At least Jan Cameron isn’t hiding from the collapse of Retail Adventures, her national empire of discount retail chains.
“This will keep me off the Rich List, let’s put it that way,” she told The Australian in what is an extraordinarily frank account of the collapse.
“I have often referred to this company as retail nightmares or retail misadventures.”
“Whatever happens, I was in charge when this was happening. I’ve got to take responsibility. I’ve made huge mistakes. It’s been a massive learning experience. I didn’t have a full understanding of this business.”
Cameron’s admissions are telling and the interview is worth quoting from at length.
After reaping $250 million from the sale of Kathmandu in 2006, Cameron continued a largely reclusive life until April 2009, as the first wave of the global financial crisis ripped through the retail sector.
When a discount retail group called Australian Discount Retail – owner of the Go-Lo, Sam’s Warehouse, Chickenfeed and Crazy Clark’s chains – fell into the hands of receivers, Cameron pounced, paying $85 million for the business.
Knowing what we know now about what would happen to the retail sector over the next three years, it was a ridiculous price – think of the big retailers that have since gone to the wall and have been unable to attract a buyer.
But worst of all, Cameron appears not to have understood what she was buying. She didn’t understand the discount end of the market and she certainly didn’t understand what lurked under the bonnet of Australian Discount Retail, which she re-named Retail Adventures.
“It is the cage-fighting of the retail industry – if all retail is warfare, this is at the guerrilla end of the scale,” she told The Australian.
“Outdoor retailing is a cakewalk compared to this.”
Discount retail might be a cage fight, but Cameron started with a pretty laidback attitude. Not only did she let others run the company, but she clearly believed it would be a pretty easy task, saying back in 2009 that it would be “a difficult feat for a company like this to lose money”.
How wrong she was.
Cameron’s first appointment was former Harris Scarfe chief Robert Atkins, who she now claimed had a “vendetta” against his former employer and was sacked for alleged sexual harassment.
A series of subsequent managers proved to be little better.
“There has been a high level of resistance to change within the company; an unwillingness or inability to deliver the radical change that has been required,” she told The Australian.
“There was a really diabolical culture that existed in the company … that … I worked very hard for the last three years to root out.
“Some (staff) had a strange desire to run me out of money, thinking the company would get bought by the next sucker and they could continue on with their cruisy ways.”
Retail Adventures will live on as another company called Discount Superstores Group, which will run under “license” from Deloitte. Cameron is both an equity holder in the new group and the biggest creditor to Retail Adventures, having loaned the business $80 million.
Exactly how that works – and what happens to other creditors – isn’t clear, but the net result is that 60 unprofitable stores will shut, with hundreds of jobs likely to go.
Cameron claims shutting these stores will make the new business profitable from day one and admits she should not have tried to carry loss-making stores.
That’s a fine admission to make now, when the business is in the hands of administrators. But how can a Rich List retailer, arguably one of the best in the country, make a mistake like that?
James Thomson is a former editor of BRW’s Rich 200 and the publisher of SmartCompany and LeadingCompany.