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Case
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Reference no. 14-160
Published by: MIT Sloan School of Management
Originally published in: 2014
Version: March 23, 2015
Revision date: 18-Aug-2021
Length: 28 pages
Data source: Published sources
Notes: This item is part of a free case collection. For terms & conditions go to www.thecasecentre.org/freecaseterms

Abstract

On July 18, 2014, the majority of Market Basket's 200 non-unionized front office workers, another 300 warehouse associates and 65 truck drivers walked out on their jobs and spent the next six weeks protesting in front of the family-owned New England supermarket chain's headquarters. Customers joined the protest by doing their grocery shopping elsewhere, essentially bringing business to a halt. The protestors were objecting to the firing of Market Basket CEO Arthur T Demoulas by the company's board of directors, on which sat his cousin, and foe, Arthur S Demoulas. But why, many wondered, was having Arthur T at the helm so important to so many different stakeholders? What exactly were they trying to protect? And why were their concerns so widely and deeply shared that they would risk banding together in protest without any legal protections for their actions? This case is part of the MIT Sloan free case collection (visit www.thecasecentre.org/mitsloanfreecases for more information on the collection).

Teaching and learning

This item is suitable for undergraduate, postgraduate and executive education courses.

Time period

The events covered by this case took place in Jul-14.

Geographical setting

Region:
Americas
Country:
United States

Featured company

Market Basket
Type:
Privately held
Industry:
supermarket

About

Abstract

On July 18, 2014, the majority of Market Basket's 200 non-unionized front office workers, another 300 warehouse associates and 65 truck drivers walked out on their jobs and spent the next six weeks protesting in front of the family-owned New England supermarket chain's headquarters. Customers joined the protest by doing their grocery shopping elsewhere, essentially bringing business to a halt. The protestors were objecting to the firing of Market Basket CEO Arthur T Demoulas by the company's board of directors, on which sat his cousin, and foe, Arthur S Demoulas. But why, many wondered, was having Arthur T at the helm so important to so many different stakeholders? What exactly were they trying to protect? And why were their concerns so widely and deeply shared that they would risk banding together in protest without any legal protections for their actions? This case is part of the MIT Sloan free case collection (visit www.thecasecentre.org/mitsloanfreecases for more information on the collection).

Teaching and learning

This item is suitable for undergraduate, postgraduate and executive education courses.

Settings

Time period

The events covered by this case took place in Jul-14.

Geographical setting

Region:
Americas
Country:
United States

Featured company

Market Basket
Type:
Privately held
Industry:
supermarket

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