More like "another bankruptcy driven by outdated business model". Leonard Green has owned them since 2010. If the idea was to strip it down, wtf took so long?
Their "business model" seemed so shitty because it was after they were obtained by private equity who loaded up the business with debt and stripped them down to bare bones to look better on paper and do an IPO (2021).
This is textbook private equity vulture capitalism. They even gave the CEO a half million dollar bonus the day before they filed for bankruptcy 😂
Ya unfortunately Joann's really was the big chain for that. We bought my niece a starter sewing machine for Xmas at one last year. Michael's has some stuff, maybe they can fill the gap. Hobby Lobby can burn.
I worked at a hobby lobby briefly and they expect so much more loss than another retail store I've worked at. Also, their refusal to implement digital stock keeping in the 21st century at that scale didn't help.
Looks like they were bought by private equity in 2010. 15 years later and they've sucked it dry, which seems to be happening to a lot of brands these days.
I used to do tech support with them as a client. Worst IT team to work with, they were always impatient jerks. I never did figure out if the company hired shitty people in the first place or just treated them like dirt with no outlet for their stress except outside vendors.
• All JOANN stores will be accepting gift cards through February 28
So, they can't give a timeline on anything else, and it's all subject to court approval, but they can just cancel all of the gift cards in 4 days? That is bullshit.
Just one of the many reasons why gift cards are terrible and should be avoided whenever possible.
When Toys R Us went bankrupt, my son had just been born. We'd been gifted a bunch of babies r us gift cards for the baby shower. I went the day the bankruptcy was announced and just went ape on diapers and wipes. Didn't have to buy any for like 6 months. They cancelled the gift cards like a month later.
And a ton of other craft supplies!
This leaves us with homophobic Hobby Lobby for large craft supply stores.
Joann's saved me from ever having to go to Hobby Lobby and will be missed.
Please do not help the Green family further destroy Oklahoma, our democracy, and Biblical history (fun fact - their Museum of the Bible is stocked with artifacts plundered during the Iraq War. Someone else got them with some fake Dead Sea Scrolls - one of them of course with the anti-gay “clobber passage”)
Craft stores are uniquely unsuited to this because they have to have thousands of suppliers. Just due to the variety of stuff available at a hobby and craft shop, you need to deal in so many thousands of SKUs but any customer needs 5-10 of them at absolute best. The only craft stores that are still independent are those that are supported by the sales of large equipment and then can also supply the owners (sewing machines, looms, etc)
This is mostly going to suck for costumers, home sewists who do anything other than quilt and machine embroidery, teachers and educators who use it for craft supplies, and probably anyone making home- health aids as a small business since they were a major support of open-cell foam in small quantities.
I feel like the biggest mistake was moving most of the stores from smaller more manageable spaces in malls to their gigantic department store sized spaces. For brick and mortar smaller retail spaces seems to be the winning strategy these days, especially since it can be supplemented with an online ordering & send to store system for items not kept in stock at the store.
how many bobbins of thread and square feet of fabric does it take to pay the wages of 2400 people?
anecdotally I have made multiple trips to buy supplies from joanns but I'd be surprised if the net profit made off of my purchases surpassed $5 combined.