Retail Operations Glossary. Essential terms for store execution teams

Retail has its own language. This glossary brings together 60 essential store operations terms, from perfect store execution and task management to planograms, operational compliance and KPI, with clear definitions and practical context so every member of your team is on the same page.

A

AI Visual Audit

Use of computer vision to assess, from in-store photographs, whether corporate standards are being met. Its scope goes well beyond planogram validation: it covers product quality control (detection of damaged, expired, or mislabeled items), order and cleanliness checks, evaluation of staff appearance on the sales floor, validation of promotions and campaign rollouts, and assessment of infrastructure and equipment conditions. It replaces subjective manual inspections with objective, automated measurements. The AI compares each image against corporate standards, assigns compliance scores, and triggers corrective tasks when deviations are detected. It dramatically reduces audit time, increases measurement frequency, and enables scaling execution control across the entire store network.

Assortment

The set of products available for sale in a store, defined by category, brand, and SKU. The optimal assortment balances customer variety with business profitability. Compliance with the planned assortment is a critical execution metric, especially in chains with high complexity across formats or regions.

Average Ticket

The average value of each transaction in a store, calculated by dividing total sales by the number of transactions. Lifting it is one of the most efficient growth levers, because it does not require attracting more visitors. Up-selling, cross-selling, and display techniques all directly influence this indicator.

B

Back Office (Store)

The set of administrative and operational processes that take place behind the sales floor: cash reconciliation, reception, staff management, reporting, and documentation. A solid digital back office frees up time so the team can focus on customer service.

C

CMMS (Computerized Maintenance Management System)

Software for planning, executing, and recording maintenance of equipment and infrastructure. In stores, it is used to keep refrigeration units, HVAC, scales, ovens, and electrical systems running.

Conversion Rate (In-Store)

The percentage of visitors who end up making a purchase. It is calculated by dividing the number of transactions by the number of visits and multiplying the result by 100. It is one of the indicators most sensitive to in-store execution: product availability, staff attentiveness, and layout organization all directly impact this metric.

Cross-Selling and Up-Selling

Cross-selling means offering complementary products to what the customer is already buying. Up-selling means offering a higher-end or premium version of the same product. Both techniques increase average ticket size and are easy to measure once the sales process is properly digitized.

Customer Success

A function or team within a company, especially in SaaS businesses, focused on making sure clients get the most value from the platform they have contracted. Unlike reactive support, Customer Success works proactively: it accompanies implementation, measures adoption, identifies churn risks, and proposes data-driven improvements in how the product is used. In the context of store execution platforms, the Customer Success team acts as a bridge between the client’s operational needs and the product’s capabilities.

D

Digital Checklist

An electronic form accessible on mobile devices that replaces the paper checklist. It captures evidence such as photos, geolocation, and signatures; applies conditional logic; triggers action plans when issues are found; and consolidates results in real-time dashboards. It is the foundation of any solid operational audit program in retail.

Document Management

The process of storing, organizing, and providing controlled access to key operational documents: manuals, certifications, contracts, supplier files, and official announcements. In a store, this means staff can find the right procedure in seconds without having to call headquarters.

F

Facing

The number of units of the same product visible at the front of a shelf. The correct facing is defined in the planogram and is one of the most frequently audited indicators, because it directly affects product visibility and rotation.

Foot Traffic

The number of people who enter a store during a given period. It is measured with door sensors or cameras with automatic counting. It is the foundation for calculating conversion rate and for evaluating the real impact of marketing campaigns on visits.

G

Generative AI in Retail

The use of language and image models to automate tasks such as drafting announcements, generating action plans, summarizing reports, answering questions from store staff, and analyzing audit photos. Its real value lies in operationalizing brand knowledge and delivering it to each frontline worker at the right moment.

GMP (Good Manufacturing Practices)

A set of standards that ensures products, especially food and pharmaceuticals, are produced and handled safely and hygienically. In retail, it applies to supermarkets, pharmacies, and food service. Chains typically audit GMP through digital checklists to avoid penalties and protect consumer health.

