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Q: Montgomery Ward business background ( Answered 5 out of 5 stars,   1 Comment )
Question  
Subject: Montgomery Ward business background
Category: Business and Money > Advertising and Marketing
Asked by: kirkm-ga
List Price: $50.00
Posted: 24 Jul 2006 10:09 PDT
Expires: 23 Aug 2006 10:09 PDT
Question ID: 749040
Why did Montgomery Ward go bankrupt and is the new owner/company
successful? Please address the annual revenue/sales and direction of
the company.
Answer  
Subject: Re: Montgomery Ward business background
Answered By: keystroke-ga on 24 Jul 2006 12:31 PDT
Rated:5 out of 5 stars
 
Hi kirkm,

Thank you for your question.  

After its heyday in the golden mail order catalog years, Montgomery
Ward spun off its catalog business in 1985. It then went through a
succession of odd owners, including Mobil Oil in 1975.  The company
filed for bankruptcy protection in 1997. After the bankruptcy, it
emerged owned by GE, its largest shareholder, and it rebranded itself
as a newer, hipper "Wards."  The reformation could only last until
2000, when a terrible holiday season forced the company to declare
bankruptcy a second time and this time close its doors for good.  Ward
filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy at the beginning of 2001.  At this
time, it closed its 252 stores and liquidated all its assets.

What led to Montgomery Ward's downfall?

The first bankruptcy had many causes.  Ward competed heavily with
Sears, and in turn both department stores had to compete with rising
sellers such as Wal-Mart.
However, the very roots of the problem lie with the company's
management decisions as far back as the 1940s.

"In the years after the Second World War, as the country grew more
prosperous and people began moving to the suburbs, some
Montgomery Ward executives suggested to the head man that they
should start building stores in suburban shopping malls. They
were fired for their trouble.

The net result was that Sears hit the shopping malls first and
Montgomery Ward never caught up. Meanwhile, a young clerk in a
J.C. Penney store -- a man named Sam Walton -- began learning
retailing from the ground up. Later, he put his knowledge and
insights to work in his own stores, which would eventually become
the Wal-Mart chain, with sales larger than those of Sears and
J.C. Penney combined."
--Creators Syndicate

In 1997, after the first bankruptcy debacle, the company fired its
management team and hired a new CEO, Roger Goddu. Goddu had previously
worked for Toys 'R' Us and he attempted to implement a "back to
basics" strategy at Wards, identifying the company's target customer
as a 30- to 55-year-old woman with a household income of $25,000 to
$50,000.  The company had made a turn towards selling electronics and
home interior goods.  Before the new strategy could be implemented,
the downturn of many companies during the 1990s befell Wards.  Stores
could not undergo needed remodels and systems could not be updated.
The company did, however, close 44 specialty appliance stores.  At the
time, market reporter Lorna Jordan commented on the company's
prospects:

"As with many of the general merchandise stores, Montgomery Ward has
been struggling to compete against discounters on the one hand, and
department stores on the other. Now trying to emerge from bankruptcy,
the 125 year old retailer says it wants to focus on jewelry, clothing,
and furniture. Analysts say the move to sell off Electric Avenue and
Whole Image outlets makes sense so Montgomery Ward can get back to its
core businesses... Unfortunately, the fate of Ward staffers is only as
good or as bad as the fate of the chain itself, and the prognosis on
Ward is really not very good."

The company spent most of 1997 and into 1998 trying to rebrand itself.
But rather than taking Goddu's strategy of identifying itself as a
midlevel fashion specializer, the company rebranded itself as a
complete shopping experience, meeting all a consumer's needs.  Along
with this, came an overdue redesign of the retail stores. Three new
stores were opened in 1998 and 40 in 1999. The opening of so many
prototype stores at once contributed to the downfall of the company.
The new stores were simply called "Wards" and many predicted that they
would save the company.  However, a poor holiday season in 2000 did
the company in for good. Its parent company, General Electric, had had
enough of the store's losses.

Many consumers were puzzled when their local Montgomery Wards store
shut down, immediately after the company had spent money to completely
remodel the store! But retail experts were not surprised. Wards had
spent millions on the remodeling projects and GE decided not to
continue funding the company. The company had 10 distribution centers
and stores in 30 states, along with 28,000 employees.

