Matt Clark
London
All of us have spent the last several weeks focused on the health and well-being of our teams and company, and, in some cases, even survival. Now, the industry stands at an unparalleled juncture, with European sales forecasted at c.-25% for the second quarter and c.-7% for the full year1. As a result, retail is facing more change, uncertainty, risk, and – if you can allow yourself to imagine it – reward than it has in memorable history.
There are innumerable predictions in the market about when lockdown will end and how the consumer is likely to respond. But let’s be honest – no one has the answer to any of these questions. The one certainty is that at some point, there will be an after. And we believe our industry should tune out all the prognosticators and focus on the pragmatists. We will return to work. Consumers will start shopping in stores and eating out. Movie theatres and amusement parks will fill up again, and there will be vacations once more. Predicting when and how fast is a fool’s errand, but we are seeing too many companies gripped in the paralysis of unknown variables. The fact is, it would be easier to try to solve Goldbach’s conjecture than plan in-store comps for the fourth quarter. This does not mean we should do nothing. It does mean that we should stop focusing on what we cannot control.
Even today, without a single known variable, pragmatic and experienced crisis managers can create a set of action-reaction-adjust cycles for all operational levers needed to restart our businesses. Over the next several weeks, we are going to tackle one set of operational considerations at a time. We will offer in-depth and pragmatic answers to the “how”, the “what”, and “what if”. There are hundreds of questions that need an answer, and we understand that can feel exhausting to even contemplate. By breaking the areas down, one at a time, we want to help our industry focus attention in a way that will help accelerate hands-on progress. These are some of the kinds of questions we will tackle:
Over the last several weeks, our industry has raced to navigate and confront the crisis and made herculean efforts to support employees and customers. The weeks and months ahead will be similarly challenging, but the winners will be the planners and pragmatists, not the strategists and soothsayers.