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  1. #1

    Default Why do so many companies in Metro Detroit go bankrupt?

    I was just thinking about the Borders bankruptcy and how they were once owned by K Mart, which also went through bankruptcy when it was based in Metro Detroit. Then of course there are the auto companies, minus Ford, that went through bankruptcy. And the major suppliers like Delphi, Visteon and Lear that went through bankruptcy as well. I'm sure there are others that I'm not thinking of right now but you get the idea... Why do Detroit area businesses fare so horribly?

  2. #2

    Default

    Because they're run into the ground by management?

    Just wanted to get one in before people start union-bashing...

  3. #3
    DetroitDad Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    Because they're run into the ground by management?

    Just wanted to get one in before people start union-bashing...
    Unions are filled not because they want to see people fail, but because they are trying to shelter themselves from reality and/or change. No other reason.

  4. #4

    Default

    When Borders was making money, they kept trying to gut the one thing people LIKED about them: That intelligent, well-read people were able to give expert advice to book-buyers. Instead, they cracked down whenever the work force tried to unionize, tried to turn them into low-paid "stockers" who knew nothing about books, and began an ill-fated expansion into CDs and DVDs [[remember them?). The whole while, they were using their profits to buy back stock and increase their personal wealth while not building their core business. So, um, there's one you can't blame on the unions; they actually knew better what made the business work in the first place.

    Speaking generally, the usual reasons for business failure are:

    -Inadequate funding
    -Bad location
    -Lack of a well thought-out business plan
    -Poor execution
    -Bad management
    -Expanding too quickly
    -Insufficient marketing or promotion
    -Inability to adapt to a changing marketplace
    -Failure to keep overhead costs low
    -Underestimating competitors

    Oh, yeah. Keep blaming unions.

  5. #5

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    When Borders was making money, they kept trying to gut the one thing people LIKED about them: That intelligent, well-read people were able to give expert advice to book-buyers. Instead, they cracked down whenever the work force tried to unionize, tried to turn them into low-paid "stockers" who knew nothing about books, and began an ill-fated expansion into CDs and DVDs [[remember them?). The whole while, they were using their profits to buy back stock and increase their personal wealth while not building their core business. So, um, there's one you can't blame on the unions; they actually knew better what made the business work in the first place.

    Speaking generally, the usual reasons for business failure are:

    -Inadequate funding
    -Bad location
    -Lack of a well thought-out business plan
    -Poor execution
    -Bad management
    -Expanding too quickly
    -Insufficient marketing or promotion
    -Inability to adapt to a changing marketplace
    -Failure to keep overhead costs low
    -Underestimating competitors

    Oh, yeah. Keep blaming unions.
    Was/is Borders unionized?

  6. #6

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    Was/is Borders unionized?
    Nope. They successfully blocked every effort of their workers to organize. I remember when the workers struck the Liberty Street store in Ann Arbor five years ago and had some long talks with them. They were warning the management even then.

  7. #7

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    Was/is Borders unionized?
    To my knowledge, only the downtown Ann Arbor store was. Not sure if this is still the case, my fuzzy brain recalls a short-lived strike-- Maybe a few years back. Can anyone add more?

  8. #8

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    Speaking generally, the usual reasons for business failure are:

    -Inadequate funding
    -Bad location
    -Lack of a well thought-out business plan
    -Poor execution
    -Bad management
    -Expanding too quickly
    -Insufficient marketing or promotion
    -Inability to adapt to a changing marketplace
    -Failure to keep overhead costs low
    -Underestimating competitors

    Oh, yeah. Keep blaming unions.
    I think that we can blame both unions and management. The whole "Detroit model" for the auto companies, their suppliers, and the UAW was based on a monopoly/oligopoly practice. The unions demanded wage increases, management di a show of force to keep the demands from being too extreme, management factored the new wage agreements into their cost calculations, management figured the level of profit they needed [[after taxes since they considered taxes as a "cost"), and then set the price for the rest of America. The rest of America, being addicted to cars, went into debt to pay the price demanded by the Big 3/UAW. Detroit and the metro area swam in profitability.

    Suddenly, a small cloud the size of a Volkswagen appeared on the horizon. Slowly European cars and later Japanese cars became available to the public and after getting hosed by Detroit, the rest of the country could now give Detroit the finger. The Big 3/UAW ignored the competition and steadily lost market share. Even though car sales are recovering, the Detroit area is still in the crapper.

  9. #9

    Default

    Add to the list these three:

    -Theft
    -High taxation
    -High insurance rates

    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitnerd View Post
    Speaking generally, the usual reasons for business failure are:

    -Inadequate funding
    -Bad location
    -Lack of a well thought-out business plan
    -Poor execution
    -Bad management
    -Expanding too quickly
    -Insufficient marketing or promotion
    -Inability to adapt to a changing marketplace
    -Failure to keep overhead costs low
    -Underestimating competitors

    Oh, yeah. Keep blaming unions.

  10. #10
    DetroitDad Guest

    Default

    I think it's because we're risk takers around here. But also because we get caught in old ideas, or old ways of doing business. Change and openess to other's ideas are violently kept out. We stand so tough, like Ahab and his whale, to the death, in love with our own pride.

    Each failure is a sunken ship, and each sunken ship has casualities and a captain who made mistakes, and is going right down with the whole damn mess. Always remember that.

