Over on LinkedIn a Trade Journalist (#thoughtleader) assembled a white board argument illustrating the demise of Sears. The individual concluded that Sears focused on Real Estate when they should have focused on Unlocking Customer Value.
A former Sears employee chimed in that the company focused on unlocking customer value every single day.
I worked at Lands' End in the early 90s ... that company was likely the best I'd seen at "unlocking customer value" during that era.
I worked at Eddie Bauer in the late 90s ... a company that didn't perform well. That company worked every single day to "unlock customer value" via marketing tactics.
I worked at Nordstrom in the first two-thirds of the 00s ... a company that performed incredibly well. That company worked every single day to "unlock customer value" via merchandising strategy. Hint - you can unlock a crap-ton of customer value when customers love your merchandise and your merchandise is expensive.
I've worked with 300+ clients since founding my consultancy. I've yet to see a client fail to "unlock customer value". They're all trying. Hard. Of course these "brands" fail, everybody fails. But it's not for a lack of effort. The dumbest of companies still work hard to unlock customer value.
"Unlocking Customer Value" is something that outsiders say. Trade Journalists. Consultants. Agencies. Professors. They'll point to Starbucks or Target or Apple ... which only further demonstrates their inexperience with actual work at an actual brand. The rules for Starbucks, Target, and Apple are fundamentally different than are the rules at Wally's Widgets.
Retail is HARD WORK. And newsflash ... the people working in retail are not mindless zombies who somehow haven't conceived the idea of "Unlocking Customer Value".
There are two situations where "Unlocking Customer Value" becomes incredibly hard.
- When merchandise productivity is in decline.
- When your industry is being structurally disrupted.
- When customers don't like what you sell (think Lands' End in 2015-2016 when, as the kids say, "things happened"), "unlocking customer value" is terribly difficult. If anything, your customer base "unlocks value" by purchasing overstocked liquidation junk at 70% off, bailing you out of a catastrophic inventory dilemma.
- When you are being structurally disrupted (as retailers and catalogers were in the past quarter century), you are "unlocking customer value" by pushing customers online. The problem is that there are consequences. As you (smartly) pushed your customers online, you emptied out the store. Once the store is emptied out, why is it there? It shouldn't be there, it's unprofitable! That's the point in time when Real Estate has value. You can slow-play that one for decades if you like, you can potentially go bankrupt, restructure everything, and move forward. You can just slog through for a half-decade or decade and not be terribly profitable. You can find a buyer, go private, and do the hard work in secret. Either way, there are consequences. There are always consequences. Same thing in catalog marketing. You (smartly) move your customers online, then the variable cost of the catalog becomes an encumbrance to your profit and loss statement. You either cut the cord, you slow-play it for ten or fifteen years and contract, or you ride it into the sunset. There are always consequences.


