Ushering in the new year with Doug Stephens
What retailers should know about the realities of the metaverse and more futuristic observations from the retail prophet.

What retailers should know about the realities of the metaverse and more futuristic observations from the retail prophet.
The team sits down to discuss what recent events suggest about this year's unpredictable shopping season.
What can we learn about the industry as a whole by looking at its weakest players?
Retailers are taking on a new challenge likely to define the 2022 season: inflation.
Backroom co-host Ben Unglesbee discusses his recent trip to one of the few remaining Sears stores in the country.
Retailers know they have an important role in addressing climate change. But navigating sustainability is riddled with challenges.
Led by former J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson, the “commerce-at-home” company has suffered from constrained supply and high costs. Note: This conversation was recorded prior to Enjoy Technology's June 30 bankruptcy filing.
Rising food and gas prices are causing consumers to pull back on discretionary spending. That hurt retailers in the first quarter.
The e-commerce giant is grappling with many challenges, including union efforts and its Prime delivery promises.
The consultant has spent decades working in and for the retail industry. We sat down with him this past February to get his take on where the industry is headed.
Activist investors have pressured the retailer to divest assets and potentially even sell itself. Retail Dive reporters discuss the implications of such moves.
The last two decades of retail disruption was supposed to mean the death of wholesale. But recent research shows that brands should think twice about that.
While the pandemic isn't over, 2021 seemed to show that physical locations remain important to retail. But each store must have something to offer, Doug Stephens tells Retail Dive's Daphne Howland.
Vaccines have changed the shopping landscape this year, as have supply chain bottlenecks. Retail Dive reporters look at how the season is playing out.
Senior Reporters Daphne Howland and Ben Unglesbee discuss why Wall Street likes it, why others don't and how Sears' decline serves as a cautionary tale.
Senior Reporters Ben Unglesbee and Daphne Howland talk about turmoil at the apparel e-retailer, DTC companies and online sales in general.
On this episode, Retail Dive's Daphne Howland and Ben Unglesbee discuss the implications of the new variant on the industry.
Retail Dive’s senior editor discusses the past and alternate histories of the brand that once topped even Nike.
In the '80s, Reebok was the top sports brand for a time. Now it's dwarfed by Nike and Adidas. We take a look at the history of the brand, through the lens of the people who were there.
In 2020, digital operations probably saved a lot of retailers when consumers were unable or unwilling to visit stores. But how sustainable is online retail in the long run?
If you think Blockbuster is merely a story about technology, take a second look. Former franchisee Alan Payne discusses its long-deteriorating operations.
A talk with author and antitrust expert Sally Hubbard about what shifts in competition policy and enforcement could mean for the retail industry writ large.
At the federal level, the minimum wage has remained unchanged since 2009 at $7.25 an hour. The team discusses what an increase could mean for the industry.
The Retail Dive team talks about how retailers have paved their own way, as Jeff Bezos prepares to hand over the CEO reins at the e-commerce giant.
A look at what went wrong for the last video chain as well as the fates of other retailers of cultural products.
A follow-up discussion with retail prophet Doug Stephens, who has been mulling the disease outbreak's implications for a forthcoming book.
The shopping holiday was defined by the COVID-19 pandemic. Its defining trends and repercussions will likely follow the industry into the next year.
The department store's deal to sell itself to landlords Simon Property Group and Brookfield Asset Management is in its final stages. But its struggles are far from over.
As the season kickstarts earlier than ever, the industry braces for a fourth quarter plagued by uncertainty.
Why did Walmart launch a membership service, and how can it compete with Amazon Prime? Senior Reporters Daphne Howland and Ben Unglesbee break it down.