The Wal-Mart Disease


Summary:

  • Many large, and leading, companies have not created much shareholder value the last decade
  • A surprising number of very large companies have gone bankrupt (GM) or failed (Circuit City)
  • Wal-Mart is a company that has generated no shareholder value
  • The Wal-Mart disease is focusing on executing the business's long-standing success formula better, faster and cheaper — even though it's not creating any value
  • Size alone does not create value, you have to increase the rate of return
  • Companies that have increased value, like Apple, have moved beyond execution to creating new success formulas

Have you noticed how many of America's leading companies have done nothing for shareholders lately?  Or for that matter, a lot longer than just lately.  Of course General Motors wiped out its shareholders.  As did Chrysler and Circuit City.  The DJIA and S&P both struggle to return to levels of the past decade, as many of the largest companies seem unable to generate investor value.

Take for example Wal-Mart.  As this chart from InvestorGuide.com clearly shows, after generating very nice returns practically from inception through the 1990s, investors have gotten nothing for holding Wal-Mart shares since 2000.

Walmart 20 year chart 10-10

Far too many CEOs today suffer from what I call "the Wal-Mart Disease."  It's an obsession with sticking to the core business, and doing everything possible to defend & extend it — even when rates of return are unacceptable and there is a constant struggle to improve valuation.

Fortune magazine's recent puff article about Mike Duke, "Meet the CEO of the Biggest Company on Earth" gives clear insight to the symptoms of this disease. Throughout the article, Mr. Duke demonstrates a penchant for obsessing about the smallest details related to the nearly 4 decade old Wal-Mart success formula.  While going bananas over the price of bananas, he involves himself intimately in the underwear inventory, and goes cuckoo over Cocoa Puffs displays.  No detail is too small for the attention of the CEO trying to make sure he runs the tightest ship in retailing.  With frequent references to what Wal-Mart does best, from the top down Wal-Mart is focused on execution.  Doing more of what it's always done – hopefully a little better, faster and cheaper.

But long forgotten is that all this attention to detail isn't moving the needle for investors.  For all its size, and cheap products, the only people benefiting from Wal-Mart are consumers who save a few cents on everything from jeans to jewelry. 

The Wal-Mart Disease is becoming so obsessive about execution, so focused on doing more of the same, that you forget your prime objective is to grow the investment.  Not just execute. Not just expand with more of the same by constantly trying to enter new markets – such as Europe or China or Brazil. You have to improve the rate of return.  The Disease keeps management so focused on trying to work harder, to somehow squeeze more out of the old success formula, to find new places to implement the old success formula, that they ignore environmental changes which make it impossible, despite size, for the company to ever again grow both revenues and rates of return.

Today competitors are chipping away at Wal-Mart on multiple fronts.  Some retailers offer the same merchandise but in a better environment, such as Target.  Some offer a greater selection of targeted goods, at a wider price range, such as Kohl's or Penney's.  Some offer better quality goods as well as selection, such as Trader Joe's or Whole Foods.  And some offer an entirely different way to shop, such as Amazon.com.  These competitors are all growing, and earning more, and in several cases doing more for their investors because they are creating new markets, with new ways to compete, that have both growth and better returns.

It's not enough for Wal-Mart to just be cheap.  That was a keen idea 40 years ago, and it served the company well for 20+ years.  But competitors constantly work to change the marketplace.  And as they learn how to copy what Wal-Mart did, they can get to 90%+ of the Wal-Mart goal.  Then, they start offering other, distinctive advantages.  In doing so, they make it harder and harder for Wal-Mart to be successful by simply doing more of the same, only better, faster and cheaper.

Ten years ago if you'd predicted bankruptcy for GM or Chrysler or Circuit City you'd have been laughed at.  Circuit City was a darling of the infamous best seller "Good To Great."  Likewise laughter would have been the most likely outcome had you predicted the demise of Sun Microsystems – which was an internet leader worth over $200B at century's turn.  So it's easy to scoff at the notion that Wal-Mart may never hit $500B revenue.  Or it may do so, but at considerable cost that continues to hurt rates of return, keeping the share price mired – or even declining.  And it would be impossible to think that Wal-Mart could ever fail, like Woolworth's did.  Or that it even might see itself shredded by competitors into an also-ran position, like once powerful, DJIA member Sears.

The Disease is keeping Wal-Mart from doing what it must do if it really wants to succeed.  It has to change.  Wal-Mart leadership has to realize that what made Wal-Mart once great isn't going to make it great in 2020.  Instead of obsessing about execution, Wal-Mart has to become a lot better at competing in new markets.  And that means competing in new ways.  Mostly, fundamentally different ways.  If it can't do that, Wal-Mart's value will keep moving sideways until something unexpected happens – maybe it's related to employee costs, or changes in import laws, or successful lawsuits, or continued growth in internet retailing that sucks away more volume year after year – and the success formula collapses.  Like at GM.

Comparatively, if Apple had remained the Mac company it would have failed.  If Google were just a search engine company it would be called Alta Vista, or AskJeeves.  If Google were just an ad placement company it would be Yahoo!  If Nike had remained obsessed with being the world's best athletic shoe company it would be Adidas, or Converse.

Businesses exist to create shareholder value – and today more than ever that means getting into markets with profitable growth.  Not merely obsessing about defending & extending what once made you great.  The Wal-Mart Disease can become painfully fatal.

 

Fire the Status Quo Police! – Forbes, AT&T, Microsoft, DEC, P&G, Sears, Motorola


Leadership

Fire The Status Quo Police

Adam Hartung, 09.08.10, 06:00 PM EDT

Their power to prevent innovation can devastate your business.

“That’s not how we do things around here.” How often have you heard that? And what does it really mean? It is said to stop someone from doing something new. It is no way to promote innovation, is it?”

That’s the lead paragraph to my latest column on Forbes.com, published yesterday evening.  Forbes launched a new editorial page covering Change Management, and gave my column’s link the premier placement!  

All companies want to grow.  But early in the lifecycle they Lock-in on what works, and then implement Status Quo Police that intentionally do not allow anything to change.  Their belief is that if nothing changes, the business will always grow.  So conformance to historical norms is more important than results to them.  To Status Quo Police results will return when conformance to old norms is returned!

Of course, this completely ignores the marketplace.  Market shifts, created by competitors launching new technologies, new pricing models, new delivery models or other new solutions cause the value of old solutions to decline.  No matter how well you do what you always did, you can’t achieve historical results.  The market has shifted! 

To keep any company growing you must know who the Status Quo Police are in your organization.  They can be in HR, controlling hiring, promotions and pay.  In Finance controlling what projects receive resources.  In Marketing, tightly controlling branding, product development or distribution.  The Status Quo Police are committed to keeping things tightly controlled, and saving the organization from change that could send the company in the wrong direction!  No matter what the marketplace may require.

But it’s not enough to know who the Status Quo Police are, its up to leaders to eliminate them!  If you want to have a vibrant, profitably growing organization you have to constantly adjust to market shifts.  You have to sense what the market wants, and move to deliver it.  You have to be very wary of the Status Quo, and instead be open to making changes in order to grow.  To do that, you have to hold those who would be the Status Quo Police in check.  Otherwise, you’ll find the obstacles to innovation and growth overwhelming!

Please read the article at Forbes, review it and comment!  Let me know what you think!

Killing Me Softly – Sears, Sara Lee

About 30 years ago Roberta Flack hit the top of the record charts (remember records anybody?) with "Killing Me Softly" – a love song.  Today we have 2 examples of CEO's softly killing their shareholders, employees and investors.  Definitely NOT a love song.

Sears has continued its slide, which began the day Chairman Lampert acquired the company and merged it with KMart. I blogged this was a bad idea day of announcement.  Although there was much fanfare at the beginning, since day 1 Mr. Lampert has pursued an effort to Defend & Extend the outdated Sears Success Formula.   And simultaneously Defend & Extend his outdated personal Success Formula based on leveraged financing and cost cutting.  The result has been a dramatic reduction in Sears stores, a huge headcount reduction, lower sales per store, less merchandise available, fewer customers, empty parking lots, acres of unused real estate and horrible profits.  Nothing good has happened.  Nobody, not customers, suppliers or investors, have benefited from this strategy.  Sears is almost irrelevant in the retail scene, a zombie most analysts are waiting to expire.

Today Crain's Chicago Business reported "Sears to Offer Diehard Power Accessories for Sale at Other Retailers." Sears results are so bad that Mr. Lampert has decided to try pushing these batteries, charges, etc. through another channel.  At this late stage, all this will do is offer a few incremental initial sales – but reduce the appeal of Sears as a retailer – and eventually diminish the brand as its wide availability makes it compete head-to-head with much stronger auto battery brands like Energizer, Duralast, Optima and the heavily advertised Interstate.  Sears has attempted to "milk" the Diehard brand for cash for many years, and placed in retail stores head-to-head with these other products it won't be long before Sears learns that its competitive position is weak as sales decline. 

