In retail and consumer businesses, the Chief Merchandising Officer decides what the business sells — a role at the heart of commercial success. Here is what it involves.
What the role owns
A Chief Merchandising Officer owns the merchandise strategy — deciding what the business sells, how the range is assembled and assorted, how it is priced, and how it is presented to customers. This spans buying, planning, assortment, pricing, and often the relationships with brands or suppliers. In retail especially, getting these decisions right is much of what determines commercial success.
At the heart of commercial performance
Merchandising sits at the centre of a retail or consumer business's commercial engine: the right products, in the right quantities, at the right prices, presented the right way. A Chief Merchandising Officer's decisions directly shape sales, margin, and inventory — which is why the role is so consequential in businesses where the offer is the business.
Product instinct and analytical rigour
Strong merchandising leaders combine genuine product and customer instinct — a feel for what will sell and why — with analytical rigour around planning, pricing, and inventory. Instinct without discipline leads to over-buying and markdowns; discipline without instinct produces a safe, uninspiring offer. The best hold both, and that combination is what the role demands.
How it relates to other roles
The Chief Merchandising Officer works closely with the commercial, product, and marketing functions, and the exact boundaries vary by business. Broadly, merchandising owns what is sold and how it is assorted and priced, while marketing drives demand for it and product develops it. Clarity on these boundaries matters when hiring.
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Explore Commercial Search →Frequently asked questions
What does a Chief Merchandising Officer do?
They own what a business sells — the product range, buying, assortment, pricing, and merchandising strategy — decisions that directly shape sales, margin, and inventory, especially in retail and multi-brand consumer businesses.
What makes a great merchandising leader?
Genuine product and customer instinct — a feel for what will sell — paired with analytical rigour around planning, pricing, and inventory. Instinct without discipline leads to markdowns; discipline without instinct produces an uninspiring offer.
Related: What Does a Chief Commercial Officer Do? · What Does a Chief Product Officer Do? · How to Hire a Retail CEO

