Burberry is the latest in a long line of retailers to announce staff cuts, store closures, and a rethink of some of its core assumptions about how customers interact with the brand and how work gets done. As a forward-looking retailer with a proven track record of digital, supply chain, and operational innovation, Burberry is (in theory) well positioned to weather the economic downturn by making rapid, adaptive pivots as the world turns around it. As CEO Marco Gobbetti says, “We are sharpening our focus on product and making other organisational changes to increase our agility and generate structural savings that we will be able to reinvest into consumer-facing activities to further strengthen our luxury positioning.” There are some key lessons here, and not just for retailers. Burberry is:
But what does this mean for your firm?
Since the beginning of the pandemic, Forrester has been running rapid cycles of consumer, employee, and executive research to help firms understand how the pandemic is impacting workers, consumers, investment strategies, and B2B relationships. We’ve published a range of forward-looking research on a range of topics and in our latest report The New, Unstable Normal: How COVID-19 Will Change Business And Technology Forever. We look out over the next five years to examine how consumers’ values will shift, how firms need to rethink engagement to focus on creating digital experiences, how work will change, and how the firms that thrive will do so by becoming resilient and adaptable. Use it to build your recovery strategy.
The original article by Martin Gill, vice president and research director at Forrester, is here. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CDOTrends. Photo credit: iStockphoto/Thinglass