H

HACCP

Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points. A preventive system for analyzing hazards and critical control points across the food chain. It is mandatory for supermarkets, food service operators, and food producers. Chains audit it through digital checklists to ensure food safety and avoid regulatory penalties.

I

Image Recognition

Computer vision technology that identifies products, people, empty spaces, or visual elements in photos and videos. In retail, it is used to validate planograms, detect out-of-shelf situations, measure traffic, and analyze customer behavior.

ISO 27001

An international standard for information security management. Certification is required by many enterprise clients and demonstrates that a company protects its own and its users’ data in accordance with audited standards. In B2B SaaS, it has become almost mandatory as a mark of trust.

K

KPI (Key Performance Indicator)

A quantitative metric that reflects how well a business objective is being met. In retail, the most commonly used KPIs include sales per square meter, conversion rate, average ticket, sell-out, shrinkage, and service level. The point is not to track many KPIs, but to track the few that actually drive decisions.

L

Like-for-Like (LFL) or Comparable Sales

A comparison of sales between the same period in two different years, counting only the stores that were operating in both. It isolates the effect of openings and closures and reveals the real growth of the operation. It is one of the most closely watched indicators by investors and retail CEOs.

Loss Prevention

The discipline that combines processes, technology, and people to reduce shrinkage from theft, error, or damage. It includes inventory control, surveillance cameras, cash-handling protocols, staff training, and surprise audits. Digital platforms have transformed this function by enabling near-real-time pattern detection.

M

Mean Time to Resolution (MTTR)

The average time that passes from the moment an operational incident is reported until it is resolved and the ticket is closed. It is the single most important indicator of helpdesk efficiency in retail. It is calculated by summing all resolution times in a period and dividing by the number of closed tickets. A low MTTR points to an agile support operation; a high one points to bottlenecks in triage, diagnosis, or the execution of fixes.

Mobile-First

A design philosophy that prioritizes the mobile experience over desktop. In store operations it is critical, because staff spend most of their day on the sales floor rather than in front of a computer. A good mobile-first app reduces friction, speeds up data capture, and drives higher adoption.

Mystery Shopper

A person who evaluates a store by posing as a customer and then fills out a questionnaire about the experience. It is a classic methodology for measuring service quality. Today, it is complemented by digital audits and automated scoring based on POS data and camera footage.

N

Non-Conformity Rate

The percentage of items evaluated in an audit that fail to meet the defined standard. It is calculated by dividing the number of non-conforming findings by the total points audited and multiplying by 100. It is a key metric for tracking the operational health of a store or chain over time, prioritizing action plans, and comparing performance across locations. Consistent tracking of this rate enables spotting deterioration trends before they affect the customer experience.

O

Offline-First

The ability of an application to work without an internet connection and sync data once the signal is restored. It is essential for remote stores, basement locations, and any mobile operation where connectivity is not guaranteed.

Operational Audit

A systematic review of how well a store or chain is following its procedures and standards, usually supported by digital forms or checklists. Its purpose is to identify deviations, document evidence, and trigger corrective action plans. In modern retail, it is carried out on mobile platforms that allow teams to attach photos, capture geolocation, and sign digitally.

Operational Compliance

Adherence to internal policies, legal regulations, and brand standards at every store. It goes beyond strict legal compliance: it includes customer service protocols, product display, shrinkage handling, and security procedures. Store execution platforms enable real-time compliance measurement.

Operational Dashboard

A visual panel that consolidates the most important operational KPIs of a store or chain on a single screen, usually in real time. It allows managers and supervisors to quickly spot deviations and make data-driven decisions without having to read lengthy reports.

Operational Excellence

A management philosophy focused on eliminating waste, standardizing processes, and continuously improving operational efficiency. In retail, it translates into fewer stockouts, less shrinkage, higher employee productivity, and a better customer experience.

