Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly is a man who often uses metaphors to make a larger point. He says corporate turnarounds are analogous to riding a bicycle. "If you start veer to the left, you steer the bicycle to the right," he says. "And if you start to veer to the right, you steer it to the left. The most important thing is to keep moving."
Joly has certainly pedaled hard, often uphill, during his first year overseeing the world's largest consumer electronics retailer.
When Best Buy officially announced the hiring of Joly on Aug. 20, 2012, the company was in turmoil. Sales were falling, as was the stock price. Former CEO Brian Dunn had resigned amid allegations of using company resources to carry on an affair. Founder Richard Schulze, who knew of Dunn's conduct but failed to inform the board, stepped down as chairman and launched a hostile bid to reacquire the company.
Joly, a former CEO at travel and hospitality giant Carlson, likes to keep it simple. Joly skillfully courted Schulze and by February, the founder had abandoned his takeover attempt and endorsed Joly's "Renew Blue" strategy.
Joly has also cut costs, mostly by laying off hundreds of corporate employees, while spending a good deal of money in retraining store employees and rebuilding bestbuy.com. "I'd like to adjust our say/do ratio," Joly previously said. "We should say less and do more."
He also hired top-notch talent like former Williams Sonoma CFO Sharon McCollam and wooed back investors.
"I would definitely say Joly has brought more credibility" to Best Buy, said Brian Yarbrough, a retail analyst with Edward Jones Investments in St. Louis.
Best Buy likes what it sees so far.