Sears Today, Walmart Tomorrow? Why You Don’t Want To Own Any Retail Stocks

Sears Today, Walmart Tomorrow? Why You Don’t Want To Own Any Retail Stocks

(Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Traditional retailers just keep providing more bad newsPayless Shoes said it plans to file bankruptcy next week, closing 500 of its 4,000 stores. Most likely it will follow the path of Radio Shack, which hasn’t made a profit since 2011. Radio Shack filed bankruptcy and shut a gob of stores as part of its “turnaround plan.” Then in February Radio Shack filed its second bankruptcy — most likely killing the chain entirely this time.

Sears Holdings finally admitted it probably can’t survive as a going concern this week. Sears has lost over $10 billion since 2010 — when it last showed a profit — and owes over $4 billion to its creditors. Retail stocks cratered Monday as the list of retailers closing stores accelerated: Sears, KMart, Macy’s, Radio Shack, JCPenney, American Apparel, Abercrombie & Fitch, The Limited, CVS, GNC, Office Depot, HHGregg, The Children’s Place and Crocs are just some of the household names that are slowly (or not so slowly) dying.

None of this should be surprising. By the time CEO Ed Lampert merged KMart with Sears the trend to e-commerce was already pronounced. Anyone could build an excel spreadsheet that would demonstrate as online retail grew, brick-and-mortar retail would decline. In the low margin world of retail, profits would evaporate. It would be a blood bath. Any retailer with any weakness simply would not survive this market shift — and that clearly included outdated store concepts like Sears, KMart and Radio Shack which long ago were outflanked by on-line shopping and trendier storefronts.

 Yet, not everyone is ready to give up on some retailers. Walmart, for example, still trades at $70 per share, which is higher than it traded in 2015 and about where it traded back in 2012. Some investors still think that there are brick-and-mortar outfits that are either immune to the trends, or will survive the shake-out and have higher profits in the future.

And that is why we have to be very careful about business myths. There are a lot of people that believe as markets shrink the ultimate consolidation will leave one, or a few, competitors who will be very profitable. Capacity will go away, and profits will return. In the end, they believe if you are the last buggy whip maker you will be profitable — so investors just need to pick who will be the survivor and wait it out. And, if you believe this, then you have justified owning Walmart.

 Only, markets don’t work that way. As industries consolidate they end up with competitors who either lose money or just barely eke out a small profit. Think about the auto industry, airlines or land-line telecom companies.

Two factors exist which effectively forces all the profits out of these businesses and therefore make it impossible for investors to make money long-term.

First, competitive capacity always remains just a bit too much for the market need. Management, and often investors, simply don’t want to give up in the face of industry consolidation. They keep hoping to reach a rainbow that will save them. So capacity lingers and lingers — always pushing prices down even as costs increase. Even after someone fails, and that capacity theoretically goes away, someone jumps in with great hopes for the future and boosts capacity again. Therefore, excess capacity overhangs the marketplace forcing prices down to break-even, or below, and never really goes away.

Given the amount of retail real estate out there and the bargains being offered to anyone who wants to open, or expand, stores this problem will persist for decades in retail.

Second, demand in most markets keeps declining. Hopefuls project that demand will “stabilize,” thus balancing the capacity and allowing for price increases. Because demand changes aren’t linear, there are often plateaus that make it appear as if demand won’t go down more. But then something changes — an innovation, regulatory change, taste change — and demand takes another hit. And all the hope goes away as profits drop, again.

It is not a successful strategy to try being the “last man standing” in any declining market. No competitor is immune to these forces when markets shift. No matter how big, when trends shift and new forms of competition start growing every old-line company will be negatively affected. Whether fast, or slow, the value of these companies will continue declining until they eventually become worthless.

Nor is it successful long-term to try and segment the business into small groupings which management thinks can be protected. When Xerox brought to market photocopying, small offset press manufacturers (ABDick and Multigraphics ) said not to worry. Xeroxing might be OK in some office installations, but there were customer segments that would forever use lithography. Even as demand shrunk, well into the 1990s, they said that big corporations, industrial users, government entities, schools and other segments would forever need the benefits of lithography, so investors were safe. Today the small offset press market is a tiny fraction of its size in the 1960s. ABDick and Multigraphics both went through rounds of bankruptcies before disappearing. Xerography, its child desktop publishing, and its grandchild electronic screens, killed offset for almost all applications.

So don’t be lured into false hopes by retailers who claim their segment is “protected.” Short-term things might not look bad. But the market has already shifted to e-commerce and this is just round one of change. More and more innovations are coming that will make the need for traditional stores increasingly unnecessary.

Many readers have expressed their disappointment in my chronic warnings about Walmart. But those warnings are no different than my warnings about Sears Holdings. It’s just that the timing may be different. Both companies have been over-investing in assets (brick-and-mortar stores) that are declining in value as they have attempted to defend and extend their old business model. Both radically under-invested in new markets which were cannibalizing their old business. And, in the end, both will end up with the same results.

And this is true for all retailers that depend on traditional brick-and-mortar sales for their revenues and profits — it’s only a matter of when things will go badly, not if. So traditional retail is nowhere that any investor wants to be.

Bigger Is Not Always Better – Why Amazon Is Worth More than Walmart

Bigger Is Not Always Better – Why Amazon Is Worth More than Walmart

This week an important event happened on Wall Street.  The value of Amazon (~$248B) exceeded the value of Walmart (~$233B.)  Given that Walmart is world’s largest retailer, it is pretty amazing that a company launched as an on-line book seller by a former banker only 21 years ago could now exceed what has long been retailing’s juggernaut.

WalMart redefined retail.  Prior to Sam Walton’s dynasty retailing was an industry of department stores and independent retailers.  Retailing was a lot of small operators, primarily highly regional.  Most retailers specialized, and shoppers would visit several stores to obtain things they needed.

But WalMart changed that.  Sam Walton had a vision of consolidating products into larger stores, and opening these larger stores in every town across America.  He set out to create scale advantages in purchasing everything from goods for resale to materials for store construction.  And with those advantages he offered customers lower prices, to lure them away from the small retailers they formerly visited.

And customers were lured.  Today there are very few independent retailers.  WalMart has ~$488B in annual revenues.  That is more than 4 times the size of #2 in USA CostCo, or #1 in France (#3 in world) Carrefour, or #1 in Germany (#4 in world) Schwarz, or #1 in U.K. (#5 in world) Tesco.  Walmart directly employes ~.5% of the entire USA population (about 1 in every 200 people work for Walmart.)  And it is a given that nobody living in America is unaware of Walmart, and very, very few have never shopped there.

But, Walmart has stopped growing.  Since 2011, its revenues have grown unevenly, and on average less than 4%/year.  Worse, it’s profits have grown only 1%/year.  Walmart generates ~$220,000 revenue/employee, while Costco achieves ~$595,000.  Thus its need to keep wages and benefits low, and chronically hammer on suppliers for lower prices as it strives to improve margins.

140805_HO_OutAmazonAnd worse, the market is shifting away from WalMart’s huge, plentiful stores toward on-line shopping.  And this could have devastating consequences for WalMart, due to what economists call “marginal economics.”

As a retailer, Walmart spends 75 cents out of every $1 revenue on the stuff it sells (cost of goods sold.)  That leaves it a gross margin of 25 cents – or 25%.  But, all those stores, distribution centers and trucks create a huge fixed cost, representing 20% of revenue.  Thus, the net profit margin before taxes is a mere 5% (Walmart today makes about 5 cents on every $1 revenue.)

But, as sales go from brick-and-mortar to on-line, this threatens that revenue base.  At Sears, for example, revenues per store have been declining for over 4 years.  Suppose that starts to happen at Walmart; a slow decline in revenues.  If revenues drop by 10% then every $100 of revenue shrinks to $90.  And the gross margin (25%) declines to $22.50.  But those pesky store costs remain stubbornly fixed at $20.  Now profits to $2.50 – a 50% decline from what they were before.

A relatively small decline in revenue (10%) has a 5x impact on the bottom line (50% decline.) The “marginal revenue”, is that last 10%.  What the company achieves “on the margin.”  It has enormous impact on profits.  And now you know why retailers are open 7 days a week, and 18 to 24 hours per day.  They all desperately want those last few “marginal revenues” because they are what makes – or breaks – their profitability.

All those scale advantages Sam Walton created go into reverse if revenues decline.  Now the big centralized purchasing, the huge distribution centers, and all those big stores suddenly become a cost Walmart cannot avoid.  Without growing revenues, Walmart, like has happened at Sears, could go into a terrible profit tailspin.

