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Shrinking Sinking Sears |
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In 1972, Sears was the world's
largest retail business. Sears had been started by an alert and confident Richard
Sears who, while working as a train conductor in the later 19th
century, purchased an unclaimed consignment of watches for $75. He sold
all of those watches and Sears Roebuck & Co. was born. |
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Sears flourished over the next
decades guided by wise merchandising minds that empowered good managers
and implemented innovative
marketing techniques. |
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Sears is
a metaphor for the United States of America. A victim during the
later third of the 20th century, Sears undermined itself through arrogance
and
inept management. It allowed the women's movement, affirmative action,
equal opportunity hiring mandates, and a pandering board of
directors to misguide management and
demoralize key staff. The changing world provided opportunities which
Sears ignored. It is too late for Sears to catch up. |
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Sears
collapsed from within by not reacting with fortitude against
damaging cultural and governmental regulatory forces. Once the
world's largest retailer, Sears declined and today Sears flails in
search of a retail niche while actually existing as a financial tool
and real estate play. |
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Serious decay
began when Sears was near its peak. It had just opened the Sears
Tower. It had plans to build a second Sears Tower directly across
the street on Franklin in about the year 2000. |
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Arrogance,
gains too easily gotten, a lack of analysis, and
no perceived need to improve, conspired against top management. This resulted in weak
upper management making inept decisions
under misguided pressures. |
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Sears' Peak: |
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In 1973 Sears was one of the 30
Dow Jones Industrial stocks, the world's largest retailer, and major
competition for its two biggest rivals, J. C. Penny and KMart. Sears
had two classes of employees. Of its 360,000 workers, approximately
4,000 were classified as "Checklist". All other employees were
"timecard". The Checklist category included executives and those in
departments working in career-oriented positions that could lead to upper
management positions over a lengthy career. |
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Sears' Mandate: |
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In 1974 the US was being split
apart
culturally. The Vietnam War, racial inequalities, a stagnant stock
market, and high inflation were each contributing to disarray. The
Watergate scandal further frustrated, polarized and angered people
who felt they had been lied to and trusted an untrustworthy man
recently reelected president by a wide margin. |
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Weak leadership had taken reign
nationally and Sears followed by electing a touchy-feely, career
employee named Dean Swift as president. Looking back it appears his grandest
accomplishment was that he did what he promised to do. Upon being given
control of Sears, he traveled across the country
and actually did shake hands with every Checklist employee. |
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At this same
period, the US Congress passed legislation known as the Equal
Opportunity Employment Act. This broad legislation mandated that
hiring must not include discrimination based upon race, religion, or
ethnicity. Congress forgot to mandate that hiring may still include
decisions based upon education, skills, and experience which
demonstrate potential success on the job. |
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However,
Congress did realize that it needed to do more than simply pass
legislation. It needed to mandate -- meaning here, pass responsibility for
successful implementation of its laws upon corporate America. |
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Sears was a
highly visible tower and a surrogate for all of corporate America.
Congress mandated through Sears board of directors that Sears should
be a perfect example of Equal Opportunity Employment hiring practices.
The pressure was put on Sears directors and they succumbed. |
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Sears
directors ordered upper management to implement a plan fast tracking
minorities and female employees into all levels of staff and
management. |
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Sears called
all Checklist employees into meetings over several weeks to define
the problem and identify its solution. |
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Sears midlevel
management presented -- often on a stage -- an easel with a
magnetic outline map of the USA. Upon this map were pinpointed New
York, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles. The presenter said employees
working on their jobs are in a race that is analogous to a car race
across the country form East to West. |
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The presenter then held two small
magnetic cars. One car was black. One car was white. He then placed
the white car somewhere in the area of Iowa. The black car was
placed on the map in Philadelphia. The presenter said that there had
been an ongoing race in America and Sears wherein the white car was
far ahead of the black car. The black was only in Philly while the
white car had reached far out into the Midwest. |
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This, according to the corporate
presenter, was -- for some unidentified reason -- not fair. He
continued by stating that Sears' Board of Directors, being patriotic and,
mandated by the US Congress, was going to change that unfair
situation. Sears was going to give the black car extras. |
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Sears plan to make things fair
stated that it would from this instant on: 1.) Aggressively hire and
promote minorities; 2.) Aggressively hire and promote females; 3.)
Aggressively refrain from hiring and promoting white males. |
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Sears' Result: |
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Following that presentation, women
and minorities were hired and promoted aggressively. White males were
passed over with abandon and with no excuses. Even in technical
areas such as computer programming, competence and high skill levels
meant little for the careers of white males. Many found themselves
working for unprepared women. Many found themselves having to do
extra work to make up for inabilities and laziness of many minority
workers who were not able to understand or capable of being concerned with
tasks such as programming, system design, and meeting deadlines. |
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In fact, Sears computer training
program which had been developed in 1968 and was one of a few
corporate training grounds in America, found its curriculum greatly
simplified to
accommodate newly hired minorities and females. In 1972, the
computer training program
was three months long. New hires could graduate in less than
three months, but no more than three months. Graduation meant
assignment into one of the many
corporate system development projects. |
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Within a year of the Affirmative
Action and Equal
Opportunity Employment plan's implementation, the training program
was simplified. Elements and aspects were removed. Graduation was no longer
required to come within three months. Graduation could be postponed
and deferred for up to nine months -- in the new simplified training program. At
the end of nine months, many graduates were reassigned to one of
several more simple corporate development projects. |
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The result was that some who had
been unable to graduate from the training program within the nine
months, just started calling in sick and collecting sick-pay.
Eventually some of those employees were no longer paid in absentia and were
not heard from again. |
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More insidiously, many who had
been unable to graduate in
nine months showed up for work but failed to do any work. That meant
additional tasks had to be
done and redone by the white males who were on those project teams
populated by Affirmative Action hires. Those were the same
white males who
were being passed over for raises and promotions. Many white males
-- those having the most potential to guide Sears through the coming
Wal-Mart era -- left after 1974. |
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It made no sense for them to stay
at Sears only to be passed over for promotions and raises. At Sears,
their work ethic demanded that they then do the work not done by
others who were being paid but cared little. But most egregiously,
there was no reason why the best employees should be made to serve
the whims of inept managers who had been prematurely promoted to
positions they would never be capable of filling adequately. Sears' remaining employees were left in
charge. Today it is evident how well they performed. Simply evaluate what Sears became
post-1974. |
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Sears, A Metaphor For America: |
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The decline of American retailers
J. C. Penny, KMart and Sears is not a decline in retailing. It is
the decline of these once great business operations built by smart
and stern managements. Their mistake was allowing weak management to
be overrun by government regulation, lowering hiring standards,
promoting the less-qualified and the unfit. The new hires were
unable to adapt to the new retail environment established by
Wal-Mart. |
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We are not all entitled
to be handed the boss's job just because we are kind, pretty, and
certainly not because we wear a specific skin color or are of a
specific gender. |
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We only deserve promotion if we
demonstrate skills and work ethic above and beyond our coworkers.
And those coworkers who fail to meet reasonable work performance standards
actually do deserve to be fired. Maybe after being fired they will
select a career path where they may excel through hard work and
perseverance. |