Mr. Lampert needed to "fix" Sears – not try to cut costs and drain it of cash.  He needed to rebuild Sears as a viable competitor by rethinking its market position, obsessing about competitors and using Disruptions to figure out how Sears could compete with the likes of WalMart, Target, Kohl's, Home Depot, JC Penneys and other strong retailers.  Now, his effort to further "milk" Diehard will quickly kill it – and make Sears an even less viable competitor.

Simultaneously, Chairperson Barnes at Sara Lee has likewise been destroying shareholder value, employee careers and supplier growth goals since taking over.  During her tenure Sara Lee has sold buisinesses, cut headcount, killed almost all R&D and new product development, sold real estate and otherwise squandered away the company assets.  Sara Lee is now smaller, but nobody – other than perhaps herself – has benefited from her extremely poor leadership.

As this business failure continues advancing, Crain's Chicago Business reports "Sara Lee to Spend $3B on Stock Buyback." In 2009 Sara Lee announced it was continuing the dismantling of the company by selling its body-care business to
Unilever and its air-freshener products and assets  to Procter & Gamble
Co. for approximately $2.2 billion.  As an investor you'd like to hear all that money was being reinvested in a high growth business that would earn a significant rate of return while adding to the top line for another decade.  As a supplier you'd like to hear this money would strengthen the financials, and help Sara Lee to invest in new products for growth that you could support.  As an employee you'd like this money to go into new projects for revenue growth that could help your personal growth and career advancement. 

But, instead, Ms. Barnes will use this money to buy company stock.  This does nothing but put a short-term prop under a falling valuation.  Like bamboo poles holding up a badly damaged brick wall.  As investors flee, because there is no growth, low rates of return and no indication of a viable future, the money will be spent to prop up the price by buying shares from these very intelligent owner escapees.  After a couple of years the money will be gone, Sara Lee will be smaller, and the shares will fall to their fair market value – no longer propped up by this corporate subsidy.  The only possible winner from this will be Sara Lee executives, like Ms. Barnes, who probably have incentive compensation tied to stock price — rather than something worthwhile like organic revenue growth.

Both of these very highly paid CEOs are simply killing their business.  Softly and quietly, as if they are doing something intelligent.  Just because they are in powerful positions does not make them right.  To the contrary, this is an abuse of their positions as they squander assets, and harm the suburban Chicago communities where they are headquartered.  That their Boards of Directors are approving these decisions just goes to show how ineffective Boards are at looking out for the interests of shareholders, employees and suppliers – as they ratify the decisions of their friendly Chairperson/CEOs who put them in their Board positions.  The Boards of Sears and Sara Lee are demonstrating all the governance skill of the Boards at Circuit City and GM.

It's too bad.  Both companies could be viable competitors.  But not as long as the leadership tries to Defend & Extend outdated Success Formulas unable to produce satisfactory rates of return.  Lacking serious Disruption and White Space, these two publicly traded companies remain on the road to failure.

Forced innovation – Consumer goods and retail,

"Retailers cut back on variety, once the spice of marketing" is the Wall Street Journal.com headline.  It seems one of the unintended consequences of this recession will be forced consumer goods innovation!

For years consumer goods companies, and the retailers which push their products, have played a consistent, largely boring, and not too profitable Defend & Extend game.  When I was young there was one jar of Kraft Miracle whip on the store shelf.  It was one quart.  This container was so ubiquitous that it coined the term "mayonnaise jar" – everybody knew what you meant with that term.  Now you can find multiple varieties of Miracle Whip (fat free, low fat, etc.), in multiple sizes.  This product proliferation passed for innovation for many people.  Unfortunately, it has not grown the sales of Miracle Whip faster than growth in the general population. 

Do you remember when you'd go to Pizza Hut and they offered "Hawaiian Pizza?"  Pizza Hut would concoct some pretty unusual toppings, mixed up in various arrangements, then give them catchy labels.  Unfortunately, what passed internally as an exciting new product introduction was recognized by customers as much ado about nothing, and those varieties quietly and quickly left the menu.  Like the Miracle Whip example, it expanded the number of choices, but it did not increase the demand for pizza, nor revenues, nor profits.

Expanding varieties is too often seen by marketers as innovation.  I remember when Oreos came out with 100 calorie packs, and the CEO said that was an innovation.  But did it drive additional Oreo sales?  Unfortunately for Nabisco, no.  It was plenty easy to count out the number of cookies you want and put in a baggie.  Or buy fewer cookies altogether in these new, smaller packages.

These sorts of tricks are the stock-in-trade of Defend & Extend managementClog up the distribution system with dozens (sometimes hundreds) of varieties of your product.  Try to take over lots of shelf space by paying "stocking fees" to the retailer to put all those varieties (package sizes, flavor options, etc.) on his shelf – in effect bribing him to stock the product.  But then when a truly new product comes along, something really innovative by a smaller, newer company, the D&E manager uses the stocking fees as a way to make it hard for the new product to even reach the market because the small company can't afford to pay millions of dollars to bump the big guy defending his retail turf.  The large number of offerings defends the product's position in retail, while simultaneously extending the product's life to keep sales from declining.  But, year after year the cost of creating, launching and placing these new varieties of largely the "same old thing" keeps driving down the net margin.  The D&E manager is trying to keep up revenues, but at the expense of profits. 

Simultaneously, this kind of behavior keeps the business from launching really new products.  The previous CEO at Kraft said in 2006 that the best investment his company could make was advertising Velveeta.  His point of view was that protecting Velveeta sales was worth more than launching new products – and at that time the last new product launched by Kraft was 6 years old!  Internally, the decision-support system was so geared toward defending the existing business that it made all marginal investments supporting existing brands look highly profitable – while killing the rate of return on new products by discounting potential sales and inflating costs! 

This D&E behavior isn't good for any business.  Consumer goods or otherwise.  And it's interesting to read that now retailers are starting to push back.  They are cutting the number of product variations to cut the inventory carrying costs.  As I mentioned, if you now have 6 different stock keeping units (SKUs) for Miracle Whip in various sizes, flavors and shapes but no additional sales you more than likely have doubled, tripled or even more the inventory – and simultaneously reduced "turns" – thus making the margin per foot of shelf space, and the inventory ROI, poorer.  Even with those "shelf fee" bribes the consumer goods manufacturer paid.

For consumers this is a great thing!  Because it frees up shelf space for new products.  It frees up buyers to look harder at truly new products, and new suppliers.  The retailer has the chance of revitalizing his stores by putting more excitement on the shelves, and giving the consumer something new.  This action is a Disruption for the individual retailer – pushing them to compete on products and services, not just having the same old products (in too many varieties) exactly the same as competitors.

This action, happening at WalMart, Walgreens, RiteAid, Kroger and Target according to the article, is an industry Disruption.  It impacts the manufacturers like Kraft and P&G by forcing them to bring more truly new products to the market if they want to maintain shelf facings and revenues.  It alters the selling proposition for all suppliers, making the "distribution fees" less of an issue and turning those retail buyers back into true merchandisers – rather than just people who review manufacturer supplied planograms before feeding numbers into the automated ordering system.  And it changes what the manufacturer's salespeople have to do.

The companies that will do well are those that now implement White Space to take advantage of this Disruption.  As you can imagine, it's a huge boon for the smaller, more entrepreneurial companies that may well have long been blocked from the big retailer's stores.  It allows them to get creative about pitching their products in an effort to help the retailer compete on product – not just price.  And for any existing supplier, they will have to use White Space to get more new products out faster.  And get their salesforce to change behavior toward selling new products rather than just defending the old products and facings.

Markets work in amazing ways.  Almost never do things happen as one would predict.  It's these unintended consequences of markets that makes them so powerful.  Not that they are "efficient" so much as they allow for Disruptions and big behavior changes.  And that gives the entrepreneurial folks, and the innovators, their opportunities to succeed.  For those in consumer goods, right now is a great time to talk to Target, Kohl's, Safeway, et.al. about how they can really change the competition by refocusing on your innovative new products again!

You gotta move beyond your “base” – expand beyond your “brand”

What is a brand worth?  Do you spend a lot of time trying to "protect" your brand?  A lot of marketing gurus spent the last 20 years talking about creating brands, and saying there's a lot of value in brands.  Some companies have been valued based upon the expected future cash flow of sales attributed to a brand.  Folks have heard it so often, often they simply assume a recognized name – a brand – must be worth a lot.

But, according to a Strategy + Business magazine article, "The trouble with brands," brand value isn't what it was cracked up to be.  Using a boatload of data, this academic tome says that brand
trustworthiness has fallen 50%, brand quality perceptions are down 24%,
and even brand awareness is down 20%.  It turns out, people don't think very highly of brands, in fact – they don't think about brands all that much after all. 