And that is what Amazon is trying to do.  Amazon is changing the way Americans shop.  From stores to on-line.  And the key to understanding why this is deadly to Walmart and other big traditional retailers is understanding that all Amazon (and its brethren on line) need to do is chip away at a few percentage points of the market.  They don’t have to obtain half of retail.  By stealing just 5-10% they put many retailers, they ones who are weak, right out of business.  Like Radio Shack and Circuit City.  And they suck the profits out of others like Sears and Best Buy.  And they pose a serious threat to WalMart.

And Amazon is succeeding.  It has grown at almost 30%/year since 2010.  That growth has not been due to market growth, it has been created by stealing sales from traditional retailers.  And Amazon achieves $621,000 revenue per employee, while having a far less fixed cost footprint.

What the marketplace looks for is that point at which the shift to on-line is dramatic enough, when on-line retailers have enough share, that suddenly the fixed cost heavy traditional retail business model is no longer supportable.  When brick-and-mortar retailers lose just enough share that their profits start the big slide backward toward losses.  Simultaneously, the profits of on-line retailers will start to gain significant upward momentum.

And this week, the marketplace started saying that time could be quite near.  Amazon had a small profit, surprising many analysts.  It’s revenues are now almost as big as Costco, Tesco – and bigger than Target and Home Depot.  If it’s pace of growth continues, then the value which was once captured in Walmart stock will shift, along with the marketplace, to Amazon.

In May, 2010 Apple’s value eclipsed Microsoft.  Five years later, Apple is now worth double Microsoft – even though its earnings multiple (stock Price/Earnings) is only half (AAPL P/E = 14.4, MSFT = 31.)  And Apple’s revenues are double Microsoft’s.  And Apple’s revenues/employee are $2.4million, 3 times Microsoft’s $731k.

While Microsoft has about doubled in value since the valuation pinnacle transferred to Apple, investors would have done better holding Apple stock as it has more than tripled.  And, again, if the multiple equalizes between the companies (Apple’s goes up, or Microsoft’s goes down,) Apple investors will be 6 times better off than Microsoft’s.

Market shifts are a bit like earthquakes.  Lots of pressure builds up over a long time.  There are small tremors, but for the most part nobody notices much change.  The land may actually have risen or fallen a few feet, but it is not noticeable due to small changes over a long time.  But then, things pop.  And the world quickly changes.

This week investors started telling us that the time for big change could be happening very soon in retail.  And if it does, Walmart’s size will be more of a disadvantage than benefit.

Listen to Employees When Evaluating Leadership

Listen to Employees When Evaluating Leadership

24×7 Wall Street just released its fourth annual analysis of the worst companies to work for in America.  By looking across all four reports it is possible to identify likely problems which will be valuable for investors, employees (current and prospective,) suppliers and communities to know.

unhappy workersTrend 1-  Low minimum wages & “Wage gap” issues remain a big deal

The lists are dominated by retailers.  Of the 30 unique companies identified, exactly half (15) were retailers.  A handful were on the list 2 or more years.  Consistently these employees complained about low wages.

By paying minimum wage, and often refusing to hire employees full time, the companies keep costs of brick and mortar store operations lower.

However, this takes a toll on employee morale as overall pay does not meet minimum living standards. Further employees feel heavily overworked and stressed, while having no job security.  Often this leads to employee unhappiness with senior management, frequently offering low evaluations of the CEO – who makes 1,000 times their annual earnings.

As employees fight for higher wages, and a reduction in the “wage gap,” it will apply pressure to the sustainability of these retailers who rely on very low pay to maintain (or enhance) profits.  The trend to a higher minimum wage will challenge profit growth – or maintenance – in these companies.

Trend 2 – Employees often “see change coming” and become negatively vocal

Jos. A Banks jumped onto the list as #4 in 2013.  Just before a major shake-up and being acquired by Men’s Wearhouse.  Family Dollar also appeared on the list in 2014 (#9,) only to be embroiled in a takeover battle with Dollar General, and finally aquired by Dollar Tree within 7 months.  Office Max appeared on the list (#5) in 2012, and was acquired by Office Depot 8 months later.  And, of course, Radio Shack made the list in 2012 (#3,) 2013 (#5) and 2014 (#11) only to file bankruptcy in 2015.

Employees can see when something bad is impending, likely jeopardizing their livelihoods, and start talking about it.

