February 27, 2026
From its early days building ERP systems in Germany, SAP has evolved to become a backbone of global business. Today, many of the largest companies in the world depend on SAP systems to run everything from financial accounting and supply chain management to e-commerce and data analytics, making the company’s strategic choices uniquely consequential.
When Christian Klein became CEO in 2020, he made a bold call: Move SAP decisively into the cloud and prepare the company for an AI‑driven future. Now, he argues that while AI is rapidly advancing, its effectiveness depends on something only SAP can offer at scale.
In this episode of Exceptional Leaders, European Software analyst Adam Wood sits down with Klein at SAP’s headquarters in Waldorf, Germany to discuss SAP’s cloud shift, its AI ambitions, and why human insight and collaboration still matter—even as intelligent agents become ubiquitous.
CHRISTIAN KLEIN
AI is really changing once again the way how business is run. We need to be the best in embedding this AI into the businesses of our customers.
ADAM WOOD
For more than 50 years, SAP has been the backbone of global business. The company's ERP software works behind the scenes at a scale that's hard for most of us to comprehend. Yet if those systems stopped working tomorrow, supply chains would be in chaos, quarterly earnings wouldn't be released, and everyday digital experiences like shopping online would come to a halt altogether.
When Christian Klein took the helm as the sole CEO of SAP in early 2020, he made headlines, not just because he was only 39 years old at the time, but because he scrapped the German software company’s outmoded five-year plan and announced a bold pivot into the cloud. Investors were skeptical, and the company's shares plunged by 30%. Christian proved the naysayers wrong by executing a successful transformation that turned SAP into one of the biggest companies in Europe.
Now, Christian is looking to the next chapter with another bold idea: embedding AI directly into business processes. As Morgan Stanley's head of European tech research, I've been covering SAP for nearly three decades. I wanted to learn more about how SAP's wunderkind CEO navigated such a dramatic transformation and how he's future-proofing SAP for what lies ahead. So I traveled to SAP headquarters in Waldorf, Germany, where I sat down with Christian, who is now known as one of the industry's most forward-thinking leaders.
WOOD
Hey, Christian, thank you very much for joining me here in Waldorf.
KLEIN
Yeah, thanks for having me on.
WOOD
So maybe could you help us understand, you know, if the SAP system is going to be turned off tomorrow, how would that impact business and maybe how it’d impact us personally?
KLEIN
When I felt it the most, it was actually during Covid, and when suddenly a lot of pharma companies reached out and said, “Hey, I need to get this ingredient for this medicine from this place to this place. Can your software help us?” When you are, you know, going to an online shop, there is a high likelihood that it’s also SAP behind a lot of telcos doing their billing. When you switch to pay-as-you-go, a subscription, that's all SAP, and they want to do it real time. And that is what SAP does. It actually runs the world economy.
WOOD
You know, what were those decisions that you made when you first took over as CEO that really started to set the tone of your future leadership?
KLEIN
It was actually clear to me, also being the Chief Operating Officer before, that with our customized on-premise ERP system inside SAP, there will be no cloud transformation. And I also learned that the way how we code, the way how we service, the way how we sell will be different in the future. So we needed a fundamental transformation, and that's why when I became later the CEO, it was crystal clear to me: “Hey, the profit is still looking good, the revenue is still looking good, but we cannot take this for granted.”
WOOD
Okay, so if we look back to that time, you know, those are big decisions. What did you do, first of all, to get the Board on board?
KLEIN
The board—well, I mean, I clearly explained to them from a customer perspective what has to change and why we have to also disrupt our core business. The core ERP are still very much on-prem, so I convinced the Board about that. I said to them, “Watch out, that will not be nice in the financial market.” Now, did I see the share price drop coming? Yes. Did I see it with the 30%? No.
WOOD
I remember I was sent there, following the company at that announcement as you described, and I think I was probably as shocked as you at the scale of the share price reaction.
KLEIN
I guess, especially in times like these, you need to feel the backing. And I always felt the backing by my supervisory board, because when you don't have the backing in such a transformation, in my eyes you can't manage it. I mean, the people here were heavily concerned; some said, “Hey, are we now really yesterday's company? Or are we going to make it?”
And there’s where you have to stand with confidence on stage and give to people a clear plan and a clear roadmap. Now with AI, I mean, is the next transformation coming? But you also then need to make always sure that you keep the balance between, okay, the people carry the company—they need to perform, so they need to be motivated. The second one is of course, the customers need to see why is SAP going in that direction, and then the investors. What I said is really about promising, but then also keep on delivering what you have promised.
WOOD
You talked about the learnings you have from running the ERP internally and the need to move that to cloud. So you have some catch up to do. What enabled you to catch up, and what sets SAP apart in that area today now?
KLEIN
Five years back, I clearly acknowledged, “Hey, look, the hyperscalers are very good in what they are doing. Customers any way want to have choice. Let's be agnostic. But what differentiates SAP in the cloud? Our differentiation comes—look at our transformation, look at Microsoft’s transformation, look at the transformation of BMW here more south. So we are not only putting an ERP to the cloud for BMW, we are saying, “Okay, how will BMW run in the future?” So while we are then moving to the cloud and want to run it as a SaaS application, we definitely also look into the process layer. And the second very important piece is data. Because when we talk about AI in the B2B world, yes, you have all of these quite large language models, but you also need business data. I mean, otherwise, you will not deliver the high value of what customers expect. So we are always doing both. We are looking into the business model, the business process, see: What is good for the top line? What is good for the bottom line? How can we streamline those business processes? Redesign them? The differentiating part, which comes with SAP, is the business process and the data layer.
WOOD
How did you change that debate internally between buy versus build?
KLEIN
You always need to first look into what can you build by when, how fast, and do you have the expertise, the domain, and the financial power to do so. And the second one is then partner. And the third one, if you feel this domain is so strategic and also customers feel that it should be SAP, then we acquire.
WOOD
I mean, automation is also a big topic for investors and also generally. And if we think about, you know, an SAP-powered workforce in the future—you help us by automation—what does that look like in your mind?
KLEIN
When you are now an SAP customer and you are EDA, you have commerce from SAP or you have your one, your stores with SAP, and you have your supply chain. Then actually in the future, when there is actually someone coming, a shopper, into your store, I mean, first you talk to your iPad and then you get, you know, the latest on what did this consumer actually buy the last time, was there some social media click? So your actually employee has way more information about the consumer coming in, either be it online or be it on site at the store. Second piece is, in the future, Consumer A wants to have this dress. So it's not in the shop, but where is it, and how can I ship it in the evening so that I'm ready for meeting Adam in the evening and have this wonderful dress?
And that is something, you know, when I look at that, there are probably many, many people involved transacting with an SAP system. When you see there is an agent who actually is analyzing what has this consumer, you know, what is the consumer interest, what is could be, you know, offered to him. There is another agent and checking inventory, and there is another agent checking out the logistics. So probably yes, you need a human being, you know, looking into that, but not the 100 people you needed.
WOOD
Could you take us forward? What does SAP over the next five years look like?
KLEIN
First, I know the software actually is super important. When you want, for example, procurement with SAP: Who has the smartest agent for sourcing? Who has the smartest agent for automation of billing, etc.? And that is, of course super important in the next five years: that with every piece of software we sell, the first discussion will be, “Okay, what is the agenda guy doing for me? How can we automate? How can we change sourcing? How can we change workforce management when you buy Successfactors? Just saying, “Oh, Successfactors helps you with putting a good workforce together to hire, to educate, to skill,” that is not enough. You need to explain: What is the AI? What is the tool doing for HR to really, you know, have the best workforce in your industry? And that is true for all of our portfolio. So AI is really changing once again the way how business is run in every part, and we need to be the best in embedding this AI into the businesses of our customers. Now that sounds easy. I can tell you, when you look into our customers landscape, it's not all SAP. There are big data lags, big issues around data quality, and so on. And again, an LLM can screen a document, can, you know, make sure that you can make use of unstructured content. But where's the business data? You need to correlate it to your business. Otherwise, strategic workforce management, intelligent sourcing will not happen. You need the business data. You need it clean. You need it high quality. And that is of course something in the next five years that we will also not only work on AI, but also work on a super strong data platform with our customers.