And according to Fast Company in the article "The new rules of brand competition" the trend has gotten a lot worse.  It seems that over time marketers have kept pumping the same message out about their brands, reinforcing the  message again and again.  But as time evolved, people gained less and less value from the brand.  Pretty soon, the brand didn't mean anything any more.  According to the  Financial Times, in "Brands left to ponder price of loyalty," brand defection is now extremely common.  Where consumer goods marketers came to expect 70% of profits from their most loyal customers, those customers are increasingly buying alternative products.

Hurrumph.  This is not good news for brand marketers.  When a company spends a lot on advertising, it wants to say that spend has a high ROI because it produces more sales at higher prices yielding more margin.  Brand marketers knew how to segment users, then appeal to those users by banging away at some message over and over – with the notion that as long as you reinforced yourself to that segment you'd keep that customer.

But these folks ignore the fact that needs, and markets, shiftWhen markets shift, a brand that once seemed valuable could overnight be worth almost nothing.  For example, I grew up thinking Ovaltine was a great chocolate drink.  Have you ever heard of Ovaltine?  I drank Tang because it went to the moon, and everyone wanted this "high-tech" food with its vitamin C.  When was the last time you heard of Tang?  It was once cache to be a "Marlboro Man" – rugged, virile, strong, successful, sexy.  Now it stands for "cancer boy."  Did the marketers screw up?  No, the markets shifted.  The world changed, products changed, needs changed and these brands which did exactly what they were supposed to do lost their value.

Lots of analysts get this wrongBillions of dollars of value were trumped up when Eddie Lambert bought Sears out of his re-organized KMart.  But neither company fits consumer needs as well as WalMart or Kohl's for the most part, so both are brands of practically no value.  People said Craftsmen tools alone were worth more than Mr. Lampert paid for Sears – but that hasn't worked out as the market for tools has been flooded with different brands having lifetime warranties — and as the do-it-yourselfer market has declined precipitiously from the days when people expected to fix their own stuff.  So a lot of money has been lost on those who thought KMart, Sears, Craftsman, Kenmore, Martha Stewart as a brand collection was worth significantly more than it's turned out to be.  But that's because the market moved, and people found new solutions, not because you don't recognize the brands and what they used to stand for.

Every market shifts.  Longevity requires the ability to adapt.  But brand marketers tend to be "purists" who want the brand to live forever.  No brand can live forever.  Soon you won't even find the GE brand on light bulbs.  That's if we even have light bulbs as we've known them in 15 years – what with the advent of LED lights that are much lower cost to operate and last multiples of the life of traditional bulbs.  GE has to evolve – as it has with jet engines and a myriad of other products – to survive.

Think for a moment about Harley Davidson.  Once, owning a Harley implied you were a true rebel.  Someone outside the rules of society.  That brand position worked well for attracting motorcycle riders 60 years ago.  As people aged, many were re-attracted to the "bad boy" image of Harley, and the brand proliferated.  A $50 jacket with a Harley Davidson winged logo might sell for $150 – implying the branding was worth $100/jacket!!  But now, the average new Harley buyer is over 50 years old!  The market has several loyalists, but unfortuanately they are getting older and dying.  Within 20 years Harley will be struggling to survive as the market is dominated by riders who are tied to different brands associated with entirely different products.

If you see that your sales are increasingly to a group of "hard core" loyalists, it's time to seriously rethink your future.  Your brand has found itself into a "niche" that will continue shrinking.  To succeed long-term, everything has to evolve.  You have to be willing to Disrupt the old notions, in order to replace them with new.  So you either have to be willing to abandon the old brand – or cut its resources to build a new one.  For example, Harley could buy Ducati, stop spending on Harley and put money into Ducati to build it into a brand competitive with Japanese manufacturers.  This would dramatically Disrupt Harley – but it might save the company from following GM into bankruptcy.

The marketing lore is filled with myths about getting focused on core customers with a targeted brand.  It all sounded so appealing.  But it turns out that sort of logic paints you into a corner from which you have almost no hope of survival.  To be successful you have to be willing to go toward new markets.  You have to be willing to Disrupt "what you stand for" in order to become "what the market wants."  Think like Virgin, or Nike.  Be a brand that applies itself to future market needs – not spending all its resources trying to defend its old position.

Don't forget to download the new ebook "The Fall of GM" to learn more about why it's so critical to let Disruptions and White Space guide your planning rather than Lock-in to old notions.