Similarly, growing internet threats are often picked-up by employees.   hh Gregg employees started complaining loudly in 2014 (#8) as their 100% commission compensation became threatened by a growing Amazon.com.  And that same year Books-A-Million was #1 on the list, as part time staffers saw the same advancing Amazon.  And in 2012 Game Stop (#10) employees could see how the advancing Netflix and Hulu threatened the “core business” and started to light up the complaint section.

Trend 3 – Ignoring employee unhappiness while focusing on earnings can portend a disaster

Sears and KMart (collectively Sears Holdings) made the list in 3 of the 4 years.  The stock was $66 in June, 2011, and $55 in 6/12 when it made #6.  By 6/13 it had declined to $39, and made the list at #7.  Starting 6/14 the stock was reasonably flat, and missed the list.  But then in 6/17 the stock fell to 27 and reappeared twice – as both Sears and KMart.

Employees have consistently expressed their dismay with CEO Ed Lampert, and 80% actively dislike his leadership.  After the Radio Shack experience, there is ample reason to listen more to these employees than the CEO who keeps promising a turnaround – amidst a long string of large quarterly losses and declining sales.

But this also opens the door for looking at some stocks that have defied employee unrest.  Dillard’s made the list all 4 years.  In 2012 the stock rose from $54 to $66, yet appeared #2 on the list.  In 2013 the stock rose to $85 as it made the list #3. 2014 the stock made it to $119, and was sixth.  In 2015 the stock peaked at $149, but has recently declined to $111 as it made the list #2.

Similarly Express Scripts rose from $53 in 2012 to $62 in 2013 when it appeared on the list in position #2.  In 2014 it rose to $71 as it remained #2.  And it 2015 the stock is at $85 as it topped the list #1.

It would be worthwhile to look at the clues employees are sending.  Express Scripts employees are loudly complaining (louder than literally any other company) across multiple years of being overworked, overstressed, underpaid and without any job security.  As are Dillard’s employees, who are the most outspoken in retail.  How long will profit improvements be sustainable in these companies?

While the data is less clear on Dollar General, it appeared on the list as #4 in 2013.  Then Family Dollar appeared on the list as #9 in 2014.  Dollar General subsequently tried buying Family Dollar, and reappeared on the list as #10 in 2015.  What are employees saying about the sustainability of the “dollar store” segment in a very tough retail market with growing internet competitors?

Any CEO can slash employee costs and payroll for a few years, but at some point the model simply collapses – aka, Sears Holdings and Radio Shack.  Or there is a loss of identity as suffered by Office Max, Jos. A Banks and Family Dollar.  It would be worthwhile for anyone to listen carefully to the feedback of these employees before investing in company equity, investing one’s livelihood as an employee, investing one’s resources to be a supplier, or investing one’s tax base as a community official.

There are a number of “one off” issues on the list. Companies appear once primarily due to bad CEO performance (Xerox, #5 this year, HP #8 in 2012 as the revolving door on the CEO office reached a high pitch.)  Or due to some change in market competition.

But it is possible to look through these issues – which could become future trends but show limited insight today – to see that an aggregated employee view of leadership offers insights not always found in the P&L or management’s discussion of earnings.  If you choose to put your resources into these companies, be aware of the risks warnings being sent by employees!

Please refer to the 24x7WallStreet.com site for deeper information on how the list was compiled, who is on each list, and their editor’s opinions of employee comments. 24×7 list in 201524×7 list in 201424×7 list in 201324×7 list in 2012

Don’t Fight Trends – So Don’t Invest in Best Buy

Don’t Fight Trends – So Don’t Invest in Best Buy

Best Buy, the venerable electronics retailer, is hitting 52 week highs.  Coming off a low of $24 in April, 2014 the current price of about $40 is a 67% increase in just 10 months.  Analysts are now cheering investors to own the stock, with Marketwatch pronouncing that the last bearish analyst has thrown in the towel.

If you are a trader, perhaps you want to consider this stock.  But if you aren’t an investment professional, and you buy and hold stocks for years, then Best Buy is not a stock you should own.

eCommerce

The bullish case for owning Best Buy is based on recovering sales per store, and recovering earnings, after a reduction in the number of stores, and employees, lowered costs.  Further, with Radio Shack now in bankruptcy sales are showing an uptick as customers swing over. And that is expected to continue as Sears closes more stores on its marches toward bankruptcy.  Additionally, it is hoped that lower gasoline prices will allow consumers to spend more on electronics and appliances at Best Buy.

