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Acquired - IKEA

发布时间:2024-11-18 04:42:39   原节目
《Acquired》播客节目深入探讨了全球最大的家具零售商宜家的故事。讨论从瑞典的斯莫兰开始,那里是创始人英格瓦·坎普拉德于1926年出生在一座农场的地方。他的家族历史可以追溯到德国,他的祖父母移民到瑞典,并在他的祖父自杀后面临困境。坎普拉德的创业精神很早就显现出来,他从小就开始交易火柴盒、圣诞贺卡,最终还开始卖钢笔,甚至在12岁时就获得了银行贷款。 1943年,坎普拉德正式创立了宜家(IKEA),这个名字是他的首字母和他农场地址的缩写。他开办了一家目录业务,在当地的农业出版物上做广告,并在欧洲各地寻找供应商。一个关键时刻出现在1948年,当时他将家具添加到目录中,利用斯莫兰当地的木材工业,填补了农村客户的需求空白。宜家的竞争优势来自于通过减少中间商来提供更低的价格,吸引“很多人”,这一个概念是公司使命的核心。 叙述随后转向宜家面临的一个挑战,即竞争对手开始削价竞争。这促使了建立一个展厅的想法,让顾客在订购前可以看到和感受到家具。第一个展厅于1953年在艾尔姆胡特开业,商业模式是它只是一个展厅,而不是一家商店。它取得了巨大的成功,并被认为是一个疯狂的想法,尤其是他们在该国一个偏远地区开设展厅。也是在这里,他们开始为购物者免费提供咖啡和早点。 故事延续到20世纪60年代,那是瑞典城市化和人口结构变化的时期。商业模式转变为为城市和郊区的客户提供家具。宜家开始自主设计家具,这是由于竞争对手施压供应商不要向宜家供货。设计师吉利斯·伦德格伦提出了平板包装家具的想法,以便于储存和运输。平板包装显著降低了成本。到1960年,宜家开始从波兰采购大部分家具。当时的波兰是一个位于铁幕之下的共产主义国家,有兴趣与外国公司合作。 他们讨论了宜家产品系列的演变。他们开始提供拉客(Lak)桌子,售价10美元,他们为了以这个价格提供这款产品,重新发明了相关的技术和制造工艺。他们还讨论了热狗,在Costco开始销售热狗大约十年后的1990年代加入了宜家的故事。他们使用热狗,称之为热狗产品政策,以促进店铺的客流量。 1958年,宜家在餐厅增加了热食。餐厅的利润率不应超过10%。此时,他们增加了儿童游乐室,进一步增加了家庭在商店的停留时间。这是在重建的斯德哥尔摩商店,也是重新设计的商店。 1973年,英格瓦和他的家人为了避税移民到丹麦。公司的结构是Inca Holdings拥有实体店,公司由荷兰的Inca基金会所有,该基金会是一个慈善基金会。一个独立的品牌是Inter Ikea Systems,Inter拥有宜家品牌、概念,然后他们将宜家品牌和概念授权给所有经营这些商店的特许经营商,其中Inca是迄今为止最大的特许经营商。作为回报,Inter Ikea获得总销售额的3%。 叙述深入探讨了英格瓦1976年写的《家具经销商遗嘱》,其中概述了公司的使命、价值观和经营原则,以及他们时间和资源的价值。在整个20世纪80年代,宜家在欧洲和北美迅速扩张,于1985年开设了第一家美国商店,随后扩展到台湾、中国和俄罗斯。在20世纪90年代,媒体爆出英格瓦是瑞典纳粹和法西斯运动的积极成员。 播客提到了宜家最初避免电子商务的决定,理由是它与低成本、以客户为中心的模式不兼容。然而,在2018年,该公司拥抱了电子商务,到2024年,电子商务已占其收入的很大比例。今天,它已成为一种全球现象,在全球63个市场拥有门店,并在一些市场建立了大型综合体。 播客分析了宜家的力量及其力量的来源。宜家没有直接的竞争对手,而且缺乏具有成本效益的电子商务。最后,他们试图提炼出宜家的本质是什么。讨论以一句引言结束,宜家销售的是一种家的感觉,类似于爱马仕所做的事情。

The Acquired podcast episode dives into the story of IKEA, the world's largest furniture retailer. The discussion starts in Småland, Sweden, where Ingvar Kamprad, the founder, was born on a farm in 1926. His family's history is rooted in Germany, with his grandparents immigrating to Sweden and facing hardship after his grandfather's suicide. Kamprad's entrepreneurial spirit emerged early as he began trading matchboxes, Christmas cards, and eventually fountain pens as a child, even securing a bank loan at age 12. In 1943, Kamprad formally established IKEA, an acronym combining his initials and his farm address. He started a catalog business, advertising in local farming publications and sourcing suppliers across Europe. A pivotal moment arrived in 1948 when he added furniture to the catalog, capitalizing on the local timber industry in Småland and filling a void for rural customers. IKEA's competitive advantage came from offering lower prices by cutting out middlemen, appealing to the "many people," a concept central to the company's mission. The narrative then turns to a challenge faced by IKEA when competitors started undercutting them. This led to the idea of a showroom where customers could see and feel the furniture before ordering. The first showroom opened in Älmhult in 1953, and the business model was that it's a showroom, not a store. It becomes an enormous success and is considered a crazy idea, especially as they're opening a showroom in one singular remote part of this country. It's also here where coffee and morning buns were offered for free to shoppers. The story continues into the 1960s, a time of urbanization and demographic change in Sweden. The business model shifts to providing furniture for urban and suburban customers. IKEA started designing its own furniture in-house, spurred by competitors pressuring suppliers not to sell to IKEA. Gillis Lundgren, a designer, introduces the idea of flat-packing furniture for easier storage and transportation. Flat-packing significantly reduces costs. By 1960, IKEA began sourcing a significant portion of its furniture from Poland. Poland was a communist country at the time behind the iron curtain and was interested in partnering with the foreign corporation. They discuss the evolution of IKEA's product range. They start offering the Lak table, which costs $10, a product which they reinvented the technology and manufacturing in order to offer at that price point. They also discuss hot dogs, which entered the story about a decade after Costco started selling them, in the 1990s. They use the hot dogs, which they call the hot dog product policy, in order to drive business into the stores. 1958 is when IKEA adds hot food to the restaurant. At the restaurants, the profit margin shouldn't be more than 10%. At this point, they've added children's playrooms, furthering the amount of time families can spend in the store. This is in the rebuilt Stockholm store, the newly redesigned store. In 1973, Ingar and his family emigrate to Denmark to avoid wealth taxes. The company structure is that Inca Holdings owns the physical store, and the company is owned by the Dutch Inca foundation, which is a charitable foundation. A separate brand is Inter Ikea Systems, and Inter owns the Ikea brand, concept, and then they license the Ikea brand and concept to everyone else who operates the stores as franchise operator, of which, today, Inca is by far the largest. In return, Inter Ikea gets 3% of the gross sales. The narrative delves into Ingvar's "Testament of a Furniture Dealer" from 1976, which outlines the company's mission, values, and operating principles, and the value of their time and resources. Throughout the 1980s, IKEA expanded rapidly across Europe and to North America, opening its first U.S. store in 1985, followed by expanding into Taiwan, China, and Russia. During the 1990s, it came out in the media that Ingvar was an active member of the Nazi and fascist movement in Sweden. The podcast touches on IKEA's decision to initially avoid e-commerce, citing its incompatibility with the low-cost, customer-centric model. However, in 2018, the company embraced e-commerce, which accounted for a large percentage of their revenue by 2024. Today, it is a global phenomenon with stores in 63 markets worldwide and has also built mega complexes in some of the markets where they operate. The podcast analyzes IKEA's power and the source of its strength. IKEA has no direct competitors and also has a lack of cost-efficient e-commerce. Finally, they try to boil down what the essence of IKEA is. The discussion ends with the quote that IKEA sells a sense of place, similar to what Hermes does.