"'This had to come eventually. The company has not been able to turn
itself around,' said George Whalin, president of Retail Management
Consultants in San Marcos, Calif. 'GE has dumped all this money into
Wards, and they're still not a relevant retailer.'"

CEO Richard Goddu called the bankruptcy "unavoidable" and said, "weak
holiday sales and a very difficult retail environment simply did not
permit us to complete the turnaround that might have been possible in
an otherwise thriving economy."

The Economist analyzed the situation in this way: "In retrospect,
Montgomery Ward?s mistake may have been to assume that retailing was
an art that only people who lived near Lake Michigan could understand.
It spent so much time competing with its fellow Chicagoan, Sears
Roebuck, that both failed to notice the growth of Wal-Mart. But the
coup de grace was delivered by the American economy: sluggish
Christmas sales get the blame for Montgomery Ward?s demise."

The company's demise may have been predicted even earlier, when it
ceased sending out catalogs in 1985 and focused on specialty stores,
such as jewelry.  Ending its mail order business-- the fundamental on
which the company had been based-- signalled an escape from its roots.

This time, there would be no more rebranding.  What followed was
complete liquidation, at that time the largest in American corporate
history.

After the filing, Computerworld reported that MW was selling its
intellectual property to pay off its debts.
"In an announcement today, a partnership of three companies said they
will sell Montgomery Ward's SMARTsuite integrated retail software
system, as well as the former retailer's fine jewelry Web site and
other software packages, at prices 15% to 30% of their original costs.
Jay Lussan, a director and senior partner at Consor Intellectual
Management in La Jolla, Calif., said his company and two partner firms
will offer Montgomery Ward's intellectual property online to bring in
cash the bankrupt company can use to pay debtors."

At that point, Ward had already sold its real estate, computer
hardware and merchandise.

The SMARTSuite (Strategic Merchandising and Retail Technology) had
cost Montgomery Ward $100 million to develop and was created by IBM. 
It included "software for managing auto maintenance facilities,
merchandise management applications, a management system for warranty
service and in-home repairs, an automated staff-scheduling system for
retail stores, and a point-of-sale and back room application."
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FNP/is_17_40/ai_78051936

The company even ended up selling its name.

Now goods can be bought at this website:
http://www.wards.com/wards/default.asp

and from this address:
Montgomery Ward
P.O. Box 2789
Cedar Rapids, IA 

The new Internet and catalog retailer has been operating since 2004
under the auspices of Direct Marketing Services, Inc.
 
"Chicago-based Direct Marketing Services, Inc owns and operates
several home décor catalogs and websites, including Charles Keath
(charleskeath.com), HomeVisions (homevisions.com), YourKidsDirect
(yourkidsdirect.com) and Montgomery Ward (wards.com). DMSI is ranked
#141 in Internet Retailer?s 2006 Top 500 Retail Web Sites."
http://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?SESSIONID=&aId=15852

Direct Marketing Services bought the Montgomery Ward name and all its
intellectual copyrights, including logos and slogans.  The website
wards.com operates as if it is actually run by the original Montgomery
Ward.  The catalog was also restarted by DMSI.

"Several years after the general merchandise catalog Montgomery Ward
ceased operations, it returns to the mail this spring. The catalog
comes from DMSI (Direct Marketing Services, Inc.), the same company
that mails Home Visions. A tagline below the logo boasts, 'Improving
American Homes Since 1872,' citing Montgomery Ward's long history as
one of the first mail-order companies."
http://www.directmag.com/news/mailstream/mail-stream-052206/index.html

The company wanted to buy the intellectual property of Montgomery Ward
for a while, but the name had been tied up in bankruptcy.  The company
did not announce the deal publicly or release anything to the press.
This could be so that consumers will think they're dealing with the
original Montgomery Ward, in business since the 1800s, rather than a
company they don't know like DMSI.

"Chicago-based multititle mailer Direct Marketing Services Inc.
quietly resurrected the Montgomery Ward catalog in September 2004. The
116-page book has mailed six times since then, with the next drop
planned for June. DMSI president/CEO David Milgrom says the early
response has been positive. ?Circulation has been fairly small because
we?re relaunching it in a small way,? says Milgrom. ?The reason we
didn?t put out a press release is because we?re testing a lot of
different things right now. It?s a very valuable name.?

