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|    alt.politics.economics    |    "Its the economy, stupid"    |    345,374 messages    |
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|    Message 343,408 of 345,374    |
|    davidp to All    |
|    Masatoshi Ito, 98, the King of Convenien    |
|    21 Mar 23 10:57:36    |
      From: lessgovt@gmail.com              Masatoshi Ito, 98, the King of Convenience Stores in Japan, Dies       By Ben Dooley, March 13, 2023, NY Times              TOKYO — Masatoshi Ito, who built a Japanese retail empire and helped       fundamentally change the country’s consumer culture with the introduction       there of the American convenience store 7-Eleven, died on Friday. He was 98.              Seven & I Holdings, the company he founded, which acquired majority control of       7-Eleven, confirmed the death in a statement on Monday. It did not say where       he died.              Mr. Ito’s experience in retail started with a family-owned clothing store in       Tokyo. He then founded Ito-Yokado, a chain of grocery stores that became the       foundation for one of the world’s most valuable retail empires, earning him       the admiration of        management gurus at home and abroad.              Perhaps his greatest contribution to modern Japan began in 1973, when a young       executive persuaded him to bring 7-Eleven to the country. Starting with a       single store in Tokyo, the deal he struck with the chain’s owners, the       Dallas-based Southland        company, launched a revolution in Japanese retailing that would transform       everything from the way companies moved their products to the way people eat.              The company’s introduction of the ready-to-eat rice ball to store shelves in       1978 made that humble snack into a central part of the country’s fast food       culture.              In the decades that followed, 7-Eleven and its imitators would open tens of       thousands of convenience stores across Japan, providing a wide range of goods       and services. The shops — open 24 hours a day, every day of the year —       became so integral to        daily life that the government declared them part of the national       infrastructure.              Under Mr. Ito, 7-Eleven Japan quickly outgrew its progenitor, Southland. In       1991, Ito-Yokado purchased a controlling stake in the American retailer,       making it a Japanese company.              But that success quickly soured into scandal, and Mr. Ito stepped down in 1992       in response to accusations that Ito-Yokado had paid off Japanese racketeers       who had threatened to disrupt its annual meetings.              Mr. Ito later became honorary chairman of 7-Eleven’s holding company, Seven       & I, where he continued to have significant influence on the company’s       operations. Today there are more than 80,000 7-Elevens worldwide, with more       than 21,000 in Japan.              Masatoshi Ito was born on April 30, 1924, in Tokyo to Senzo and Yuki Ito, who       ran a dry goods shop called Yokado.              In 1944, fresh out of high school, Mr. Ito spent a brief period in the       Japanese military and at a Japanese company before joining Yokado, which he       took over in 1956 after the death of his older brother. In 1958, he founded       the company that would go on to        become Ito-Yokado and, in 2005, Seven & I.              In 1961, as Japan continued to recover from the destruction of WWII, Mr. Ito       traveled to the United States and there “experienced a kind of cultural       shock at how rich everybody seemed,” he said in a 1988 interview with The       Journal of Japanese Trade        and Industry. He added, “I became particularly conscious of the sheer size       of America’s consumer society and the distribution techniques that made it       all possible.”              Convinced that Japan would soon follow the same development path, Mr. Ito       devoted himself to building a chain of supermarkets inspired by the American       model. He began making regular trips to the U.S., and by the 1970s Ito-Yokado       had become one of Japan’       s top retailers, going public in 1972.              But the company’s fate changed forever the next year, when a young       executive, Toshifumi Suzuki, traveled to the U.S. in search of new business       opportunities. Convinced that smaller shops like 7-Eleven could be the future       of Japanese retail, he talked        Mr. Ito into taking a gamble on the operation. They opened a small shop in       Tokyo’s Toyosu neighborhood in 1974.              Before long, stores began opening up all over Japan, introducing new ideas       about how to run retail operations, including the use of franchising to expand       market share and instituting 24-hour operations.              By the late 80s, Ito-Yokado had become a Japanese business empire with super       stores, department stores, a nationwide chain of Denny’s restaurants and       more than 4,000 7-Elevens, all generating over $12 billion in annual sales.              In 1989, 7-Eleven Japan took over operations of franchises in Hawaii — a       popular destination for Japanese tourists, many of whom expressed disappointed       that the American stores were not up to snuff in comparison with Japan’s       outlets.              A little over a year later, as 7-Eleven’s American owner, Southland, faced       financial collapse, Ito-Yokado struck a $430 million deal to purchase 70       percent of the company. Mr. Ito wanted to buy the operation because he feared       that the company’s        management, which he viewed as shoddy, would damage the brand in Japan, he       told Nikkei Business in a 1996 interview.              The victory, however, was short-lived. In 1992, Mr. Ito announced he was       stepping down as Ito-Yokado’s president after three executives at the       company were accused of providing payoffs to corporate shakedown artists who       had threatened to disrupt the        company’s annual meeting, a common racket at the time.              Replaced by his protégé, Mr. Suzuki, Mr. Ito stayed out of the public view       for several years before re-emerging in the late 1990s, when he was appointed       Ito-Yokado’s honorary chairman. In 2005, the company became Seven & I,       combining the convenience        store’s name with the first initial of its predecessor. Mr. Ito remained       honorary chairman until his death.              Information about his survivors was not immediately available.              Reflecting on his success in the 1988 interview with The Journal of Japanese       Trade and Industry, Mr. Ito displayed a disarming modesty.              “I am frequently asked if I succeeded because of hard work or because I was       just lucky,” he said. “The answer is some of both.”              https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/13/business/masatoshi-ito-dead.html              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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