Whole Foods Market, once the darling of the grocery industry, is facing a whole lot of problems. Poor shareholder performance threatens founder and CEO John Mackey’s position. New directors have been added to deter activist investors and improve relationships with major institutional investors. Some argue that for all its previous success, Whole Foods has not mastered Retail 101 and that is why it is failing. Perhaps – no retailer gets away with poor service and unnecessarily high prices these days. From my perch, however, the core issue facing Whole Foods is its business model. Organic and healthy was once a unique niche within the grocery industry, warranting a separate store. Now, fresh and organic are mainstream. Niches are alcoves — protected places. They exist in our natural world. In our economy, they’re specialized markets. By serving a narrower target market (Four Seasons versus…
Healthcare data: The promise and peril
In this last of four blogs reporting from WTN’s Disruptive Healthcare Conference 2014, I focus on a realization I came to during the conference: Big Data and the Internet of Things have finally come-of-age in healthcare. Examples of how data, analytics and mobile platforms connected to cloud-based data centers are transforming healthcare were woven into many presentations. Here are some examples: Aurora Health Care, which spends $780 million on its supply chain annually, is using data comparing different surgeons’ supply usage to identify savings that do not hurt quality of care. It is also identifying frequent users of ERs who could be served less expensively in a primary care location. Specialists and primary care physicians are able to collaborate virtually or via e-referrals that, according to PDS CEO Jonathan Ravdin, are reducing the need for visits to specialists or wait times for appointments….
Has the drive for efficiency through cost cutting gone too far?
The drive for efficiency has gone too far in my estimation. “But efficiency is always good,” you might protest. True, productivity gains increase incremental profits all else equal. But “all else equal” rarely holds true in practice. Therefore, like all good things pushed too far, gains from incremental efficiency initiatives may not be worth the price paid to secure them. Why is the Efficiency Goddess who brought us big box miracles like Staples, online retailing and record corporate cash balances failing us? Efficiency initiatives usually pay attention only to readily measurable costs, ignoring unintended consequences and opportunity costs. Why do CIOs limit support to only PC-computers? Why do CFOs reduce support staff, forcing administrative work onto revenue-generating managers? Such is the thinking of modern corporate managers: They are brilliant at measuring costs and lousy at measuring professional productivity. Shortsighted trade-offs are magnified as…