Operational Fragmentation

The situation in which a chain runs its operations across multiple disconnected tools, such as Excel, informal chats, email, paper forms, and legacy systems, with no single source of truth. It produces errors, duplicated work, lost information, and high hidden costs. Resolving it is one of the most underestimated productivity levers in retail.

Operational Incident

Any event that interrupts or degrades the normal operation of a store: a miscalibrated scale, a down card reader, a critical stockout, a difficult customer. Good handling depends on how quickly the incident is detected, assigned, resolved, and documented. Digital platforms enable this cycle to be closed in minutes rather than days.

Operational Routines

The set of standardized tasks performed on a defined cadence — daily, weekly, or monthly — at every store: opening, closing, replenishment, cleaning, counts, and equipment checks. Digitizing them ensures compliance, leaves a clear audit trail, and frees up supervisor time for analysis and coaching.

Operational Shrinkage

Inventory loss from causes other than sales: internal or external theft, damage, expiration, or administrative error. It is measured as a percentage of sales. Reducing shrinkage by one or two percentage points can equal the entire margin of a store, which is why it is a permanent focus of loss prevention programs.

Out of Shelf (OOS)

The situation in which a product is missing from the shelf, even though stock may still be available in the store’s back room. It is one of the most common causes of lost sales and is controlled through periodic visual audits, ideally supported by AI to detect empty spaces in photos.

P

Perfect Store

A concept that defines the ideal state of a store in terms of full assortment, planogram compliance, correct prices, visible POP material, products in optimal condition, and trained staff. It is measured with a score that combines several indicators and is often used as a target for team incentive programs.

Phantom Inventory

The mismatch between the stock a system records as available and the stock that physically exists in the store. In other words, the system shows units of a product, but those units cannot be found either on the shelf or in the back room. Common causes include recording errors, undetected theft, damaged goods not written off, and receiving mistakes. Phantom inventory is especially damaging because it prevents automatic replenishment systems from generating orders, prolonging the stockout without triggering any alert. Detecting it requires frequent cycle counts and cross-checking data between the POS, the WMS, and the store’s physical inventory.

Planogram

A detailed diagram that defines how each product should be displayed on a shelf: position, number of facings, height, and order. It is the visual translation of the commercial agreement with brands and of the assortment strategy. Compliance is typically audited weekly or monthly through photos compared against the official layout.

POP Material

Point-of-Purchase material: posters, hangers, displays, shelf stoppers, vinyl decals, and banners. Installing it correctly in accordance with the promotional plan is one of the most audited elements of store execution, because missing POP reduces campaign visibility and undermines commercial agreements with brands.

POS (Point of Sale)

POS refers specifically to the physical location where the payment transaction is processed and, by extension, to the combined software and hardware that records it: the terminal, the barcode scanner, the receipt printer, and the checkout software. The POS is the primary source of transactional data: sales, average ticket, items sold, peak hours, and payment methods. Its integration with operational platforms enables connecting execution to business results.

Product Availability

The percentage of products from the planned assortment that a customer actually finds on the shelf at the moment of purchase. It is one of the most critical store execution metrics, because each missing product represents a lost sale and a potential customer shift to a competitor. It differs from pure stock-out because there may be inventory in the back room even though the product is not available to shoppers. Improving it depends on coordinated replenishment, frequent visual audits, and real-time visibility into shelf conditions.

R

Retail Chain

A network of stores operating under the same brand and a centralized set of operating standards. Once a chain grows past 20 to 30 stores, issues of visibility, communication, and consistency become critical and require specialized digital platforms to keep execution aligned.

Retail Helpdesk

A help desk specialized in resolving operational incidents from stores: technical failures, system issues, procedural questions, and staff matters. An efficient helpdesk shortens the time a store operates with problems and frees regional supervisors from acting as constant firefighters.

