THE JOURNEY YO REMARKABLE RETAIL

Steve helps organizations understand and respond to retail disruption by creating customer-centric, memorable and profitable growth strategies.

Quitting Is Underrated

We don’t have to spend much time among our friends or on social media to run across the never-give-up, quitting-is-for-losers, in-it-to win-it ethos. There’s a whole socially acceptable narrative built around the concept that we must keep pushing no matter what. It’s ridiculous. It’s wrong. And it can be harmful.

Perseverance, grit, determination, and hard work are certainly important to achieving our goals, be they in innovation or just about anything worth striving for. But knowing when to stop can be as valuable as getting started in the first place. Knowing when—and having the courage—to quit is exactly what frees us up to go work on the next promising idea. Yes, the struggle is real, but so are opportunity costs.

I worked for a retailer many years ago that had been running a new concept in pilot mode for nearly five years. There were no plans to expand. There were no plans to shut it down. The project was mostly a distraction with no discernible contribution to the enterprise at large, other than we could mention it on earnings calls to earn some innovation points. No one bothered to establish any real metrics around what success looked like, nor was there anything close to go/no go parameters. Because it didn’t look like it was much of a cash drain, no one felt any urgency to do anything. As it was the pet project of two senior executives, there was no pressure to admit defeat.

But that’s exactly what needed to be done, the more it became clear that the opportunity cost (in cash, staff time, and management focus) of keeping it alive was the real problem.

Sometimes killing an idea that the organization has been holding on to for too long is just as radical as generating a new venture. As much as we want to increase our success rate, it’s worth paying attention to our idea kill rate as well.

 

This is excerpted from Chapter 19 (Essential #8: “Radical”) of my new book Remarkable Retail: How to Win & Keep Customers in the Age of Digital Disruption, available on Amazon and elsewhere.

Please follow and like us:
My 2024 Retail Predictions: A Baker’s Dozen

My 2024 Retail Predictions: A Baker’s Dozen

In 2018 I started sharing my annual retail predictions. Looking back, let’s just say mistakes were made. But some—like “physical retail isn’t dead—boring retail is” and my dour outlook on many much hyped disruptor brands (aka “wobbly unicorns”)—have held up pretty...

read more

My Bold Retail Predictions for 2023

As I share my annual retail predictions I’m reminded of a joke a colleague of mine recently shared with me: Q. What’s the difference between God and a retail futurist? A. God doesn’t think he’s a retail futurist. So damn the humility and full speed ahead as I bring...

read more
logo

"The Store Operations Council enjoyed every minute of Steve Dennis's presentation on retail's future. He always keeps it real and speaks the language of retail experts."

Cathy Hotka

Principal

Cathy Hotka & Associates

logo

"The Store Operations Council enjoyed every minute of Steve Dennis's presentation on retail's future. He always keeps it real and speaks the language of retail experts."

Cathy Hotka

Principal

Cathy Hotka & Associates

4
5

Discover more from Steve Dennis

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading