What is Product Hierarchy
A product hierarchy is the structured way of organizing products by grouping them into levels based on inherited attributes.
The top levels are usually non-sellable products (most are parent products) that contain standard information and pass it down to the last level, which is the sellable version that customers buy (variants of that parent product), and contain unique attributes like color and size. This setup helps teams manage complex catalogs by showing how products group together and how variants fit under main parents.
In platforms like Plytix, product hierarchies form the foundation for organizing parents, variants, bundles, and non-sellable products, keeping your catalog scalable, clean, and ready for multichannel distribution.
Examples
| Parent and variant | A smartphone (parent) with different storage sizes and colors as variants grouped beneath it. |
| Product bundle | A gaming console sold together with a controller and headset, grouped as one bundle product. |
| Non-sellable product | A shoe style that groups all color and size variants but isn’t sold directly itself. |
| Multi-level variant | A jacket available in colors, and each color variant also has multiple size options as sub-variants. |
| Component relationships | A laptop (parent) with interchangeable parts like RAM and storage, organized under a product hierarchy. |
A brief history
Product hierarchies have traditionally helped businesses organize products based on relationships and variants, primarily in ERP and retail systems to manage SKUs across different locations and assortments.
With the rise of ecommerce and Product Information Management (PIM) platforms, these hierarchies have evolved beyond simple SKU grouping to support complex product relationships, multi-level variants, and both sellable and non-sellable products.
Modern product hierarchies organize data, simplify ordering, and ensure consistency across channels.
Good to know
- Not just for ecommerce: Product hierarchies are also used in B2B catalogs, marketplaces, print catalogs, and product lifecycle tools.
- They support automation: Many PIM platforms use hierarchies to drive inheritance, relationships, and workflows.
- They help control visibility: By defining levels in your hierarchy, you can decide which products are displayed or hidden in different channels.
- They don’t always stop at variants: In complex catalogs, you may have multiple layers (like parent > color > size).
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