Best Buy CEO Hubert Joly will meet with the company's founder, Richard Schulze, this week in the Twin Cities as Schulze moves closer to making an offer to buy the consumer electronics retailer.
Joly and Schulze are expected to discuss ways to recharge the struggling company, according to multiple sources. While the pair have previously crossed paths, this week's meeting will provide the first real chance for the executives to share their points of view about the company in a substantial way, a source close to the situation said.
Top members of Schulze's buyout team -- former CEO Brad Anderson and former president Al Lenzmeier -- also are expected to attend, a source told the newspaper.
Analysts and investors say the meeting could mark a turning point in Schulze's ongoing effort to take over Best Buy, which has roots in Minnesota going back to 1966. The gathering comes just one week after Joly held his first major presentation to investors in New York and just before Black Friday, the official start to the critical holiday shopping season.
"It's an extremely significant meeting given the timing," said Burt Flickinger, managing director of Strategic Resources consulting firm in New York.
A company spokesman acknowledged that the meeting will occur, adding that the timing is not that unusual.
"Dick is our biggest shareholder, and Hubert is the CEO," said Matt Furman, Best Buy's senior vice president of public affairs. "It's not at all surprising that they would meet from time to time, just as they have in the past and just as they will certainly do in the future."
Furman declined further comment.