  11. #11
    Augustiner Guest

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DetroitDad View Post
    I think it's because we're risk takers around here. But also because we get caught in old ideas, or old ways of doing business.
    These two sentences contradict each other.

  12. #12

    Default

    I don't think it's Detroit specific. If you live in Detroit, it probably seems like it is. If you live somewhere else..... well, you get the point.
    The whole country is in poor shape.

  13. #13

    Default

    I just realized I used a little jargon, heh. Just to clarify:

    Store 1 - The Downtown Ann Arbor store
    BnN - Barnes and Noble
    BInc- Borders Inc.
    Mass Market - "pocket" paperback books [[not to be confused with "quality paper" books)
    Genre Lit - Categorical Fiction, such as romance, sci-fi, fantasy, true crime, mystery/thriller, etc.

  14. #14

    Default

    Borders is out of business because they failed to change with the times.

    With modern technology, you must evolve daily.

    They failed to see the success of e-books.

    They failed to see the success on-line music.

  15. #15
    DetroitPole Guest

    Default

    This is strictly my opinion and anectdotal, but in my experience working in an office in Metro Detroit is like taking a time machine back to the 1970's. The corporate culture here is stagnant, old-fashioned, backward-thinking, in large part. Very top down, with the bigshots calling all the wrong shots. I know there are innovative examples [[like Quicken) but I think the good-old-boys mentality of the auto industry spilled over into other industries.

  16. #16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by HistoryNotHisStory View Post
    Borders is out of business because they failed to change with the times.

    With modern technology, you must evolve daily.

    They failed to see the success of e-books.

    They failed to see the success on-line music.
    e-books are successful? Every statistic I see, every poll I see tells a different story on that....a vastly different one.

  17. #17

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by mikefmich View Post
    e-books are successful? Every statistic I see, every poll I see tells a different story on that....a vastly different one.

    http://money.cnn.com/2011/04/15/tech...acks/index.htm

  18. #18

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by mikefmich View Post
    e-books are successful? Every statistic I see, every poll I see tells a different story on that....a vastly different one.
    You don't need a poll are article to see so many of them out in public. When I get on the subway, bus, walk through a city park, stop by a coffee shop, catch a flight, I see a ton of people with E-readers. On no day will I see less than a dozen.

  19. #19

    Default

    All good points. Does anyone remember PharMor from the 90's? It was a highly profitable business with over 300 stores nationwide. They went bankrupt because one of the owners [[private stock) and the CEO embezzled millions from the company, hid losses and moved funds to a world basketball league.. I thought K-Mart had similiar problems.....
    Old Guy is right, companies are going bankrupt everywhere not just Metro Detroit. For instance I believe Florida has the largest amount of bank failures in the US. It's just the times all over this country.

  20. #20

    Default

    Yet Radio Shack is still in business.

  21. #21

    Default

    Borders is history because their online product became stagnant and they quit. Basically they said "oh, why dont we just let the wolf run the hen house?" and allowed Amazon to become the monster that they are.

  22. #22

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Red Devil View Post
    Borders is history because their online product became stagnant and they quit. Basically they said "oh, why dont we just let the wolf run the hen house?" and allowed Amazon to become the monster that they are.
    I forgot about that part! Good point- when all else failed and we couldn't find or order a book a customer wanted, we directed them to "borders.com" which was basically an amazon skin. BInc got a cut, but BNN did a better job of adapting.

    As for Radio Shack- I think they are a great example of a store that adapts with the times. I spend some money there still because their prices are reasonable, they carry an interesting line of goods, and they have great locations.

  23. #23

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by christos View Post
    I forgot about that part! Good point- when all else failed and we couldn't find or order a book a customer wanted, we directed them to "borders.com" which was basically an amazon skin. BInc got a cut, but BNN did a better job of adapting.

    As for Radio Shack- I think they are a great example of a store that adapts with the times. I spend some money there still because their prices are reasonable, they carry an interesting line of goods, and they have great locations.
    Hey christos-- Borders has been raked over the coals for its bad decisions, and probably fairly so, but I was wondering about your take on their perceived flub with a Kindle like device. It seems like years ago there was some Sony reader out there that Borders tried to push-- Now compared to todays offerings the thing was clunky and probably only like half the features, but getting 'raked' for missing the boat on a ereader format seems a little unfair. I feel it was more of a 'jumping the gun' moment for them regarding kindle-like technologies, rather than being a 'Johnny-come-lately' as most of the media portrays them on this issue in particular.... Since you were an insider, I was wondering your take on this.

  24. #24

    Default

    How amazing is Borders in Detroit/Grosse Pointe/Dearborn had closed while Barnes and Noble, Marwil, and John King books are still open. I think local stores in downtown detroit could still thrive if they would just open on weekends and leave the old M-F 9am to 5pm philosophy behind

  25. #25

    Default

    One of the subtle changes that has come about from e-book technology is the disappearance of traditional indices that once appeared at the end of books. An e-book can be so quickly searched for any term that it makes a traditional index unnecessary.

    What's really interesting is that to make those searches faster, we can encapsulate within the e-book the machine-readable equivalent of an old-fashioned index. The end user never has to actually see it but it's still there and useful.

    I find it fascinating that we're witnessing a permanent historic change in library science that will likely be missed by most of humanity.

    It's an intellectual landmark that will go mostly unnoticed.
    Last edited by Jimaz; April-20-11 at 07:58 PM.

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