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Wal-Smart: What It Really Takes to Profit in a Wal-Mart World
 
 
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Wal-Smart: What It Really Takes to Profit in a Wal-Mart World [Hardcover]

William Marquard (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0071475168 978-0071475167 December 12, 2006 1

THE SECRET OF WAL-MART'S SUCCESS-AND YOURS

Wal-Smart is not just a book about Wal-Mart. It's about the principles of leadership in a Wal-Mart economy. No matter what industry you work in, Wal-Mart influences the way you do business. In providing a new level of convenience, discount pricing, and efficiency, Wal-Mart has changed the rules of the global economy, the customer expectations for every business-and the ways your organization must deliver to keep up. Is it even possible to thrive in a world ruled by this, and other, industry giants?

Yes, it is possible-if you're “Wal-Smart,” says Bill Marquard. The architect of Wal-Mart's first-ever strategic planning process, Marquard takes you on a rare tour of what's really driving Wal-Mart's success, from its powerful process disciplines to its hidden management “DNA” to its simple, but elegant, productivity loop.

Wal-Smart answers our most gut-wrenching question as business leaders in any industry: Now that we're immersed in the Wal-Mart world, what are we going to do about it? Marquard prescribes the smart choices you need to make in every aspect of your business: as competitors, suppliers, employers, and community members.

Throughout are stories of triumph-and of defeat-that distill the critical strategic choices you must make to win in the shadow of any giant of industry . . . or to become a giant yourself. Wal-Smart equips leaders, managers, and anyone in the business community with the essential strategies that really work to survive and thrive in this brave, new Wal-Mart world.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

With annual revenues of $312 billion, Wal-Mart accounts for 2.6% of U.S. economy and, with 1.8 million "associates," is the world's largest employer. Whether or not one likes it, Marquard says, it's a Wal-Mart world we live in, and astutely choosing how to respond to Wal-Mart, and other industry big dogs like it, can mean the difference between a business's success and failure. Marquard, who helped Wal-Mart devise its very first business strategy and has since worked for other businesses competing against that strategy, knows his subject intimately and describes the controversial retail goliath with admirable neutrality, bringing together the conclusions of various research studies on relevant topics-wage and expansion policies, for instance-rather than praising or condemning Wal-Mart's polarizing business practices himself. What he does provide is a weary, pragmatic portrait of the rapacious retailer from Arkansas, how that retailer "defines our world," and what "twelve smart choices" must be made to survive and prosper in its shadow.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From the Back Cover

Wal-Mart created a new economy that touches every business on the planet. To survive and thrive in a world ruled by giants, you need to make smart choices. You need to be…

WAL-SMART

Wal-Smart is the business strategy book for the 21st century. It is essential reading for any leader facing the daunting challenges of this global economy.”- Mark Hansen, former president and chief executive officer, SAM'S CLUB

Wal-Smart reminds me why I have hired and worked with Bill over many years. He and his book are focused on the right business DNA.”-James B. Adamson, former chairman/CEO, Kmart

“Compelling insights powerfully expressed.Wal-Smart offers the best guide yet for any business facing the daunting challenge of a dominant competitor.”-Hank Meijer, cochairman, Meijer, Inc.

“This book is not just about how to compete as a retailer, but how to win in any competitive business environment. As an insider, Bill Marquard does an excellent job revealing strategies to make this a reality.” -Corey A. Griffin, chief executive officer, The Boston Company Asset Management, LLC

“Full of deep insights from Wal-Mart that will help any company rethink how it can approach and dominate its market.”-Jeffrey K. Liker, Ph.D., author, The Toyota Way


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: McGraw-Hill; 1 edition (December 12, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0071475168
  • ISBN-13: 978-0071475167
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,535,853 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Playing with Big Boxes, November 7, 2007
This review is from: Wal-Smart: What It Really Takes to Profit in a Wal-Mart World (Hardcover)
If you `play' in the consumer products/retail market - the sandbox of the `big boxes' - this book is for you. In this informative, enjoyable, well written, easy to read and exceptionally well structured (easy to read in numerous sittings without losing the context or flow) book, consultant Bill Marquard offers advice on numerous strategic fronts.

1. He provides advice on strategic decision making - chose what not to do, chose what to do, and chose with intentionality (means commitment to me).
2. He tells us how Wal-Mart transformed our world thru its; pervasive nature, pioneering new rules of the game, redefining customer expectations, and its ability to set the agenda for suppliers.
3. He restates the keys to success for Wal-Mart - focus (the business is running one store at a time), correction of errors (how to do it better tomorrow), constructive paranoia (who is ahead of us), thrift, and a `we can make it better' attitude (reuse others ideas, better)
4. And in Part II he advises on strategic thinking in this new consumer products world. This part is a particularly well constructed discussion, where he links competitor strategy and vendor strategy and employer strategy and community strategy, suggesting what key questions must be answered correctly to win:
* A Big Box competitor strategy requires winning decisions on: How to differentiate, What to emulate, Where to dominate.
* A Big Box vendor strategy must address: What to leverage, How to invest, Where to diversify.
* A Big Box employer strategy should consider: How to reward, How to impassion, How to help them grow.
* A Big Box community strategy must include: Where to belong, How to align, How to engage.

