Product details

Product details
By continuing to use our site you consent to the use of cookies as described in our privacy policy unless you have disabled them.
You can change your cookie settings at any time but parts of our site will not function correctly without them.
Case
-
Reference no. 9-704-491
Published by: Harvard Business Publishing
Originally published in: 2004
Version: 2 September 2005

Abstract

Describes the transformation of a company's corporate-level strategy. Begins by laying out the strategy that brought the Newell Co stunning success for nearly three decades. The highly integrated, internally consistent strategy was tailored for manufacturing and selling a particular genre of products to a particular kind of customer. In the mid-1990s, Newell encountered some shifts in its competitive environment and a subtle erosion in profits. In 1999, the USD3.5 billion company paid a 49% premium to acquire the USD2.5 billion Rubbermaid Co, in part for its product development process and strong consumer brands. After the acquisition, the profits of the combined enterprise deteriorated at an accelerated rate and the CEO was replaced. In less than a year, a fundamentally new strategy was announced, profits improved, and both Wall Street and major retailers were encouraged. Some setbacks followed, leading to reduced earnings and revised expectations. Exposes students to the pains and struggles of changing a deeply ingrained and long-lived strategy. Also forces them to confront the question of whether the new strategy is the right one and the markers one should seek to prove the case.
Location:
Size:
USD7.75 billion revenues, 47,000 employees
Other setting(s):
2001-2003

About

Abstract

Describes the transformation of a company's corporate-level strategy. Begins by laying out the strategy that brought the Newell Co stunning success for nearly three decades. The highly integrated, internally consistent strategy was tailored for manufacturing and selling a particular genre of products to a particular kind of customer. In the mid-1990s, Newell encountered some shifts in its competitive environment and a subtle erosion in profits. In 1999, the USD3.5 billion company paid a 49% premium to acquire the USD2.5 billion Rubbermaid Co, in part for its product development process and strong consumer brands. After the acquisition, the profits of the combined enterprise deteriorated at an accelerated rate and the CEO was replaced. In less than a year, a fundamentally new strategy was announced, profits improved, and both Wall Street and major retailers were encouraged. Some setbacks followed, leading to reduced earnings and revised expectations. Exposes students to the pains and struggles of changing a deeply ingrained and long-lived strategy. Also forces them to confront the question of whether the new strategy is the right one and the markers one should seek to prove the case.

Settings

Location:
Size:
USD7.75 billion revenues, 47,000 employees
Other setting(s):
2001-2003

Related