Avoid Succumbing to Conventional Wisdom – Target & Pershing Square
"Target heads toward the Crossroads" is the Marketwatch headline today. Like almost all large retailers, Target has had a tough year. Profits dropped, and Target hit a growth stall. If not careful, the company could fall away into noncompetitiveness, like KMart did. At the same time, some think Target is the only strong competitor to WalMart. Just to rough up the problem, outside investors led by raider Bill Ackman are trying to pressure Target to "restructure" and spin off its real estate into a publicly traded trust. Management isn't helped by a Wall Street Journal report "Proxy firm backs critics in Target vote" recommending shareholders vote to put Mr. Ackman on the Board. At this time, in the Flats, is when management teams are most vulnerable – and more often than not make decisions that doom the company.
It's at this time, when growth has stalled and vultures are swirling around, that management is most likely to turn to Defend & Extend Management. They look backward, and try to implement old practices hoping it will ward off attacks. They stop Disrupting, instead forcing high levels of conformance among employees. They jump into short-term cost cutting actions, which kill off new growth ideas, and shut down White Space projects to conserve cash. Instead of heading toward new markets, they emulate traditional competitors and focus on short-term actions. Unfortunately, these actions throw the company into the Swamp, hurting their ability to compete long term and making them victims of competitors. Look at Motorola, which swung from an intense high into the throws of near-failure when the executive team turned toward D&E management after Carl Icahn attacked the company. Instead of going after market growth, the D&E practices plunged the company into a cash drain leading to cataclysmic drop in sales and market share.
The worst thing Target could do is try to be Wal-Mart. Nobody can beat WalMart at being WalMart. And WalMart has its own troubles, including saturation of its stores as well as declining customer interest in its low-cost format. Recent resurgence, linked to the worst economy in 70 years, does not reflect a change in what customers want from retailers long-term. Rather, it's a short-term blip for a Locked-in Success Formula that has seen declining returns on investment for over a decade. If Target were to try emulating WalMart, in format or approach, it would be disastrous.
Nor is doing what Target always did the right thing to do. The market has shifted. What worked in 2005 cannot be assured of working in 2010. Trying to refind its "core" and do more of the same practices would again be a Defend & Extend approach which will hurt results. Amplifying those D&E practices by taking radical actions, such as spinning out its real estate in a short-term financial machination, would only reduce the variables Target can use to regain growth. Following the recommendations of raider Ackman and his Pershing Square firm will attempt to short-term spike profitability, but at the grave risk of killing the company long-term.
What Target needs to do now, more than ever, is study the market. The retail industry is under a major shift as on-line participants increase capability and share, per-store numbers struggle to maintain, and as underlying real estate values tumble. Customer expectations, from baby boomers to GenY are different than they were in 2001, and all retailers need to adapt to these changes. The retailers that do, with new approaches – perhaps mixed approaches that combine on-line with traditional, and/or combine mega-stores with specialty, etc. – will be the ones that capture share as pent-up consumer demand re-emerges in the future. What scenario of the future looks most likely to attract and retain customers in 2015?
Simultaneously, Target needs to study competitors, to define its positioning that produces best results. The good news is that the biggest competitor (WalMart) is so locked in that it's easy to predict. Target can study WalMart, Kohl's, Gordman's, J.C.Penney and others to identify what actions it can take that will avoid head-to-head battering and instead provide rapid growth. Especially by focusing on on-line competitors, including Netshops.com, much can be learned about how the market is shifting and where Target should go to maximize growth.
Above all, Target needs to take this opportunity to Disrupt old behaviors and convince employees, and shareholders, that Target will pull out all stops to become the leading retailer by 2020. WalMart is so Locked-in that it can easily decline (and if you doubt that, just look at other market leaders and how they did coming out of downturns – like GM and Sears). The right retailer, making the right decisions, can become the next leader. But not by just doing more of the same. It will take a concerted effort to open the doors for trying and doing new things.
And right now Target needs to be throwing up test stores and new concepts – White Space projects – where it can learn what will work for the next great retailing Success Formula. No amount of planning is worth as much as experimentation. The newest ideas in retailing need to be reviewed and tested to see what can work now. Maybe the time has finally arrived for home grocery shopping, for example. Who knows? What we do know is that the company that uses this market transition period to build a new Success Formula aligned with changing customer expectations will be positioned to be the new market leader.
Conventional wisdom would say that Target should cut costs, emulate WalMart, get really cheap with prices, tighten its supply chain, spin out all "non core" assets and focus on returning to practices that made a profit in 2004, 05, 06 and 07. But our studies for The Phoenix Principle showed that those practices almost always doom the competitor. Instead, at this critical lifecycle point, it's more important than ever to focus on GROWTH and return to the Rapids – otherwise you end up in the Swamp, moving along toward the Whirlpool, like Woolworths, S.S. Kresge, TG&Y, Sears, KMart and Sharper Image.