I have always had a soft spot for former Iceland boss Malcolm Walker and his shoot-from-the-hip style of management. Even when he was being a bit well, how can I put this? economical with the truth.
No, I am not talking here about share dealing scandals. Rather about the time I contacted Walker on his mobile last autumn to ask whether Iceland had effected a strategic U-turn and implemented a high:low pricing strategy.
Walker said: why do you ask? Well, I replied, I have seen your new tv ad focusing on deep price cuts rather than multibuys, and wondered what that was all about.
Walker insisted the ads were designed to fill a gap before the Christmas campaign.
"We just cobbled together the deal ad to fill the gap and will do it again in January. I thought it was quite strong but the deals are not different," he said.
So imagine my surprise when I opened the Iceland annual report this week and read new chief executive Bill Grimsey's views on the group's ill-fated decision to move to a high:low pricing policy with mad' deals designed to attract customer visits.
But the change in activity led only to disappointing results. A heavyweight multibuy programme was reintroduced for Christmas. Unfortunately, the high prices across the rest of the range remained in place making Iceland very uncompetitive.
And when did this farce happen? Grimsey says the U-turn took place last October shortly before I rang his predecessor to ask why he had moved to a high:low strategy. Fancy that!
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