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286 PART 4 • STRATEGY EVALUATION<br />

Doing Great in a Weak Economy. How?<br />

Family Dollar Stores<br />

Founded in 1959 by the father of CEO Howard Levine,<br />

Family Dollar Stores (FDO) is doing great in the ongoing<br />

recession as cash-strapped consumers hunt for bargains.<br />

The company’s second-quarter 2009 results<br />

exceeded expectations: Sales were up 8.7 percent from<br />

last year to $2 billion. Pro-forma earnings are expected<br />

to be between 59 and 61 cents per share, safely ahead<br />

of the consensus estimate of 50 cents. Family Dollar’s<br />

same-store sales, a key retail metric, were up 6.4 percent<br />

the second quarter of 2009. FDO’s fiscal 2009 3rd quarter<br />

earnings increased another 36 percent.<br />

Family Dollar’s earnings held up well throughout the<br />

global recession, beating estimates in each of the last<br />

four quarters. The company was one of three S&P 500<br />

companies to have a rising stock price in 2008. For fiscal<br />

2008, FDO’s sales increased from $6.8 billion to<br />

$6.9 billion. The company’s net income for 2008 was<br />

$233 million.<br />

The nation’s number two dollar store (behind Dollar<br />

General), Family Dollar targets women shopping for a<br />

family that earns less than $30,000 a year. Family Dollar<br />

The best formulated and best implemented strategies become obsolete as a firm’s external<br />

and internal environments change. It is essential, therefore, that strategists systematically<br />

review, evaluate, and control the execution of strategies. This chapter presents a framework<br />

that can guide managers’ efforts to evaluate <strong>strategic</strong>-<strong>management</strong> activities, to make sure<br />

they are working, and to make timely changes. Management information systems being<br />

used to evaluate strategies are discussed. Guidelines are presented for formulating, implementing,<br />

and evaluating strategies. Family Dollar Stores evaluates strategies well.<br />

The Nature of Strategy Evaluation<br />

operates about 6,600 stores in some 45 states and the<br />

District of Columbia. Consumables (food, health and<br />

beauty aids, and household products) account for about<br />

60 percent of sales; the stores also sell apparel, shoes,<br />

and linens. Family Dollar emphasizes neighborhood<br />

stores near its low- and middle-income customers in rural<br />

and urban areas. Most merchandise is less than $10.<br />

The <strong>strategic</strong>-<strong>management</strong> process results in decisions that can have significant, longlasting<br />

consequences. Erroneous <strong>strategic</strong> decisions can inflict severe penalties and can be<br />

exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, to reverse. Most strategists agree, therefore, that<br />

strategy evaluation is vital to an organization’s well-being; timely evaluations can alert<br />

<strong>management</strong> to problems or potential problems before a situation becomes critical.<br />

Strategy evaluation includes three basic activities: (1) examining the underlying bases of a<br />

firm’s strategy, (2) comparing expected results with actual results, and (3) taking corrective<br />

actions to ensure that performance conforms to plans. The strategy-evaluation stage of the<br />

<strong>strategic</strong>-<strong>management</strong> process is illustrated in Figure 9-1.

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