
Retail Therapy
Why The Retail Industry Is Broken - And What Can Be Done To Fix It
Mark Pilkington(Author)
Bloomsbury Business (Publisher)
Published on 28. May 2020
Book
Paperback/Softback
336 pages
978-1-4729-7860-8 (ISBN)
Description
An insightful review of the collapse of the traditional retail sector in the West, and a roadmap for its potential recovery.
Almost weekly, the news is full of stories about disappearing retail chains. From House of Fraser and BHS to Toys'R'Us and Sears, recognised names are vanishing overnight - as such large organizations disappear, so the malls, shopping centres, high streets and main streets become emptier and less appealing to visit. No name is safe: in September 2019, Marks & Spencer lost its place in the FTSE100 Index - a sign of just how far its fortunes have fallen.
But the retail sector remains hugely important in terms of job numbers: in the US, it employs around 30 million people (directly and indirectly); in the UK, around 10 million. As such, anything that jeopardises the retail sector will have a deep and lasting impact on millions of lives, as well as on public policy. While many blame the 'Amazon effect', this is an oversimplification. Deeper forces are at work that are changing people's relationships with brands, the balance of power between producers and consumers, and the whole nature of the supply chain that has existed since the industrial revolution.
Retail Therapy offers a comprehensive analysis of these forces and their impact on the world of retailing. More importantly, it presents a cogent analysis of the longer term trends that are shaping retailing, and outlines a clear road map for sustainable success in the future.
Almost weekly, the news is full of stories about disappearing retail chains. From House of Fraser and BHS to Toys'R'Us and Sears, recognised names are vanishing overnight - as such large organizations disappear, so the malls, shopping centres, high streets and main streets become emptier and less appealing to visit. No name is safe: in September 2019, Marks & Spencer lost its place in the FTSE100 Index - a sign of just how far its fortunes have fallen.
But the retail sector remains hugely important in terms of job numbers: in the US, it employs around 30 million people (directly and indirectly); in the UK, around 10 million. As such, anything that jeopardises the retail sector will have a deep and lasting impact on millions of lives, as well as on public policy. While many blame the 'Amazon effect', this is an oversimplification. Deeper forces are at work that are changing people's relationships with brands, the balance of power between producers and consumers, and the whole nature of the supply chain that has existed since the industrial revolution.
Retail Therapy offers a comprehensive analysis of these forces and their impact on the world of retailing. More importantly, it presents a cogent analysis of the longer term trends that are shaping retailing, and outlines a clear road map for sustainable success in the future.
Reviews / Votes
Retail Therapy bristles with alarming numbers. Before I finished the book I was recommending it to others, particularly because of his powerful analysis of the crisis. It is worth listening to the fixes - some of them controversial - he believes will cure the industry's ills. -- Anne Ashworth * The Times *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 129 mm
Width: 197 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
Weight
234 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4729-7860-8 (9781472978608)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
01/2019
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Business
€18.49
Available for download

E-Book
01/2019
1st Edition
Bloomsbury Business
€18.49
Available for download
Person
Mark Pilkington is an experienced retail chief executive and strategy consultant, based in the UK. After graduating from INSEAD, he joined Courtaulds, later becoming CEO of Gossard where he was responsible for initiating the huge global success of Wonderbra. He then founded Splendour.com - the world's first direct-to-consumer ecommerce brand, with the backing of Marks & Spencer.
Content
Introduction - an overview of the crisis
Part 1: Retail A!pocalypse Now!
1.A tale of two bankruptcies
2.The great stores meltdown
3.No longer a nation of shopkeepers
4.Dark Satanic Malls
5.My kingdom for a horse - the knock-on impact on branded suppliers
6.The next big short?
7.Killing more jobs than China
8.A global problem
9.The impact of public policy
Part 2: The Causes of the Crisis in Retailing
10.The classical retailing model
11.The rise of e-commerce
12.The broader impact of the technological revolution
13.The generational revolution
14.The death of brands
15.Passing peak consumption
16.Conquering the final mile
17.The dawn of a virtual world
18.This is your fridge talking
19.Algorithm'n'blues
20.Veni, Vidi, 3D
21.See you later, incubator
22.Direct is best
23.Retail derailed
24.Bankers away!
25.Can the last one out switch off the lights?
Part 3: How to Save Retail
26.The importance of simplicity
27.Go with the flow
28.Cannibalise, cannibalise, cannibalise!
29.Lean and mean
30.Brand theatre
31.The third space
32.Re-tech
33.Becoming the conversation
34.The price is right
35.Inclusive is the new exclusive
36.Virtuous reality
37.The hacker way
38.Reinventing shared shopping spaces
39.Advice to governments
40.Summary - the new rules for survival
Part 1: Retail A!pocalypse Now!
1.A tale of two bankruptcies
2.The great stores meltdown
3.No longer a nation of shopkeepers
4.Dark Satanic Malls
5.My kingdom for a horse - the knock-on impact on branded suppliers
6.The next big short?
7.Killing more jobs than China
8.A global problem
9.The impact of public policy
Part 2: The Causes of the Crisis in Retailing
10.The classical retailing model
11.The rise of e-commerce
12.The broader impact of the technological revolution
13.The generational revolution
14.The death of brands
15.Passing peak consumption
16.Conquering the final mile
17.The dawn of a virtual world
18.This is your fridge talking
19.Algorithm'n'blues
20.Veni, Vidi, 3D
21.See you later, incubator
22.Direct is best
23.Retail derailed
24.Bankers away!
25.Can the last one out switch off the lights?
Part 3: How to Save Retail
26.The importance of simplicity
27.Go with the flow
28.Cannibalise, cannibalise, cannibalise!
29.Lean and mean
30.Brand theatre
31.The third space
32.Re-tech
33.Becoming the conversation
34.The price is right
35.Inclusive is the new exclusive
36.Virtuous reality
37.The hacker way
38.Reinventing shared shopping spaces
39.Advice to governments
40.Summary - the new rules for survival