But, this completely ignores the trend toward on-line retail sales, and the long-term deleterious impact this trend will have on Best Buy.  According to the U.S. Census Bureau, on-line sales as a percent of all retail have grown from less than 2.4% in 2005 to over 7.6% by end of 2014 – more than tripling! But more critical to this discussion, all retail sales includes automobiles, lumber, groceries – lots of things where there is little or no online volume.

As most folks know, the number one category for online sales is computers and consumer electronics, which consistently accounts for about 20% of ALL online retail.  In fact, about 25% of all consumer electronics are sold online.  So the growth in online retail is disproportionately in the Best Buy wheelhouse.  The segment where Best Buy competes against streamlined online retailers such as NewEgg.com, ThinkGeek.com and the ever-dominant Amazon.com.

So while in the short term some traditional retail customers will now shift demand to Best Buy, this is not unlike the revenue “bounce” Best Buy received when Circuit City failed.  Short term up, but the long term trend continued hammering away at Best Buy’s core market.

This is a big deal because the marginal economic impact of this shift is horrific to Best Buy.  In traditional retail most costs are “fixed,” meaning they can’t be changed much month to month.  The cost of real estate, store maintenance, utilities and staff cannot be easily adjusted – unless there is a decision to close a gob of stores.  Thus losing even a few sales, what economists call “marginal” sales, wreaks havoc on earnings.

Back in 2010 and 2011 Best Buy made a net income (’12 and ’13 were losses) of about 2.6% – or about $2.60 on every $100 revenue.  Cost of Goods sold is about 75% of revenue.  So on $100 of revenue, $25 is available to cover fixed costs.  If revenue falls by just $10, Best Buy loses $2.50 of margin to cover fixed costs.  Remember, however, that the net income is only $2.60.  So losing 10% of revenue ($10 out of the $100) means Best Buy loses $2.50 of contribution to fixed costs, and that is deducted from net income of $2.60, leaving Best Buy with a meager 10cents of profitability.  A 10% loss of revenue wipes out 96% of profits!

Now you know why retailers who lose even a small part of their sales are suddenly closing stores right and left.

Looking forward, online retail sales are forecast to grow by another 57%, reaching 11% of total retail by 2018.  But, as we know, this is disproportionately going to be driven by consumer electronics.  Which means that while sales for Best Buy stores are up short term, long term they will plummet.  That means there will be more store closings, and layoffs as sales shrink.  And, increasingly Best Buy will have to compete head-to-head online against entrenched, leading competitors who have been stealing market share for 10+ years.

If you want to trade on the short-term uptick in revenue, and return to slight profitability, then hold your breath and see if you can outsmart the market by picking the right time, and price, for buying and selling Best Buy.  But, if you like to invest in strong companies you expect to grow for another 5 years without having to be a market timer, then avoid Best Buy.

Quite simply, it is never a good idea to bet against a long term trend.  Short term aberrations will happen, and it may look like the trend has changed.  But the trend to online commerce is picking up steam, not reducing.  If you want to invest in retail, you want to invest in those companies that demonstrate they can capture the customer’s revenue in the growing, online marketplace.

Wrong assumptions create lousy outcomes – Sony, McDonald’s, Radio Shack, Sears

Sony was once the leader in consumer electronics.  A brand powerhouse who’s products commanded a premium price and were in every home. Trinitron color TVs, Walkman and Discman players, Vaio PCs.  But Sony has lost money for all but one quarter across the last 6 years, and company leaders just admitted the company will lose over $2B this year and likely eliminate its dividend.

McDonald’s created something we now call “fast food.” It was an unstoppable entity that hooked us consumers on products like the Big Mac, Quarter Pounder and Happy Meal. An entire generation was seemingly addicted to McDonald’s and raised their families on these products, with favorable delight for the ever cheery, clown-inspired spokesperson Ronald McDonald.  But now McDonald’s has hit a growth stall, same-store sales are down and the Millenial generation has turned its nose up creating serious doubts about the company’s future.

Radio Shack was the leader in electronics before we really had a consumer electronics category. When we still bought vacuum tubes to repair radios and TVs, home hobbyists built their own early versions of computers and video games worked by hooking them up to TVs (Atari, etc.) Radio Shack was the place to go.  Now the company is one step from bankruptcy.

