Friday, July 19, 2013

No. 7 July 2013

I know you read the headlines in 2012 about Ron Johnson, the Apple vice president, who was hired away from Apple to become the president of J.C. Penney (“Penney”). By the spring of 2013, he was gone — fired by the Penney board of directors. I wanted to find out why, because I was sure there were some good business lessons to be learned. As it turns out, there is much to be learned from what Johnson did and did not do at Penney.

When Johnson arrived at Penney, he found a culture of sales, markdowns and coupons — exactly the opposite of Apple’s culture of high prices and a very high level of service to go with it. In Penney’s culture, I’m sure Johnson saw that constantly changing prices in the stores took lots of manual labor. At Apple, there were no surprises in margins and gross profit, managing to budgets was easier, and there was more efficiency throughout the enterprise. Inventories were stable at Apple, and there were no whiplash effects of selling thousands of an item one week and none the next week because of discounting and coupons.

The interesting fact was that Penney customers were actually not paying less in the old culture. Penney just kept raising prices and then discounted those prices during promotions. The average markdown was 50 percent. Low consumer prices were really a mirage. But Penney customers were conditioned to wait for deals and sales, partially because they did not have a good sense of what an item was really worth.

Alexander Chernev, a professor at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, summed up the faults in Johnson’s strategy this way: “By going to everyday low and ‘fair’ pricing with a single non-discountable price, Johnson assumed consumers have some context for how much items should cost. But they don’t. Penney might say it’s a fair price, but why should consumers trust Penney?” Chernev asked. “At the end of the day, people don’t want a fair price. They want a great deal. Consumers infer that they get a great deal based on the reference point provided by the higher, presale price. Social scientists refer to this idea as anchoring, and it applies to all sorts of consumer behavior and expectations. Without that anchor, consumers have trouble determining whether the store is actually giving them a good price.”

A Journal of Retailing study says, “Even the words a retailer uses in its marketing can affect how a customer judges a deal — ‘sale’ or ‘special’ leads people to think the item has a high value, but a straight markdown leads them to think it’s a cheaper item.”

In the old Penney culture, limited-time sales lured customers into the stores, which was very important because Penney doesn’t have a differentiated, high-value product like Apple. Also, coupons were effective in drawing in a broader consumer base — one shopper to buy at a high price, and a more price-sensitive shopper to buy the same item at a lower price.

Which retailers have been able to make everyday low pricing successful? Those that take narrow profit margins like Costco and Wal-Mart. Costco almost never runs sales and doesn’t adjust prices much, but it depends a great deal on annual membership fees for profit. Wal-Mart makes up for low margins with huge volumes of customers that come to its stores. But there was no such clarity at Penney. Penney told its customers to expect low prices — but not the lowest prices. Penney could not communicate exactly how much its shoppers were saving with everyday low pricing, and regular Penney shoppers became confused and stayed away.

Now, we’re reading that Penney employee layoffs have affected employee morale at Penney. Will good customer service be the next thing to go away at Penney?

Harvey Mackay reminds us that one of the most important things employees can remember when they come to work every day is “that their primary job is to provide incredible customer service.” That’s the culture you want in your business.



Mackay goes on to say, “Perhaps the simplest way of creating a service culture is a variation of the golden rule: Treat your customers as you wish to be treated.  Make your customers excited that you’re in business. Make them grateful that they have the opportunity to buy your services and products. Make them feel like they are your most important client. Make your service so outstanding that they wouldn’t even think of doing business with anyone else. And then find a way to make your service even better! Remember: Customer service is not a department, it’s everyone’s job.”