S

Same-Store Sales (SSS)

A metric that measures sales growth using only the stores that were open in both comparison periods. It is the same as LFL and is the industry’s preferred measure for evaluating a chain’s organic health.

Sell-In and Sell-Out

Sell-in is the sale from the supplier to the retailer; sell-out is the sale from the retailer to the end consumer. The gap between the two defines inventory in transit or in storage. For brands, sell-out is the more meaningful indicator because it measures real demand, not just placement capacity in the chain.

Service Level Agreement (SLA)

A formal agreement on the committed service level: maximum response times, resolution times, availability, and compensation when commitments are missed. In store operations, SLAs apply to the helpdesk, to supplier support, and to internal processes such as the approval of action plans.

Smart Communications

A corporate communication model that prioritizes delivering the right message to the right person at the right moment. It relies on AI to personalize content by role, segment audiences by store or region, and measure whether the message was read, understood, and acted on. It replaces mass email and informal chat groups.

SSO and MFA

Single Sign-On lets a user access multiple applications with a single authentication. Multi-Factor Authentication requires a second credential (a code, biometrics, or an authenticator app) in addition to the password. Both are essential security standards for enterprise SaaS platforms.

Staff Onboarding (Store)

A structured process for bringing on a new team member: paperwork, initial training, system access, team introductions, and support through the first weeks. A solid onboarding significantly reduces early turnover and shortens time to productivity.

Staff Turnover

The percentage of employees who leave the company over a given period, typically a year. In retail, it often exceeds 50 percent across many chains. It carries a large hidden cost: recruiting, training, lost productivity, and the loss of local customer knowledge.

Stock-Out

The absence of a product in the inventory available for sale. It differs from OOS because it can occur both on the shelf and in the back room. Its causes usually trace back to the supply chain or to planning errors. The impact on sales is direct and is calculated by multiplying turnover by days out of stock.

Store Execution

The set of activities that ensure every store operates in accordance with the standards set by headquarters: assortment, display, service, cleanliness, promotional compliance, and operating routines. Strong store execution translates directly into sales, customer satisfaction, and lower shrinkage.

Store Layout

The physical arrangement of shelves, displays, service areas, and checkout within the store. A good layout guides the customer’s path, maximizes exposure to key products, and minimizes friction. It is adjusted by store format and season, and its compliance is part of the operational audit.

T

Task Management for Retail

A system that creates, assigns, executes, and measures operational tasks across a store network, making sure each activity reaches the right role, at the right store, at the right time. It is the backbone of any digitized retail operation and replaces email, informal messaging apps, and spreadsheets as coordination tools.

Ticketing

A system that records, prioritizes, assigns, and tracks requests or incidents as tickets. Every ticket has an owner, a status, an associated SLA, and a full history of comments and actions. It is the backbone of an efficient retail helpdesk.

Trade Marketing

A marketing discipline focused on the distribution channel and sales floor rather than the end consumer. Its goal is to ensure that a brand’s products have the best display, visibility, and rotation inside retailers’ stores. It includes shelf space negotiations, POP material design and distribution, promotional activations, incentive programs for floor teams, and field compliance measurement. Trade marketing execution is tracked with indicators such as share of shelf, planogram compliance, POP material presence, and sell-out by account.

V

Visual Merchandising

A discipline that blends design, marketing, and consumer psychology to present products appealingly and persuasively inside the store. It covers lighting, color, product grouping, traffic flow, and visual storytelling. Solid visual merchandising can lift category sales without changing the assortment.

W

WMS (Warehouse Management System)

A warehouse management system that controls receiving, putaway, picking, packing, and dispatch of merchandise. While it does not live on the sales floor, its proper integration with the POS and with the store operations platform prevents stockouts and inventory errors.

Workflow

An automated flow of work that links tasks, approvals, and notifications according to predefined rules. In retail, it powers post-audit action plans, assortment change approvals, incident escalation, and onboarding of new team members.