There are items that sell OK but are overshipped, if that makes sense. For example, Laura Scott sells OK but it doesn't warrant 500 sweaters/T-shirts/cardigans of each color/pattern.
Other things don't sell well (or barely sell), like all of those novelty Joe Boxer socks (filled two 36 x 36 x 36 rolling bins with them last year, only 1/2 off one bin sold), the hand soap (about 150 boxes worth, with 24 in each case, haven't had a need to replenish what is already out on the salesfloor), stationery, pillows (way too many varieties and lots of redundancy, it confuses customers) and so on, yet we still receive this stuff.
Softlines needs to be overhauled and shrunk down. In some stores it should just be eliminated. Apparel is no longer the reason why people come to Sears. Sell the basic stuff that sells well. No two stores are the same and should not be "uniform". It is OK to add or drop categories and brands based on historical sales figures for a particular store. To a lesser extent, hardlines could use this model too. For example, nobody is buying fancy "premium" appliances in a working class, conservative town. Use the floor space for "domestic" appliances in the mid-range price point.
I'm not sure why the company doesn't handle their inventory and assortments on a granular, dynamic level, handling the stores on an individual basis and enabling the store managers to have a say in how their store should be stocked. Think of the money that would be saved and how that would be paving the way to profitability.