Woolworth’s and Wal‐Mart face an identity crisis: A well liked business
Abstract
In the Coen Brothers’ film, O Brother Where Are Thou?, set in depression‐era southern USA, one of the three convicts on the run is thrown out of a Woolworth’s shop and told never to come back. “Does this mean I’m banned from just this shop or all Woolworth’s?” Delmar, played by Tim Blake Nelson, worries. The joke reflects the affection that existed then, and does still, for a retailer that is seen by many people as being cheap and cheerful. However, loved or not “Woolies” is in crisis. When Trevor Bish‐Jones was appointed chief executive in March last year he took over a retailer facing huge problems.
Keywords
Citation
(2003), "Woolworth’s and Wal‐Mart face an identity crisis: A well liked business", Strategic Direction, Vol. 19 No. 5, pp. 19-22. https://doi.org/10.1108/02580540310794598
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited