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| Problems with Borders | ||
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The basic problem with Borders these days is that the corporate side
of the company is no longer run by "book people." Look at the most recent CEO's- George Jones (came to Borders from Saks); Greg Josefowicz (came to Borders from Albertson's); Phil Pfeffer (came from Ingram- could have been good if not for so many internal problems that caused his tenure to be less than a year long). The problem that the corporate types don't understand here is that a Compare the leadership of Borders to that of Barnes and Noble; the If Borders keeps heading in the same direction (which seems to change |
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I disagree. How is selling books so different than other commodities?
You don't have to be a "food expert" to run a supermarket, so why do you have to be a book expert to run a book store? What does it even mean to be a book expert? Having people from out of the industry being brought in adds a fresh In terms of anecdotal evidence that the company is doing well, the |
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Very well put.
A certain amount of day-to-day industry knowledge is needed on the In the larger-scale, the nuances of the publishing industry are very The idea is to be *more* than a bookstore, not *just* a bookstore. |
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There must be somebody there who's a "book person," and because you
worked at Saks or Albertsons doesn't necessarily mean your not one. Anyway here's the only kind of book I care if the CEO is into: http://www.amazon.com/How-Run-Company-Lessons-Leaders/dp/140004927X |
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