WOOD
How does Gen AI enable SAP to build products differently? How will these products look? And also how does it change the way the employees work?
KLEIN
First, imagine how supply chain, how a bottler, will do last-mile delivery in five years from now. There's a lot of traffic. How can you bring delivery in time with the right temperature, you know, to the place to be? And how can you load the trucks most effectively? And this is kind of what we are now reimagining: How will this work? And then, we need to also then retrain and reskill our developers and say, “Okay, what does really now matter in the future to be world-class with our AI?” So it's less about spending your time on coding, but more about how to build a cohesive data layer, how to build really great AI models, how to reimagine the business processes.
WOOD
How do you futureproof SAP more generally for the next five years and beyond?
KLEIN
If in five years from now, not 70%, you know, of the deals we are closing does include, really, to a large amount AI, then we are probably not successful because this agentic AI layer will take over huge parts of the business processes we are running today. So that is for me really, really important. And then the second piece is of course, industry by industry, really be the best in understanding, “Okay, you run all of these supply chains for us today. How is SAP the frontrunner when it comes to resilient supply chains, intelligent supply chains in the future?” And that is what we are doing here now, but you need to engineer that, and that is something that is of course super important to also have SAP at the top in five years from now.
WOOD
In your view, what could Europe do more to support, whether it's big tech companies like SAP, or whether it's the startup community around GenAI in Europe?
KLEIN
You need a framework where you can be competitive, and this is clearly something—AI, data regulation, I mean, there are big differences. And not only that we are here way more regulated, even worse is that we are differently regulated because Brussels has a good idea and regulation, but still each member states also believe they have a good idea, and what comes up is you actually don't have a union. Our aspiration should be to form a union, to have regulation without too many grey zones, and use this as actually a competitive edge.
WOOD
Let's imagine a world a little bit down the road where actually we can sit back and relax because Joule the agent is doing both our jobs for us.
KLEIN
Yeah.
WOOD
Let's picture that. I'm going to be sitting on a beach with a margarita.
KLEIN
Yes.
WOOD
What does that world hold for Christian Klein? Are you going to be living out your childhood dream ski racing, or where are you going to be?
KLEIN
Yeah, I mean, imagine, you know, here in this place, we are actually doing our earnings. You are sitting at a beach. I'm sitting at the mountains of Austria or Switzerland and yeah, enjoying life. And there's an agent, you know, presenting results, smart enough to answer all of your questions better. And you actually can just instruct a chatbot, “Alright today, grill Christian, or the chatbot of Christian, a little bit more on this topic.” I mean, I would say absolutely possible. I still believe, nevertheless, honestly, that a human conversation—I mean, you leave every conversation, you have a gut feel. You feel the sentiment, yeah? And not saying that AI can't measure that as well, but at the end there is still a piece left for an analyst, for an investor, for a CEO, for a CFO who is still, you know, also where you need a human being, where you need the sentiment, feel the emotions in the room, to also then come up with a final judgment: Was this now good earnings or not-so-good earnings?
WOOD
We need to keep that personal connection.
KLEIN
I and honestly, I mean, human beings are also like that; I mean, I love this conversation. So I enjoyed, and I guess this is who we are: you know, we need that.
WOOD
This is a great conversation, Christian. Really appreciate you taking the time.
KLEIN
Thanks a lot.
In this engaging series from Morgan Stanley, experts from across the firm sit down with leaders at world-class companies for insightful conversations covering everything from leadership lessons to foundational changes in industries, markets and society.
JAMES QUINCEY
The future belongs to the discontented. Robert Woodruff wrote that in 1936 on the 50th anniversary of Coke. If we rest on our laurels. If we think the future is owed to us, it'll be a catastrophe. The people who are trying to think a little harder about how to satisfy the consumer needs is going to win.
