HB2K
I Spit Hot Fire!
- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Messages
- 611
I'm going to ask for a little latitude from the mods in posting this.
Many times we've heard people excuse Ei$ner's "please the shareholders" budget cuts and in general short sighted profits mission statements all in the name of Wall Street. I've heard all too often that Disney can't be run like it was during the "glory" days because it's unacceptable to Wall Street.
Well here's an article on CNN.COM discussing Costco and how WalMart is in competition with them. The article itself isn't really Disney related other than this passage.
Why is it a warehouse retailer can grasp the concept of long term planning & having your priorities straight (Customer, Employee, Investor) is the best for your company long term and a larger company (Disney) can't?
I'm casting my voite for Sinegal to be Ei$ner's replacement. That type of thinking is EXACTLY what Disney sorely needs right now...
Many times we've heard people excuse Ei$ner's "please the shareholders" budget cuts and in general short sighted profits mission statements all in the name of Wall Street. I've heard all too often that Disney can't be run like it was during the "glory" days because it's unacceptable to Wall Street.
Well here's an article on CNN.COM discussing Costco and how WalMart is in competition with them. The article itself isn't really Disney related other than this passage.
Analysts have pounded on Sinegal to trim the company's generous health benefits and to otherwise reduce labor costs. But he's taken only limited steps in that direction, like modestly increasing employees' share of health-insurance premiums. That doesn't satisfy critics like Deutsche Bank analyst Bill Dreher, who recently wrote, "Costco continues to be a company that is better at serving the club member and employee than the shareholder."
Sinegal just shrugs. "You have to take the **** with the sugar, I guess. We think when you take care of your customer and your employees, your shareholders are going to be rewarded in the long run. And I'm one of them [the shareholders]; I care about the stock price. But we're not going to do something for the sake of one quarter that's going to destroy the fabric of our company and what we stand for."
Why is it a warehouse retailer can grasp the concept of long term planning & having your priorities straight (Customer, Employee, Investor) is the best for your company long term and a larger company (Disney) can't?
I'm casting my voite for Sinegal to be Ei$ner's replacement. That type of thinking is EXACTLY what Disney sorely needs right now...