Front-of-store mix is 60% of basket contribution. The wrong 12 SKUs on the counter costs more than a bad promo. Nobody models it at SKU × store × week.
POS & retail intelligence for accessories and jewelry retail.
Accessories chains live on impulse mix, gift-season spikes, and a long-tail that is mostly for breadth. Kwanta runs the pricing, promo, and assortment math behind all three.
Three places accessories P&Ls leak.
The bottom half of the SKU base drives a few percent of revenue. It earns its place on breadth alone — until you can measure it. Then half of it goes.
Q4, Valentine’s, Mother’s Day — promo windows are predictable but timing of the depth curve is not. Over-discount early and you leave margin on the table.
How the agents show up for an accessories chain.
The same six agents, contextualized for the accessories shelf, the jewelry counter, and the gift-season calendar.
Curates the impulse mix at front-of-store by basket contribution — the 12 SKUs that quietly carry the quarter.
Promo depth and cadence for gift seasons. Discounts only the SKUs that need it, not the flagship line.
Attribution for low-unit-price, high-frequency categories. Separates gift-purchase behavior from self-purchase.
Catches fast-movers on the front counter. Triggers replenishment between stores on the impulse mix, not after.
Reads margin by category and price-band. Flags the long-tail SKUs quietly turning into working-capital dead weight.
Gift-occasion sequences. Reminder cadence on Valentine’s, birthdays, Mother’s Day — triggered by first purchase.
Plugs into the accessories retail stack.
Marketplaces, e-commerce, legacy POS — all read, all writable.
You are a Kwanta accessories retailer if…
“Finally a POS that treats the front-of-store mix as a real asset — not a merchandising afterthought. We see which 12 SKUs carried the quarter, by store.”
See it on your mix.
Accessories chains get the most out of agent-driven curation. Short call first — we will know if it fits within 20 minutes.