeover cost per unit can exceed the ingredient cost.

Inventory Carrying Cost

A slow-moving SKU ties up warehouse space and working capital. If you are holding 90 days of inventory for a SKU that sells 50 units per month, you have capital sitting idle that could be deployed elsewhere. The carrying cost (typically 20-30% of inventory value per year) is a real cost that rarely appears in SKU-level P&Ls.

Forecasting Error Cost

Low-volume SKUs have disproportionately high forecast error rates. A SKU that sells 100 units per month with 30% forecast error means you are either producing 130 units (30 units of excess inventory) or 70 units (30 units of lost sales) most months. Both outcomes have real costs.

Retailer Compliance Cost

If a SKU is listed at a major retailer, it carries ongoing compliance costs — slotting fees, promotional requirements, minimum fill rates, and the risk of chargebacks for non-compliance. A SKU that is barely breaking even on product margin may be deeply negative when retailer compliance costs are included.

A Practical SKU Rationalization Process

Step 1: Calculate True Net Margin Per SKU Per Channel

Start with your wholesale price or net revenue per unit (after distributor deductions and retailer allowances). Subtract actual COGS (not standard cost — actual lot-level COGS), broker commissions, freight, and trade spend. The result is your true net margin per unit. Do this for every SKU in every channel where it sells.

Step 2: Calculate Volume-Weighted Contribution

Multiply the net margin per unit by the annual volume sold. This gives you the total dollar contribution of each SKU. Sort by total contribution, descending. You will almost certainly find that the top 20% of SKUs generate 80% or more of total contribution.

Step 3: Calculate the Hidden Costs

For each SKU in the bottom 30% by contribution, estimate the hidden costs: changeover cost per production run, inventory carrying cost, and any retailer compliance costs. Add these to the COGS. Many SKUs that appear marginally profitable become clearly negative when these costs are included.

Step 4: Apply the Rationalization Criteria

A SKU is a candidate for elimination if it meets two or more of the following criteria:

Step 5: Plan the Exit

Cutting a SKU is not just an internal decision. You need to notify retailers, manage out existing inventory, and communicate with distributors. Give retailers 90 days notice. Sell through existing inventory before discontinuing production. Document the decision for your records.

What to Do With the Resources You Free Up

The goal of SKU rationalization is not just to cut costs — it is to redeploy resources. The production capacity, working capital, and management attention freed up by eliminating 10 underperforming SKUs should be invested in the 5 SKUs with the highest growth potential. This is where rationalization creates real value.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many SKUs should a CPG brand have?

There is no universal answer, but a useful rule of thumb is that each SKU should generate at least $50,000 in annual net contribution to justify its operational complexity. Brands with fewer than 20 SKUs that each clear this threshold are generally in a healthier position than brands with 60 SKUs where 40 are marginal.

Will cutting SKUs hurt my retail relationships?

It depends on how you do it. Cutting a retailer-exclusive SKU without notice will damage the relationship. Cutting a low-velocity SKU that the retailer is already considering delisting is often welcomed. Always communicate proactively and give adequate notice.

How often should I do a SKU rationalization review?

Annually at minimum, ideally semi-annually. SKU performance changes as distribution expands, competition intensifies, and input costs shift. A SKU that was marginally profitable two years ago may be deeply unprofitable today if ingredient costs have risen.

Know your true margin on every SKU before you cut

Guidance calculates true net margin per SKU per channel — after all deductions, freight, and trade spend — so you can make rationalization decisions with complete data.

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Related: True Net Margin by Channel · Automated Cost Propagation · Promotional Lift Calculation