A retail associate reviews and completes assigned tasks on Zebra Workcloud Task Management, increasing productivity and visibility into store operations.
By Curtis Marquardt | July 9, 2026

The $32M Size 9: The Hidden Cost of Inaccurate Inventory

Legendary ice hockey player Wayne Gretzky famously said, “You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” In the highly competitive footwear retail market, this translates to an absolute truth: you miss 100% of the sales you cannot fulfill.

At the core of reliable fulfillment is inventory accuracy; ultimately, you cannot sell what you cannot count.  Unfortunately, maintaining precise stock levels is far more complex for footwear retailers than for general retail. This difficulty stems first from highly intricate SKU matrices driven by numerous size, width, and style variations. Furthermore, shoeboxes and their contents are easily separated and misplaced. When combined with complicated returns processes, displaced displays and inventory tracking hurdles, these challenges heighten the risk of unfulfilled orders, eroded customer loyalty, frontline inefficiencies and lost revenue.

Let’s look at an unfortunately all-too-common scenario:

Rebecca purchases a size 9 pair of running shoes online for in-store pickup. The inventory system shows that there are 12 pairs in stock of that shoe in the size, style, and width she wants. She completes the transaction, confident that she’ll arrive at the store later that day with her shoes bagged and waiting. After finishing her day at work, she battles through 45 minutes of heavy traffic to get to the store, enters, and asks for her online order.

But there’s a problem.  Mateen, the associate tasked with pulling her online order, couldn't locate the shoes. He had already spent two hours searching through stacks of shoe boxes, even recruiting several teammates to help with the hunt.

Just before Rebecca arrived, Mateen finally located the right box; only to discover that one shoe, likely a display model, was missing. A frantic search of the sales floor became his new mission, all while Rebecca waited... and waited. After 20 agonizing minutes of a fruitless hunt, Mateen informed Rebecca that her order couldn't be fulfilled. Hoping to save the sale, he checked the inventory for the nearest store, which showed 20 pairs in stock and let Rebecca know he could call the store and have her shoes ready for her. But, short on patience and unwilling to risk another wasted trip, Rebecca declined and walked out empty-handed.

The result: A lost sale, a disappointed, frustrated, and less loyal customer, as well as layers upon layers of frontline productivity lost chasing an inventory ghost.

Pretty Soon, They All Add Up to Real Money

Zooming in on this single lost sale, it hardly seems like a catastrophic event for a major retailer. But zoom out, and the perspective changes. If this friction is happening at one storefront, it is likely happening across all locations, day in and day out. Let’s assume the fictional retailer in our scenario has 500 stores and $800 million in annual revenue. Even one lost sale per store, per day, quickly compounds. Suddenly, the math paints a much grimmer picture of the true cost of inventory inaccuracy.

The Efficient Consumer Response (ECR) Community, a collaborative, voluntary network of major retailers, manufacturers, and researchers, recently reported on the impact of inaccurate inventory and found that retailers are losing 4 to 8% of their sales because of poor inventory accuracy.

Applying this math to our fictional $800 million shoe retailer, poor inventory accuracy costs them anywhere between $32 million and $64 million annually. But the bleeding doesn't stop there; these failed transactions trigger a domino effect of hidden costs.

When staff are pulled from the floor to chase ghosts, overall customer service suffers. When frustration turns loyal shoppers into lost causes, future lifetime value evaporates. And, of course, there is the sunk cost of paying your frontline to hunt instead of help.

The SKU Matrix: Why Footwear Retailers Face an Uphill Inventory Accuracy Battle

In the retail sector, inventory inaccuracy is a systemic issue. In fact, a study on inventory discrepancies by The University of Chicago and Harvard Business School revealed that retailers average a meager 65% inventory accuracy rate. Crucially, the study also revealed that footwear retailers face a staggering 26.4% category-level variance, compounding an already deep operational challenge.

So, what makes the footwear segment uniquely difficult?

