When Target announced its 2026 reset, the press focused on price cuts across thousands of SKUs. The more telling number was the multibillion-dollar parallel investment in stores, remodels, supply chain, and guest experience. Target paired the two moves. Most retail ‘value’ strategies still pick one.
In meeting after meeting, I hear the same split: one team talks price cuts, promotions, and private label; another, often in a different room, talks delayed store tasks, weak inventory accuracy, poor substitutions, late pickup orders, and rising fulfillment costs. Both conversations are about value. Treating them as separate is the mistake.
Deloitte’s 2026 retail outlook reaches the same conclusion many operators have already drawn from their P&L: AI, fulfillment, and operational resilience are no longer side stories. They are core competitive levers, sitting alongside price and assortment in the value conversation.
The uncomfortable truth: value is no longer a pricing tactic. It is an operating model.
The Misdiagnosis
When leaders say they are “focused on value,” they usually mean one of three things: lower prices, sharper promotions, or more private label. Each helps. None is sufficient.
A retailer can cut prices and still destroy margin through poor allocation and weak replenishment. A strong promotion can still disappoint if shelves are empty, substitutions are wrong, or pickup orders arrive late. Expanding private label can add confusion if assortments swell and store execution is uneven.
Amazon’s ongoing rollout of paid one-hour and three-hour delivery underscores the same shift: speed and convenience now sit inside the value conversation. The winners are not trying simply to look cheaper. They are trying to work better.
The Four Operational Pillars of Value
Value is won or lost in four places. The order matters: inventory comes first because every other pillar assumes it.
1. Inventory discipline
Inventory is the clearest expression of value. Customers do not care how sophisticated the planning engine is if the shelf is empty or the order is late.
Industry research, including work from the Auburn University RFID Lab, consistently places inventory accuracy at most non-RFID retailers in the 65 to 75 percent range. Every downstream system – forecasting, allocation, pickup promises, low-stock messaging, silently depends on accuracy it does not fully have. The retailer ends up paying for sophisticated decisioning sitting on top of a foundation that lies to it.
AI can help with forecasting and prioritization. It cannot rescue bad item data, inaccurate counts, or weak execution. Discipline – accurate data, reliable counts, fast exceptions – is the prerequisite.
Problem: Most non-RFID retailers operate at 65 to 75 percent inventory accuracy and treat the number as an operations metric.
KPI to watch: Item-level accuracy at store and DC, not the aggregate. The aggregate hides catastrophic local accuracy.
One action this quarter: Move inventory accuracy onto the CFO’s monthly review. The reporting line is the lever.
2. Assortment clarity
Complexity is often misread as choice. To shoppers, excessive SKUs feel like friction, not abundance.
The rationalization opportunity is rarely just the long tail. It is also the 30 to 40 percent of items in the middle of the assortment that duplicate each other across price ladders and brands. Individually, each is defensible. Together, they clutter the shelf, confuse the customer, and dilute the private label they were meant to anchor.
Consider Aldi. The chain operates with roughly 1,400 SKUs against a typical conventional grocer’s 30,000-plus, and has grown into one of the fastest-expanding US grocery formats through exactly that discipline. The point is not that every retailer should adopt Aldi’s model. The point is that radical assortment clarity, executed with conviction, is itself a value proposition shoppers actively choose.
Tariff volatility makes the rationalization more urgent. When landed costs move, category roles and entry price points move with them. The retailer that simplifies without becoming bland gains real ground.
Problem: 30 to 40 percent of items in most retail assortments duplicate each other in the middle of the price ladder.
KPI to watch: SKU count per category against attach rate; private-label share inside rationalized categories.
One action this quarter: Audit your top three categories for middle-tier duplication before the next tariff move shifts landed costs.
3. Labor productivity
Value is also a labor economics question. Poor task sequencing, duplicate checks, unclear priorities, and bad replenishment timing make stores expensive and unreliable. Long lines, faded displays, missed picks, and late pickups erode perceived value even when prices look attractive.
The next productivity gains in many chains will come from simpler task design, cleaner exception handling, and smarter deployment of labor to high-value work, not from another shiny tool. Start by simplifying the work. Then automate.
Problem: Associates spend too much time on duplicate checks, low-value tasks, and exception chasing.
KPI to watch: Share of associate hours spent on customer-facing work versus back-of-house administrative work.
One action this quarter: Build a stop-doing list before evaluating the next automation tool. Pilot in six stores; measure same-store availability.
4. Fulfillment economics
Convenience has become part of value. Customers now judge value by how much friction the retailer removes: reliable pickup windows, sensible substitutions, fast local delivery, easy returns.
But convenience is costly when poorly executed. Speed without predictability is a margin leak. A 90-minute promise that lands consistently is worth more than a 30-minute promise that slips one order in five. A 6 percent substitution rate handled well, explained clearly, with sensible swaps and easy returns, protects trust better than a 3 percent rate handled badly. The product is not speed alone. It is predictability and trust.
Problem: Retailers compete on speed; customers reward predictability.
KPI to watch: Promise-keep rate by time window; substitution acceptance rate by category.
One action this quarter: Pilot a predictable-window offer in two metros against a same-day promise in two comparable metros; measure NPS and repeat-order rate.
One Question for Leadership Teams
When a retailer says it is focused on value, ask: are we investing only in the price story, or are we also investing in the operating discipline that makes the price story believable? If the answer is mainly pricing and promotions, the retailer is probably underestimating the challenge.
A 90-Day Diagnostic
Six diagnostics worth running in the next ninety days:
- Audit item-level inventory accuracy on your top 200 SKUs. If it lands below 90 percent, accuracy belongs on the CFO’s monthly review.
- Run a duplication audit on your three largest categories. Identify the items that are individually defensible but collectively redundant.
- Build a stop-doing list for store associates before evaluating the next labor automation tool.
- Measure promise-keep rate by fulfillment window, not just average delivery time.
- Identify the top 50 SKUs by lost-sales risk and route them to a daily exception dashboard.
- Pair the next promotional cycle with a parallel allocation review. Promotions without inventory readiness become trust erosions in disguise.
In 2026, value is earned not just through price, but through how the business actually runs.

