How to Set Product Assortment Efficiency Benchmarks for Your Shopify Store (When Industry Data Doesn’t Exist)
Product assortment efficiency is becoming one of the most important metrics for Shopify store owners – but here’s the truth:
There are no official benchmarks. No universal standards. No clear answer to “What’s a good sales-to-product ratio?”
It’s a new, emerging metric – and that means if you want to track it properly, you need to create your own benchmarks.
Here’s how.
Industry Benchmarks for Product Assortment Efficiency
They don’t exist. Not really.
Unlike conversion rates or ROAS, there’s no reliable public dataset that says “the average fashion store has X sales per product” or “home goods collections should have fewer than 25 SKUs.”
Why?
- Shopify doesn’t provide this metric natively
- Most apps don’t track it
- Every store’s pricing and margins are too different for one-size-fits-all numbers
So if you’re here looking for official numbers – stop. Instead, let’s build your own.
What “Good” Efficiency Looks Like by Store Size
Here’s a simple idea:
- Large stores often need lower sales-to-product ratios — more long tail, more browsing
- Small stores should aim for higher ratios – tighter inventory, clearer merchandising
Hypothetical:
Store Type | Products | Monthly Sales | Sales-to-Product Ratio |
---|---|---|---|
Boutique fashion | 50 | €25,000 | €500 per product |
Mid-sized electronics | 300 | €60,000 | €200 per product |
General home decor | 800 | €40,000 | €50 per product |
These aren’t rules – just logic. More products doesn’t mean more efficiency. And if you’re selling 15€ candles, your “good” ratio won’t look like someone selling 900€ phones.
Fashion vs Electronics vs Home Goods: Benchmark Differences
Each vertical behaves differently:
- Fashion: high churn, trend-driven, returns-heavy – needs frequent pruning
- Electronics: low volume, high ticket – small collections can do big revenue
- Home goods: wide assortment, evergreen products – long tail matters
So don’t compare your store to another niche. Compare you to you.
The 80/20 Rule Applied to Product Assortment
Across many stores, we see this play out:
- 20% of products drive 80% of sales
- The rest? Often just sitting there.
Use the Sales-to-Product Ratio to prove that. It helps you spot:
- Collections where 5 products do the work of 50
- Categories where half your SKUs haven’t moved in months
Your first benchmark? Figure out how many products are actually pulling weight.
Red Flags: When Your Efficiency Score Needs Immediate Attention
Here’s what to watch out for — even without industry data:
- A collection with dozens of products and little to no revenue
- Subcategories where 80% of SKUs haven’t sold in 90 days
- Tags with more than 10 products but under €500 in sales last month
- Store-wide ratio is dropping month after month
If you’re seeing this, your assortment efficiency needs work.
Seasonal Variations in Assortment Efficiency
Don’t benchmark blindly. Efficiency changes with seasons.
- Some collections spike during holidays (e.g. gifts, partywear)
- Others slow down naturally in off-peak months
- Sales-to-product ratios often dip in high-product-launch periods
The fix? Compare each collection to its own past performance — not just a store average.
Setting Realistic Improvement Targets for Your Store
Here’s a simple process to build your own product efficiency metric:
- Pick a baseline month (30 or 90 days)
- Calculate sales-to-product ratio per collection
- Calculate store-wide average
- Sort your collections into 3 buckets:
- Above average
- Average
- Below average
- Set goals like:
- “Raise all below-average collections by 20% over the next 2 months”
- “Cut deadweight products from collections below €100 per product”
This approach fits every store — no need for outside benchmarks.
Case Study (Hypothetical): How One Store Improved Efficiency by 40%
Let’s say you run a Shopify store with 400 products and €40,000 in monthly sales. That’s €100 per product store-wide.
But when you break it down:
- 2 collections are doing €5,000 each with 20 products → €250/product
- 4 collections are doing €15,000 combined with 200 products → €75/product
- The rest? 180 products, only €5,000 in sales → €28/product
You trim the lowest-performing 80 SKUs, reorganize your best-sellers into focused collections, and push them harder.
One month later:
- Same product count (just different mix)
- Same total sales
- But now you’re getting €140 per product average — a 40% lift in efficiency
Final Thoughts
If you’ve been searching for product assortment efficiency benchmarks – don’t.
The smartest stores are setting their own benchmarks:
- Based on their data
- Tailored to their pricing
- Aligned with how their customers shop
Start there. Track it monthly. And let your efficiency tell the story.
With tools like Portfolytics, all of this is automatic. Sales-to-product ratios, collection-level analysis, trend tracking – no spreadsheets. Just clarity.
Related:
- How to Analyze Product Tags for Better Merchandising
- How to Identify Underperforming Collections
Want to optimize your Shopify store?
Join the Portfolytics waitlist for early access