Milgrom admits that several of his peers doubted the viability of the
Montgomery Ward name, but ?we don?t think it?s dead.? What?s more, the
response--both online and through the catalog--has been very positive,
he says. ?We think there is great value in the Montgomery Ward brand.
We thought it was a great opportunity.?"
http://multichannelmerchant.com/news/montgomerward-catalog-05242006/

This is not the only name/logo/intellectual property that DMSI has
acquired recently.

"CATALOG AGE has learned that Chicago-based Direct Marketing Services
Inc. (DMSI) acquired the name, intellectual property, and house file
of apparel and home decor catalog Charles Keath from Boca Raton,
FL-based The Mark Group. Terms of the deal, which closed at the end of
November, were not disclosed. New York-based investment bank Petsky
Prunier advised DMSI in the deal."
http://multichannelmerchant.com/news/marketing_charles_keath_changes/index.html

With all these acquisitions, DMSI is certainly diversifying, and it
seems to be helping their revenues. Their annual revenues were $150
million in 2000, $150 million in 2001 and $165 million in 2002. For a
company that only began seven years ago, they seem to be doing very
well and their strategy of acquiring older, established domain and
catalog names seems to be working. Of the annually published list of
top home furnishings retailers, DMSI ranks 42nd this year. For home
textiles only, they made $96 billion in revenues in 2005 and $88
billion in 2004.
The list can be seen here:
http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2006/07/19/1719917.htm

Since DMSI is a privately owned company and not publicly traded, it
doesn't publicize its revenues. The company does seem to be doing very
well, however;  it took a place (#93)in the top 100 of Catalog Age's
catalog retailers in 2003 seen here:
http://multichannelmerchant.com/webchannel/marketing/marketing_big_bigger/index.html
However, it has not made a return appearance in the Top 100 since. Its
revenues appear to be holding steady at around $165 to $175 million,
which would put it just below the cutoff point for the Top 100 list. 
The Ward name certainly hasn't been hurting the company. Ward is
trusted for merchandise beyond home furnishings, merchandise such as
clothes and electronics, and more department store-type merchandise
than the Home Visions catalog, and so it seems that it will be a great
asset to the company.  With the addition of many catalog titles to
cover the range of consumers, from fashion to electronics to home
furnishings, and from mid-range to upscale, it seems to be a positive
forecast for DMSI.

Whether the Montgomery Ward name will help revenues further in the
years to come will be interesting to find out.

Sources:
http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:sseilgW7VMwJ:www.computerworld.com/managementtopics/management/itspending/story/0,10801,63224,00.html+montgomery+ward+bankrupt&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=3&client=firefox-a
University of Ontario Business Library
http://www.lib.uwo.ca/business/wards-ourpage.html
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node=Montgomery%20Ward
http://www.economist.com/printedition/displayStory.cfm?Story_ID=505458
http://marketplace.publicradio.org/shows/1997/08/01_mpp.html
http://multichannelmerchant.com/news/montgomerward-catalog-05242006/
http://www.hometextilestoday.com/article/CA149760.html/htt?pubdate=07%2F30%2F2001
http://www.furnituretoday.com/toc/09%2F16%2F2002

Search terms:
montgomery ward bankrupt
montgomery ward smartsuite
site:multichannelmerchant.com "montgomery ward"
dmsi revenues milgrom
"direct marketing services inc" milgrom
catalog age 100



I trust that I have answered your questions. If you need any
additional clarifications answered, let me know and I'll be glad to
help!

Cheers,
--keystroke-ga

Request for Answer Clarification by kirkm-ga on 25 Jul 2006 07:42 PDT
Thanks for the excellent reply to the Montgomery Ward question. Please
see similar posting for Nine West.
kirkm-ga rated this answer:5 out of 5 stars and gave an additional tip of: $20.00

Comments  
Subject: Re: Montgomery Ward business background
From: keystroke-ga on 25 Jul 2006 12:20 PDT
 
Thank you for the comments and the generous tip! I'll have a look at
the Nine West question for you, also.

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