V.O. (DARA MOHSENIAN)
From its pharmacy beginnings in 1886, Coca-Cola has become more than just a beverage company. It's one of the most iconic brands of all time, simultaneously evoking nostalgia as well as optimism for a brighter future. Of course, enduring brands need visionary leaders. And that's where James Quincey comes in. Since stepping into Coke’s CEO role in 2017, Quincey has guided the company through a period of profound transformation, refocusing Coke as a total beverage company, flattening the corporate structure, and emboldening the organization to take smart risks. All while keeping up with ever evolving consumer tastes. As an analyst covering U.S. Beverages and Household Products, I've been closely following Quincy's career and was eager to meet with him ahead of his March 2026 retirement. So, I traveled to Coca-Cola's global headquarters in Atlanta, saw more than a century's worth of memorabilia, visited the vault holding Coke's original secret formula, and sat down for a fascinating conversation with Quincey about leadership, legacy, and the enduring power of an exceptional brand.
DARA MOHSENIAN
James, thank you so much for being here, this is an incredible opportunity. We're excited about it.
JAMES QUINCEY
Pleasure.
DARA MOHSENIAN
So, Coke has 30 separate billion-dollar brands. You've locked away the secret formula in your vault, which I saw this morning. But what's the secret to building billion-dollar brands in your mind?
JAMES QUINCEY
you need to have a sort of messianic belief in an idea. The brand, what it does, what problem it solves the consumer. If you don't have a messianic belief in it, you'll never go through all the hard things that are ahead on building a brand. And yet, on the other hand, it's very rarely right first time. You know, you can name zillions of companies, they came up with an idea. And then through three, four, five iterations, they ended up with something really, really good. And that's what they're famous for now, but they generally started as something else. And that's true of brands as well.
How do you manage the tension between believing in something and yet still being adaptable to the feedback from the consumer? And that's kind of key to creating these brands. I mean, you think about Coca-Cola, it's not the first formula we tried. Right, you know, John Poundland, he used to go down to the port of Savannah and buy different spices and ingredients and go back and mix them together. So, there was an iterative process there of coming up, not just with the brand, but with the product that typifies it. It's not all, it's not all science. There's definitely some art to it, too, and listening to the consumer.
DARA MOHSENIAN
At a consumer level. How do you really conceptualize what can work in a big way in this environment?
JAMES QUINCEY
in the end, you're trying to solve a problem for the consumer. They may not know they've got the problem. They're not answering it directly from the need. it's like, how do you solve the problems they've got with dealing with, all the people coming through the doors trying to buy beverages. And that's, you know, the advent of the fountain machine or the vending machine. Really, starting with the consumer. I think it's a great enduring lesson of the importance of understanding deeply what is the consumer really interested in?
DARA MOHSENIAN
Let's go back to 1996, when you joined Coca-Cola as an organization.
JAMES QUINCEY
Coca-Cola was a bit of iconography around, you know, the American dream or the dream of freedom and all those things. So, of course, it was kind of embedded in my mind. And, you know, I can remember playing squash with my dad and drinking a Coke afterwards. So again, everyone has an integration of the brand into their life. It was clearly a brand I loved and therefore - and there was this moment of serendipity - so I came in and joined the company. I thought, let's give it a try. Let's see what happens.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Talk about your leadership style and how it's evolved at Coke over time.
JAMES QUINCEY
I mean, I've been here almost 30 years. And, you know, you learn and mature. You learn from your own experiences. Like, ‘okay, this works. This doesn't work. That's not so smart. And let's do something better.’ You learn from seeing leaders you admire, and frankly, leaders you don't admire. Okay. Well, I'm not going to follow that example. And so there's been a natural process of learning and growing, and maturing over the 30 years and to some extent, you know, as you go up in the organization, you start off kind of very focused on getting stuff done. And it gets a little more conceptual as you get up to the top of the organization. But it's really been a steady process of learning and growing, which at the end, what does it require? It means it requires you to be open to getting the feedback, and incorporating new ideas and new ways of doing things.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Coke's truly a global beverage company. How does that impact the way you manage the company, your leadership, the global orientation?
JAMES QUINCEY
Well, firstly, I think that that experience, talks to the possibilities at Coke, which is you can go almost anywhere in the world and have different management experiences. And it demonstrates the globalness of the organization that you can be almost anywhere. But each of those experiences was different. And that talks to the localness of the business. You know, running Argentina is very different to running Mexico is different to running Europe. Each of these businesses in each of these countries has something very unique about it. You know, and I was the Argentine country manager in their crisis in 2001- 2002.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Fun times.
JAMES QUINCEY
Yeah, I arrived in the country - it was one of the most expensive places in the world. A few years later when I left, it was one of the cheapest. And, you know, everything can change overnight in some of these countries. The premium on agility, the willingness to reconsider everything from first principles, having a very broad view of the organization because all variables can come into play at any time. You need to be much more holistic, and much quicker, and much more willing, to change things on a dime. And also, the results can be much better on the way up. And they can be much worse on the way down. And then you go to a Europe where that generally is not true. Not all variables at play at the same time.
The difference between good and bad is a much smaller margin of error. It feels more institutional and set piece. But then of course it puts the premium or puts the intensity on the of the competition on those few variables that are in play at a much higher level than perhaps you would have in a Latin America or an emerging market. So, I think being able to learn each of those different experiences makes it much better as a platform to then try and run the global company.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Can you highlight the emerging markets opportunity you see over time?
JAMES QUINCEY
The simplest way, I think, to think about the global beverage market. And as we're talking beverages, think two bottles. You’ve got one bottle that's the developed economies. That's about 20% of the world's population. In that bottle people are paying for about 75% of what they drink each day.
So commercial beverages largely fills the bottle in the developed economies. Of course, that's made up of alcohol, nonalcoholic drinks, coffee, tea, etc., etc.. And our share is, you know, in the low teens of the total commercial beverages. We don't play in every piece, but it's a relatively low share of the total money. So, we got lots of opportunities to continue to gain share of the money that's being spent in the developed economies for the beverage share. But that's just the developed market, which is 20% of the world's population.
The other bottle actually represents largely the emerging markets. That's 80% of the world's population. And there they are only paying for two and a half of the drinks out of ten that they're consuming. And our share is, I think, high single digits. So, actually, the most important feature of the global beverage industry is it's yet to be created, is the empty emerging market bottle. As the industry leader, we can help grow. And obviously, we think we can gain share in both the developed and the emerging markets as we do.
DARA MOHSENIAN
When you came in as Coke’s CEO, you really refocused the company from primarily a soft drinks focus. And you talked a lot about making Coke a ‘total beverage company.’ Could you talk about the genesis behind that thinking and how you've evolved the company?
JAMES QUINCEY
People had realized we needed to be a broader beverage company before, and had tried to break out. But it was left at the intellectual level. And the culture basically ate the idea and stopped it. The company was very much culturally - Coke first, second and third without any opportunity. And every country gets to decide and they can keep changing everything.
Once you've got that, it’s very difficult to galvanize about a new idea that you need to move around. Because everything got relitigated. And everything got subsumed to Coke's. Actually, the insight in a way and the action was to resell the idea of a total beverage company in a compelling way, and bring with that a cultural change strategy that allowed it to then prosper and thrive within the evolved company.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Culture has been a huge focus for you at Coke. One of the seminal moments was when you showed up for the first analyst day in jeans.
JAMES QUINCEY
The jeans moment was, in a way, leveraging the simple idea that everything communicates. To say ‘things are going to be different’ because it was a very formal, hierarchical, but very formal organization. Here's the moment of change. It was reinforcing the idea ‘We’ve got to be different.’ And the culture had become very inward looking. It's a large organization. It became inward looking because things got very hard to do. So of course, you direct more energy internally. And we very much had to push the idea of a growth mindset, and understanding that everything we did communicated or reinforced that strategy. And the simple mechanism I used to give to people is ‘every time you do something that is coherent with what you said you wanted, you score a point. And every time you do something that's not coherent with what you said you wanted, you get minus ten.’ If you can't get into positive numbers, you’ve got zero chance of changing the culture.
DARA MOHSENIAN
AI seems to be transforming everything at this point. Where do you think it could be most impactful for Coke?
JAMES QUINCEY
in the long run, I think it's most interesting as a demand creation, consumer engagement, retailer engagement vehicle. In the short term, I think it's more likely to be productivity. That's where it's easier to see it's impact, whether it's the effectiveness with which you make the Christmas ad or some of the other things we've been doing, helping the salespeople be much more effective.
