Basic Units and Packages Columns
In some reports there are columns with the number of basic units or packages in the planogram. This manual explains what the values in each column mean.
- Min Planned Width Packages: The minimum number of packages planned to be placed in width (side by side). This is the minimum set on the block for the package.
Max Planned Width Packages: The maximum number of packages planned to be placed in width (side by side) = the number of packages actually placed in width in the planogram.
Min Planned Height Packages: The minimum number of packages planned to be placed in height (one above the other). This is the minimum set on the block for the package.
Max Planned Height Packages: The maximum number of packages planned to be placed in height (one above the other) = the number of packages actually placed in height in the planogram.
Min Planned Front Packages: The minimum number of packages planned to be placed in front = number of packages side by side x number of packages one above the other. These are the width and height minimums set on the block for the package.
Max Planned Front Packages: The maximum number of packages planned to be placed in front = the number of packages actually placed side by side x one above the other.
Min Planned Depth Packages: The minimum number of packages planned to be placed in depth (behind each other). This is the minimum set on the block for the package.
Max Planned Depth Packages: The maximum number of packages planned to be placed in depth (behind each other) = the number of packages actually placed in depth in the planogram.
Min Planned Packages Total: The minimum number of packages planned to be placed in total (width x height x depth). This is the minimum set on the block for the package (min width x min height x min depth).
Max Planned Packages Total: How many packages in total are actually placed in the planogram.
Max Fitting Height Packages: How many packages of this product can fit in the shelf in which the package is placed, in height.
Max Fitting Depth Packages: How many packages of this product will fit in the shelf in which the package is placed, in depth.
Max Fitting Packages: What is the maximum capacity of the shelf in which the package is placed if the number of front packages remains the same. Calculation: Front Packages x Max Fitting Depth Packages.
Packages Shelf Capacity: What is the maximum shelf capacity if the number of packages displayed in width remains the same. Calculation: Horizontal Packages x Max Fitting Height Packages x Max Fitting Depth Packages.
Min Planned Basic Units Wide: The minimum number of units planned to be displayed in width (side by side). This is the minimum set on the block for the product.
Max Planned Basic Units Wide: The maximum number of units planned to be placed in width (side by side) = the number of pieces actually placed in width in the planogram.
Min Planned Basic Units Front: The minimum number of units planned to be placed in front (width x height). This is the minimum set on the block for the product (min width x min height).
Max Planned Basic Units Front: The maximum number of units planned to be placed in front (in width x height) = the number of pieces actually placed in front in the planogram.
Min Planned Basic Units: The minimum number of units planned to be placed in total (width x height x depth). This is the minimum set on the block for the product (min width x min height x min depth).
Max Planned Basic Units: The maximum number of units planned to be placed in total (in width x in height x in depth) = number of pieces actually placed in the planogram in total.
Max Fitting Basic Units: What is the maximum capacity of the shelf in which the product is placed if the placed front basic units remains the same
Basic Units Shelf Capacity: What is the maximum capacity of the shelf if the placed horizontal basic units remains the same.
The columns relating to packages and basic units show the same information, but where they relate to the package column, a package that may contain more than one basic unit is taken into account. For example, a family package of 4 yoghurts. If you do not use packages in Quant, each package automatically has only 1 basic unit and then these columns will display the same value.