Velocity Metrics
How fast it sells where it's stocked. Velocity metrics divide sales by distribution to reveal selling power per point of availability — distinguishing a genuinely strong product from one that's just widely stocked.
- Term
- Velocity metrics
- Measure
- Sales per point of distribution
- Isolate
- Selling power from availability
- Reveal
- True product strength vs mere reach
Parts of speech & senses
- Velocity metrics measure how fast a product sells relative to its distribution — sales per point of distribution — separating a product's selling power from mere availability. "High velocity meant the product sold fast wherever it was stocked."
What velocity metrics are
Velocity metrics measure how fast a product sells relative to its distribution — its rate of sale per unit of availability, rather than its total sales. The core idea is sales per point of distribution: dividing a product's sales by a measure of its distribution (such as %ACV or number of stores) to isolate how productively it sells where it's available. A common form is sales per point of %ACV distribution (or sales per store per week, etc.). Velocity separates a product's intrinsic selling power — how well it sells where stocked — from the breadth of its distribution, answering 'how fast does this sell where it's available?' rather than just 'how much does it sell in total?'.
Velocity matters because total sales conflate two very different things: how widely a product is distributed and how well it sells where distributed. A product could have high total sales because it's everywhere (wide distribution) even if it sells slowly per store (low velocity), or have modest total sales because it's in few stores even though it sells fast wherever stocked (high velocity, limited distribution). Velocity isolates the selling-power dimension, revealing the product's intrinsic strength independent of its distribution breadth — which is essential for understanding what's really driving (or limiting) sales and what to do about it.
Why velocity reveals what total sales hide
Velocity metrics reveal the crucial distinction between distribution and demand. High velocity (fast sales per point of distribution) signals genuine product strength — strong demand, the product sells well wherever it's available — which means expanding distribution would likely drive more sales (a clear growth opportunity). Low velocity (slow sales per point of distribution) signals a demand or execution problem — the product is available but not selling well — which means more distribution won't help much; the issue is the product, price, positioning, or merchandising, not its reach. Total sales alone can't tell these apart; velocity can.
This makes velocity central to diagnosing retail performance and directing action. A product with high velocity but limited distribution should be expanded (it sells well where available — get it into more stores, especially high-ACV ones). A product with wide distribution but low velocity has a demand problem to fix, not a distribution one (more stores would just add slow-selling points). Retailers also use velocity to decide what to stock and keep — high-velocity products earn their shelf space, while low-velocity ones risk delisting. So velocity is both a brand diagnostic (is the constraint demand or distribution?) and a determinant of retailer decisions (does the product earn its shelf?), making it one of the most important lenses in retail analysis.
Using velocity metrics well
Using velocity metrics well means measuring sales relative to distribution to isolate selling power, reading velocity alongside distribution to diagnose performance, and acting on what the combination reveals. High velocity with limited distribution signals an expansion opportunity (grow distribution); low velocity with wide distribution signals a demand problem (fix the product, price, positioning, or merchandising, not the distribution). It means using velocity to identify genuinely strong products worth expanding, weak products that need fixing rather than more distribution, and the evidence (velocity) that justifies winning shelf space from retailers, who reward products that sell fast.
The failures are judging products by total sales alone (conflating distribution and selling power), expanding distribution of low-velocity products (adding slow-selling points rather than fixing demand), and not using velocity to diagnose whether a product's constraint is demand or reach. The discipline is to use velocity metrics to isolate selling power from availability — diagnosing whether to grow distribution (high velocity) or fix demand (low velocity), and proving selling power to earn shelf — recognizing velocity as the metric that reveals true product strength and the right action, which total sales, conflating reach and demand, cannot.
Synonyms & antonyms
Synonyms
Antonyms
Origin & history
Velocity metrics — sales per point of distribution — isolate selling power from availability, revealing whether a product's constraint is demand or reach and which action total sales alone cannot show.
Etymology: source.
Usage trends
Search interest for this term over the last five years:
Common questions
- What are velocity metrics?
- Measures of how fast a product sells relative to its distribution — sales per point of distribution (e.g., sales per point of %ACV, or per store per week) — isolating a product's selling power from how widely it's available.
- Why does velocity matter more than total sales?
- Because total sales conflate distribution breadth and selling power — a product could sell a lot by being everywhere yet sell slowly per store. Velocity isolates how well a product sells where available, revealing its intrinsic strength and the right action.
- What does velocity tell you to do?
- High velocity with limited distribution signals an expansion opportunity (grow distribution); low velocity with wide distribution signals a demand problem to fix (product, price, positioning, merchandising) — and high velocity helps earn shelf from retailers.
Resources & people to follow
- referenceRGM analysis — definitions, senses, and usage verified per term
Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.
Related training
Disciplines
Areas of marketing where velocity metrics is a core concern: