I worked as Credit Manager for one of Lowe's Top-5 performing stores in the US for five years. In fact, my store was ranked number 1 in the country in both consumer credit and commercial contractor credit. I was there from 2001-2005, following the purchase of both Heckingers and Home Quarters - a time in which Lowe's completely kicked HD in the rear. I'll tell you in a nutshell what has happened to Lowe's and why their business has gone to heck in a hand basket.
Former Lowe's Chairman Bob Tillman retired in January 2005 and was replaced with Robert Niblock.
Pretty simple. Along with that, the top management who'd been at Lowe's for a number of years and orchestrated a successful store operations philosophy has also left during the past several years.
Former Chairman, Tillman was hired as an entry level store employee in Wilmington, NC in 1962 and worked his way up to store manager, etc. learning every single phase of the business. New Lowe's Chairman since 2005, Niblock was hired directly out of the University of North Carolina, Charlotte as an accountant and has never spent one single day working in a Lowe's store.
The lack of knowledge of the current Lowe's management team with store operations is now telling a disastrous tale with performance and earnings. As Lowe's has cut back on store personnel and Home Depot has restaffed, shoppers and contractors who'd moved from HD to Lowe's have moved back due to the now low levels of customer service at Lowe's. All the electronic gizmos and smartphones in the world will not replace the former Lowe's staffers dealing one on one with contractors and consumers.
Also, Lowe's closing down it's in-house Commercial Credit department in Wilkesboro and selling its assets to GE Credit back around 2004 alienated the bejesus out of a tremendous number of contractors who suddenly found GE Credit not nearly as lenient and forgiving to the Lowe's contractor customers as the former in-house credit department had been. My own store lost a ton of business at that point not to Home Depot, but to 84 Lumber. At the time I was one of several individuals within driving radius of Lowe's new Mooresville, NC headquarters appointed to the " Store Business Process Improvement Team " to attempt to address the huge resentment and negative backlash feedback from contractors.
As much as I wanted to tout the benefits of sponsorship when I worked in racing, I'm not at all convinced that the two big home improvement company sponsorships are driving sales for either. In most of the marketing studies with which I am familiar, what we found was that race fans would be highly supportive of a single sponsor in a particular category such as our Wrangler Jeans sponsorship. However, when multiple sponsors ( i.e. motor oils ) were there, the results were difficult to differentiate. NASCAR consumers gravitated heavily to a single sponsor product such as Tide, Crisco, and Folger's Coffee, but it became a negligible thing when there were lots of sponsors in the same category.
Start mixing the big three - Home Depot, Menards and Lowe's all on race cars and then results of a sponsorship is severely diluted. But, I don't think Lowe's current economic problems have anything to do with their performance on the race track. Personally, I think that all the Lowe's dollars that were poured into Charlotte Motor Speedway would have been better spent on promotions, but that is one fellow's opinion.
RJ Reynolds contrived a very successful formula for sports sponsorship spending. They reasoned that for every dollar spent on direct sports sponsorship, and additional three dollrs should be spent on the advertising and promotion of that sponsorship. It was a formula thta has worked well when applied correctly.
If you've got $8 million committed to the sponsorship of a race car, then you'd better have another $24 million available to design advertising and promotions around that sponsorship if you hope to be successful. This is where so many sponsors meet their downfall. They spend big bucks to paint their name on a car then don't properly advertise and promote it. They may as well have thrown the $8 million car sponsorship in the ocean. The 3 to 1 Rule should always be followed.
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"Any Day is Good for Stock Car Racing"