That 100th/50th free customer promotion must have cut into sales hard. Imagine a customer getting an expensive TV for nothing. Then you add it up to other expensive items and there is no wonder why Venture went under.
Venture was in trouble long before that promotion, which was more likely either a last-gasp effort, or perhaps a hairbrained idea of the last CEO who mostly seemed interested making Venture's coffers his own.
Anybody could see that promotion was horrific at best. Imagine if Walmart did that. Look at how many customers one store has in one hour. Multiply that by at least 100 stores and one gets an idea of how stupid that promotion was for the company.
That 100th/50th free customer promotion must have cut into sales hard. Imagine a customer getting an expensive TV for nothing. Then you add it up to other expensive items and there is no wonder why Venture went under.
Venture was in trouble long before that promotion, which was more likely either a last-gasp effort, or perhaps a hairbrained idea of the last CEO who mostly seemed interested making Venture's coffers his own.
Anybody could see that promotion was horrific at best. Imagine if Walmart did that. Look at how many customers one store has in one hour. Multiply that by at least 100 stores and one gets an idea of how stupid that promotion was for the company.
It was actually due to overexpansion in such a short time, but yeah, there's a reason nobody does THAT deal anymore.
A store called Ames did that in the late 1990s and early 2000s. They closed in 2002.