Sears created the original non-store shopping capability with its famous catalogs. Sears went on to become a Dow Jones Industrial Average component company and the leading national general merchandise retailer with powerhouse brands like Kenmore, Diehard and Craftsman.  Now Sears’ debt has been rated the lowest level junk, it hasn’t made a profit for 3 years and same store sales have declined while the number of stores has been cut dramatically.  The company survives by taking loans from the private equity firm its Chairman controls.

Closed Sears Store

How in the world can companies be such successful pioneers, and end up in such trouble?

Markets shift.  Things in the world change. What was a brilliant business idea loses value as competitors enter the market, new technologies and solutions are created and customers find they prefer alternatives to your original success formula.  These changed markets leave your company irrelevant – and eventually obsolete.

Unfortunately, we’ve trained leaders over the last 60 years how to be operationally excellent.  In 1960 America graduated about the same number of medical doctors, lawyers and MBAs from accredited, professional university programs.  Today we still graduate about the same number of medical doctors every year.  We graduate about 6 times as many lawyers (leading to lots of jokes about there being too many lawyers.)  But we graduate a whopping 30 times as many MBAs.  Business education skyrocketed, and it has become incredibly normal to see MBAs at all levels, and in all parts, of corporations.

The output of that training has been a movement toward focusing on accounting, finance, cost management, supply chain management, automation — all things operational.  We have trained a veritable legion of people in how to “do things better” in business, including how to measure costs and operations in order to make constant improvements in “the numbers.”  Most leaders of publicly traded companies today have a background in finance, and can discuss the P&L and balance sheets of their companies in infinite detail.  Management’s understanding of internal operations and how to improve them is vast, and the ability of leaders to focus an organization on improving internal metrics is higher than ever in history.

But none of this matters when markets shift.  When things outside the corporation happen that makes all that hard work, cost cutting, financial analysis and machination pretty much useless.  Because today most customers don’t really care how well you make a color TV or physical music player, since they now do everything digitally using a mobile device.  Nor do they care for high-fat and high-carb previously frozen food products which are consistently the same because they can find tastier, fresher, lighter alternatives.  They don’t care about the details of what’s inside a consumer electronic product because they can buy a plethora of different products from a multitude of suppliers with the touch of a mobile device button.  And they don’t care how your physical retail store is laid out and what store-branded merchandise is on the shelves because they can shop the entire world of products – and a vast array of retailers – and receive deep product reviews instantaneously, as well as immediate price and delivery information, from anywhere they carry their phone – 24×7.

“Get the assumptions wrong, and nothing else matters” is often attributed to Peter Drucker.  You’ve probably seen that phrase in at least one management, convention or motivational presentation over the last decade.  For Sony, McDonald’s, Radio Shack and Sears the assumptions upon which their current businesses were built are no longer valid.  The things that management assumed to be true when the companies were wildly profitable 2 or 3 decades ago are no longer true.  And no matter how much leadership focuses on metrics, operational improvements and cost cutting – or even serving the remaining (if dwindling) current customers – the shift away from these companies’ offerings will not stop.  Rather, that shift is accelerating.

It has been 80 years since Harvard professor Joseph Schumpeter described “creative destruction” as the process in which new technologies obsolete the old, and the creativity of new competitors destroys the value of older companies. Unfortunately, not many CEOs are familiar with this concept.  And even fewer ever think it will happen to them.  Most continue to hope that if they just make a few more improvements their company won’t really become obsolete, and they can turn around their bad situation.

For employees, suppliers and investors such hope is a weak foundation upon which to rely for jobs, revenues and returns.

According to the management gurus at McKinsey, today the world population is getting older. Substantially so. Almost no major country will avoid population declines over next 20 years, due to low birth rates.  Simultaneously, better healthcare is everywhere, and every population group is going to live a whole lot (I mean a WHOLE LOT) longer.  Almost every product and process is becoming digitized, and any process which can be done via a computer will be done by a computer due to almost free computation. Global communication already is free, and the bandwidth won’t stop growing.  Secrets will become almost impossible to keep; transparency will be the norm.

These trends matter.  To every single business.  And many of these trends are making immediate impacts in 2015.  All will make a meaningful impact on practically every single business by 2020.  And these trends change the assumptions upon which every business – certainly every business founded prior to 2000 – demonstrably.

Are you changing your assumptions, and your business, to compete in the future?  If not, you could soon look at your results and see what the leaders at Sony, McDonald’s, Radio Shack and Sears are seeing today.  That would be a shame.