1.       Footwear requires highly complex SKU matrices. Unlike general apparel, a single shoe style demands an extensive spectrum of sizes, widths and colors. A single product can easily translate into dozens upon dozens of unique SKUs.

2.       Constant product movement breeds floor chaos. Customers frequently move shoes around the store as they try on different sizes. Because of how shoeboxes are stacked and handled, a pristine sales floor can descend into disorganized clutter in a matter of hours.

3.       Inventory shrinkage is disproportionately high. A report by Mordor Intelligence reveals that footwear retailers lose approximately $4 billion to shrink annually, with a third of those losses stemming from operational issues.

Ultimately, these factors create a perfect storm of inventory inaccuracy. The problem only worsens when retailers try to manage a high-volume, high-movement digital system using slow, manual processes and solutions. There are simply too many SKUs and too much physical product movement for any store team to realistically manage manually.

Data Disconnect: 5 Common Ways Your Inventory Accuracy Goes Astray

The true inventory problem for many footwear retailers isn’t a lack of data; they often have the insights needed to prevent these losses. The real issue is the execution gap between those insights and the frontline. What good is data if your team can’t use it to make timely, strategic decisions when it matters most?

Let’s look at five ways this data disconnect might be impacting your bottom line:

1.       Your Hero Display is MIA
Shoppers visit your store to see shoes, not empty shelves. Yet, when a display shoe is sold and never replenished, it directly impacts your bottom line. How often is a missing display costing you a sale? Does your system automatically alert employees the moment a display model is sold, or does that high-value spotlight stay empty?

2.       Returns Processes That Drive Loss
Does your data drive critical inspection workflows for your frontline team? Are they receiving real-time alerts to flag suspicious returns? Without direct, actionable data, damaged items can easily slip back onto the sales floor. Meanwhile, perfectly sellable returns sit forgotten in the backroom, silently turning into unaccounted shrink.

3.       The ROI-Task Disconnect
Not all retail tasks are created equal. If you aren't assigning a monetary value to the tasks your frontline executes, you are missing massive opportunities to increase efficiency and revenue. Smart execution requires tying action to financial impact. Imagine if your system tells corporate: “by executing the automated display-replenishment tasks this week, store 104 recovered $4,200 of at-risk revenue.”

4.       Human Bottlenecks from Manual Processes
When you have millions of data points to monitor, automation is no longer optional; it is the engine of a proactive, real-time response. If you can’t solve problems before they become problems, you create a perpetual loop of chaos, confusion and new fires that need to be put out. Footwear retailers need real-time visibility to instantly spot inventory discrepancies and a system that automatically sends corrective tasks directly to an associate’s mobile device the moment they are needed.

5.       Needing a Search Party to Find Missing Inventory
As we saw with Rebecca and Mateen, if it takes a small army to locate a pair of shoes while a frustrated customer is on the verge of walking out, what is that truly costing you? A lost sale means lost customer loyalty, wasted frontline hours, and diminished brand trust; all compounding into massive revenue leaks. With RFID integrated into inventory data, your associates could be guided directly to that missing shoe box in seconds, saving valuable time.

The Bottom Line…

You can’t sell what you can’t count, and you can’t count on not selling. The staggering financial impact of poor inventory accuracy should serve as an urgent wake-up call for store operations leaders; especially those in the footwear sector.

The productivity drain from manual searches is substantial, but the upside of fixing it is equally significant. Our latest research with Oxford Economics reveals that retailers who improved their operations reported a 3.3-percentage-point gain in employee productivity.

Retailers can eliminate this operational friction by taking decisive steps to automate inventory management using advanced technologies. By deploying AI-driven analytics, RFID integration, and dynamic frontline communication tools, stores can finally end the era of manual searches and chasing ghosts, replacing them with real-time accuracy, structural organization, and protected profit margins.

If you are interested in learning how Zebra can help your business protect profit margins contact us here.

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