Because the consumer marketing world - any business sector world, for that matter - moves at such a rapid pace, specific strategic ideas found in a book, any book, are outdated before the ink is dry. While Marquard does provide specifics, it is the conceptual thinking and his clarity that make this book worth the time to read.

Dennis DeWilde, author of
"The Performance Connection"
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Find the "And": This Is Not a Zero-Sum Game, May 6, 2007
This review is from: Wal-Smart: What It Really Takes to Profit in a Wal-Mart World (Hardcover)

When I began to read this book, I incorrectly assumed that William H. Marquard would focus his attention almost entirely on Wal-Mart when, in fact, his objective is to suggest what lessons can be learned from this extraordinary successful company, lessons that could be of substantial value to almost all other companies, regardless of size or nature. As Marquand observes, the primary message of Wal-Smart is that "we all must make smart choices - intentionally and explicitly - to profit in a global marketplace that is dominated not only by Wal-Mart but also by many [other] giants of industry. The message in short is: Choose or lose."

He carefully organizes his material as follows: Within the first half of the book, he suggests "why we ended up in a Wal-Mart world by explaining the elements of Wal-Mart's success that few people see...it is what's behind the scenes that really makes the difference in creating [various] visible advantages" such as its efficient logistics, low cost structure, and everyday-low-price perception. Then in the second half, Marquard responds to a challenge which all business leaders face: "Now that we are enmeshed in the Wal-Mart world, what are we going to do about it?" he prescribes a number of "compelling strategies" that can guide and inform "smart choices" as competitors, suppliers, employers, and community members. More specifically, Jacquard suggests how to examine options, how to choose the right ones, and how to "win" (if necessary) a second chance to succeed. "Smart choices" must be (as they continue to be within the Wal-Mart organization) explicit and intentional, then executed them consistently to increase the chances of success.

Marquard asserts that the first step in the decision-making process is to choose what not to do -- and that includes (for nearly all organizations) not competing directly with Wal-Mart - before choosing what to do. Once these decisions are made, it is imperative to sustain their implementation throughout the given enterprise with a firm commitment and sufficient resources. Long ago, I decided that strategies are analogous with hammers and that tactics are analogous with nails. The former drive the latter and, if (huge "if") well-chosen, should remain constant whereas the latter may need to be modified or even replaced to accommodate changes within the competitive marketplace.

With all due respect to the importance of what Marquard calls "intentionality" of purpose, decision-makers must also be both willing and able to piece together wisdom from diverse and often disparate places. "Effective strategies come from making connections, from synthesizing, from melding choices in ways that no other company has - or can. When make one choice [begin italics] and [end italics] link it to another [begin italics] and [end italics] link it to another, we eventually craft a mosaic that evokes a more compelling, more complete image than any strategic piece taken individually ever could." When making explicit, intentional choices, therefore, find the "and" which connects all strategies so that they can work effectively together.

Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check our Ram Charan's Know-How: The 8 Skills That Separate People Who Perform from Those Who Don't, Lynda Gratton's Hot Spots: Why Some Teams, Workplaces, and Organizations Buzz with Energy - And Others Don't, Robert J. Herbold's Seduced by Success: How the Best Companies Survive the 9 Traps of Winning, Jagdish N. Sheth's The Self-Destructive Habits of Good Companies...and How to Break Them, Charles G. Koch's The Science of Success: How Market-Based Management Built the World's Largest Private Company, Jack Alexander's Performance Dashboards and Analysis for Value Creation, Michael Useem's The Go Point: When It's Time to Decide--Knowing What to Do and When to Do It, and Enterprise Architecture As Strategy: Creating a Foundation for Business Execution by Jeanne W. Ross, Peter Weill, and David Robertson.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An excellent book that attempts to dig beneath the apparent veneer of the organization., November 16, 2007
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This review is from: Wal-Smart: What It Really Takes to Profit in a Wal-Mart World (Hardcover)
Overall a good book that establishes the groundwork by examining how the world that we live in (the "Wal-Mart world) actually got created. The author attempts to explain that the much talked about stuff like an efficient logistics system, low costs etc. may be "perceived" to be the drivers of success but that the true drivers are behind these factors. These are simply "visible" competitive advantages which are being driven by "hidden" management DNA. Having established that groundwork, the author then attempts to make us understand what the smart choices are in various dimensions of the business world as suppliers, employers, competitors and community members. Each of these four dimensions is explained through stories of winners and losers. An excellent book that attempts to dig beneath the apparent veneer of the organization.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
productivity loop, constructive paranoia, employment compact
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Trader Joe, Clif Bar, Sam Walton, United States, Levi Strauss, Dancing Deer, Oklahoma City, University Bank, New York, Towers Perrin, United Kingdom, Global Insight, Home Depot, Jack Kahl, Lee Scott, Los Angeles, Retail Forward, Sam's Choice, Strong-Process Organization Weak-Process Organization, The Coca-Cola Company, General Electric, New Hampshire, Retail Link, Jim Spencer, John Menzer
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Wal-Mart World by Stanley D. Brunn
 


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