Best Buy Co. Inc.'s decision to pull the plug on its partnership with Carphone Warehouse in Europe is not just a partial retreat from the world stage. It also suggests that the Richfield-based consumer electronics retailer, which has leaned on joint ventures, consultants and strategic alliances, will need to seek its best ideas from within the company instead of outside it.
Best Buy said Tuesday it will sell its 50 percent stake in Best Buy Europe to Carphone Warehouse for $775 million in cash and stock, continuing its strategy of simplifying its operations. Best Buy shares jumped 7 percent, or $1.79, to close Tuesday at $25.99.
Since CEO Hubert Joly joined Best Buy last September, the company has wound down its venture capital business, reduced its reliance on consultants, and ended its Geek Squad experiment with Target Corp. The company, of course, is trying to cut costs while focusing its resources primarily on fixing its core U.S. stores. But the moves also suggest that if Best Buy needs innovation, it will rely on its own talent, including chief financial officer Sharon McCollam, U.S. stores chief Shawn Score, and e-commerce president Scott Durchslag.
Best Buy's "intellectual fire power will come from within," said Brian Yarbrough, a retail analyst with Edward Jones. That includes recent hires like Joly, who previously led Carlson; McCollam, who launched Williams-Sonoma's e-commerce business, and Durchslag, a former president of Expedia.
"We concluded that the timing and economics were right to enter into this agreement," Joly said of Best Buy's announcement. "This transaction allows us to simplify our business ... and strengthen our balance sheet."
Best Buy declined to comment further Tuesday.
Throughout its history, the company has relied on an army of consultants and coaches to craft strategy and mentor leaders, yet reserved its most important position, CEO, to longtime store veterans Brad Anderson, Brian Dunn and founder Richard Schulze.
In addition, over the past decade, Best Buy has partnered with a hodgepodge of outside groups including MIT Media Lab, Carnegie Mellon and Silicon Valley tech enthusiasts. The company created a Strategy and Innovation Department, which even included a venture capital unit that invested money in high-tech start-ups.