Home

PriceZombie

Login
  • The Hard Road to the Softer Side: Lessons from the Transformation of SEARS
  • Amazon

    From $1.99 (3rd Party New)

  • Learn More
  • Change Region
  • Full Website

Copyright © 2016 PriceZombie, LLC.

Buy from Amazon $2.47$0.01 $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 $0.50 Jul Sep Nov Jan Mar May Jul Sep Nov Jan Mar May 2014 2015 2016 $1.89, May 4 1:57 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.85, May 6 3:52 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.82, May 8 8:32 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.78, May 10 1:08 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.74, May 12 8:55 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.71, May 13 12:49 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.69, May 14 1:20 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.63, May 17 9:42 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.59, May 19 5:08 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.55, May 21 1:22 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.52, May 23 10:41 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.48, May 25 10:03 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.45, May 26 5:08 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.41, May 28 1:47 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.37, May 30 3:01 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.33, Jun 1 12:56 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.29, Jun 3 12:13 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.27, Jun 4 9:44 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.22, Jun 7 9:56 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.30, Jun 8 - Jun 9$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Jun 10 - Jun 15$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.08, Jun 16 3:42 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.06, Jun 18 10:13 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.02, Jun 19 11:27 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.98, Jun 22 5:32 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.95, Jun 23 9:10 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.93, Jun 24 - Jun 27$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Jun 28 - Jul 2$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.04, Jul 4 4:00 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.00, Jul 6 11:11 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.97, Jul 8 7:07 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.93, Jul 10 6:11 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.90, Jul 11 11:37 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Jul 13 5:18 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.05, Jul 16 2:16 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.03, Jul 17 10:43 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.98, Jul 19 10:41 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.94, Jul 21 6:50 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.91, Jul 23 4:28 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.88, Jul 24 10:19 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.84, Jul 26 5:48 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.79, Jul 29 11:08 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.75, Jul 31 6:37 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Aug 1 - Aug 2$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.07, Aug 3 10:22 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.03, Aug 5 7:26 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.01, Aug 6 11:57 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.97, Aug 9 12:08 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.93, Aug 11 12:26 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.90, Aug 12 9:14 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Aug 14 7:30 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.05, Aug 16 9:22 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.03, Aug 17 7:33 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.98, Aug 20 4:16 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.95, Aug 22 4:42 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Aug 23 - Aug 25$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.07, Aug 26 7:58 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.05, Aug 27 10:50 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.00, Aug 29 3:49 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.98, Aug 30 8:01 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.93, Sep 2 4:50 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.88, Sep 4 2:04 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.86, Sep 5 6:28 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.81, Sep 8 3:02 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.79, Sep 9 8:52 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.74, Sep 11 5:59 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.72, Sep 12 10:16 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.68, Sep 14 8:53 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.64, Sep 16 8:45 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.60, Sep 18 10:08 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.54, Sep 21 8:24 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.50, Sep 23 4:01 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.46, Sep 25 4:43 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.42, Sep 27 6:55 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.38, Sep 29 7:10 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.34, Oct 1 10:23 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.29, Oct 4 12:19 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.25, Oct 6 1:40 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.21, Oct 8 3:21 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.17, Oct 10 7:24 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.13, Oct 12 9:02 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.09, Oct 14 11:19 am$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.04, Oct 16 2:41 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$1.00, Oct 18 6:39 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$0.95, Oct 21 - Oct 23$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.02, Oct 28 3:01 pm$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.08, Nov 2 - Jan 13$0.01, May 4 - Apr 23$2.09, Apr 26 - May 4$0.01, Apr 26 - Apr 9$1.95, May 7 - May 19$0.01, Apr 26 - Apr 9$2.09, May 23 4:55 am$0.01, Apr 26 - Apr 9$2.47, May 27 11:51 am$0.01, Apr 26 - Apr 9$2.09, Jun 1 - Mar 5$0.01, Apr 26 - Apr 9$1.99, Mar 17 - Apr 9$0.01, Apr 26 - Apr 9 215,0772,685,199 2,050,781 1,367,188 683,594 0 Oct Dec Feb Apr Jun Aug Oct Dec Feb Apr Jun 2015 2016

Price Details

3rd Party New

Latest $1.99 1 day ago
Highest $2.47 May 27, '15
Lowest $0.95 Oct 21, '14
Average $1.99 (30d avg)
$2.06 (90d avg)
$2.08 (180d avg)
$2.08 (365d avg)
$1.99 (Lifetime average)
Added May 4, 2014

3rd Party Used

Latest $0.01 1 day ago
Highest $0.01 Apr 26, '15
Lowest $0.01 Apr 26, '15
Average $0.01 (30d avg)
$0.01 (90d avg)
$0.01 (180d avg)
$0.01 (365d avg)
$0.01 (Lifetime average)
Added May 4, 2014

Sales Rank

30 day average: 2,262,420
90 day average: 1,699,304

Product Description

For the better part of a century, Sears, Roebuck and Company touched the lives of almost everyone in America. A stunning tale of marketing and savvy, the company started selling watches and quickly became an essential source of goods for the American home. Sears brought the Christmas dreams of distant children to life; introduced the American homemaker to a collection of appliances that stripped much of the drudgery from daily living; and put solid, dependable tools in the hands of strong, eager men. At the same time, it forged a solid relationship with its customers, earning that most valuable business asset of them all: loyalty.

And then, when it could least afford to, Sears lost its way. It gradually forgot about its customers. It no longer understood (or cared) who its competitors were. It shifted its focus inward, to the interests and needs of its huge bureaucracy, all at the expense of the customers who found themselves in declining, dismal stores. The greatest retailer in world history had become a company with a great past, a disappointing present, and a dismal future.

The Hard Road to the Softer Side: Lessons from the Transformation of Sears is the story of how Sears recovered from this downfall, told by the visionary who built the team that forged the companys rebirth. When Arthur Martinez took charge at Sears in 1992, he found a once-great company facing a loss of $4 billion, with a Soviet-style bureaucracy, little idea of its target customer, and an army of 300,000 disheartened employees. Many experts thought Sears was too far gone to save.

But save it Martinez did, putting Sears in the black by 1994 and sailing on through 1997. It wasnt easy. Almost everything the company had become needed to change. Fifty thousand jobs disappeared. The Sears catalog, which had become so much a part of the companys mythology, was put to rest. More than 100 stores were closed. But what rose from all of that turmoil was a new commitment to customers and a strategy that should have been apparent: in the American family, the mother is the chief financial officer.

With a boldness and determination backed by billions of dollars in renovations, Sears revived its connection to its customers and, at the same time, brought its own people back to life. The advertising sent the message, the sales staff opened its arms, and the customers came back. The new Sears was keeping its eye on the marketplace, its focus on the customer, and its interests firmly connected to the financial health of its shareholders. Then Sears hit the wall again with new aggressive competitors, a huge ethics problem, a war for talent, and a slowdown in sales.

The story of how Martinez and his team worked their way through not one but two crises is compelling and highly instructive, especially for anyone working in a company with an entrenched corporate culture or a long tradition that needs to be updated in order to stay competitive.

Back to store list

Login