I think those sorts of examples, are the near-in ones, which are kind of easy to grasp. As it goes forward and as AI systems of Coke can talk to the AI systems at the retailer, can interact with the consumer's AI systems, then really it's about demand creation and competitive advantage.
DARA MOHSENIAN
You've had an incredible tenure as CEO over the last decade.
JAMES QUINCEY
Thank you.
DARA MOHSENIAN
How do you ensure the organization is positioned for success post your tenure?
JAMES QUINCEY
Actually, it starts on day one. It's one of those kind of weird experiences on being a CEO. You start and immediately begin the conversation of how to replace yourself. It's kind of, it's sort of unique in that way. And you do. That's what we and you know, the board and I have been doing ongoing all through my tenure is stewarding all the talent down through organization.
Think of it as a huge kind of funnel, if you like, giving people opportunities to grow, promoting the ones with the best and the most long-term potential, and constantly looking for a stream of successes to each job and ultimately successes to the CEO job. So, it’s been an ongoing process. You can't start the day before you want it. It has to be something both for the CEO and the organization that's an enduring and ongoing piece of the management development program.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Looking ahead, what's still on your agenda?
JAMES QUINCEY
I used to say something like, ‘well, hopefully there'll be nothing left to do,’ but that is a wildly naive thing to say because the reality is the world keeps changing. Consumers needs have an enduring part to them, but they also have, kind of, they come in new forms of manifestations. How and where you will engage with them has changed. So, if you just look at the journey of marketing over the hundred and four years of the Coke Company, it's gone from, you know, started with sampling, then it's got ads in newspapers, then it's got billboards, then it's got radio, then it's got TV, then it's got social media. Now we're kind of on the verge of the agentic agent. The consumer is still there with a need to drink liquids.
But how you engage is changed every time. So, really the challenge will always be, and it will be an enduring challenge, is how do you make the brands relevant to every generation of consumers? How and where do you make that happen? And that'll be an eternal job.
DARA MOHSENIAN
How do you think you'll be remembered as Coke’s CEO?
JAMES QUINCEY
I used to say, ‘I hope I'm not remembered.’ But I'm not sure that's a very good answer. I hope there's a degree of fondness and success and respect. But at the end, the important thing about history is that recent history should not be marshaled in service of the future.
JAMES QUINCEY
You know, I hope they forget me. Not because they didn't like me or they didn't think it was good what I did. But the future is so full of growth, has so many opportunities, and they're so successful that they're looking forward and not looking at the recent past.
DARA MOHSENIAN
Well as always, that was very informative. Thank you so much for being here.
JAMES QUINCEY
Thank you.
SIMEON GUTMAN (V.O.)
When Ed Stack took over Dick's Sporting Goods in 1984, his main objective was keeping the family business afloat.
ED STACK
We weren’t very well capitalized. Certain brands wouldn’t sell us at the time.
SIMEON GUTMAN (V.O.)
Today, Dick’s is the dominant player in sporting goods, with more than 850 stores across nearly every state in America. And it is one of the most innovative names in retail, connecting with customers through immersive experiences in the store, on the playing field, and digitally. Ed's vision.
ED STACK
To be the best sports company in the world.
SIMEON GUTMAN (V.O.)
As an analyst covering hard lines in broadline retail, I wanted to learn more about how Ed, whose father founded Dick's in 1948, has led the company through pivotal periods, and how he's setting the pace for its future. So I traveled to Pittsburgh, where I met Ed at a House of Sport for a fascinating conversation and some friendly competition.
SIMEON GUTMAN
Ed, thank you so much for doing this. Good to see you.
ED STACK
Yeah, good to see you, too. Thanks.
SIMEON GUTMAN
Let's get into it.
ED STACK
Sure.
SIMEON GUTMAN
So what was your first job at Dick's, and growing up, did you imagine yourself joining the family business?
ED STACK
My father put me to work here when I was 13 because he was going to teach me responsibility. So I worked in the warehouse, and I was unloading trucks and sweeping floors. And when I was 15 years old, he put me on the sales floor, starting to wait on customers. I hated every minute of it. I wanted nothing to do with the family business. And when I went off to college, I never expected that I would come back.
As I was getting ready to get out of school, my dad got really sick, and I came back into the business. And, somewhere along the line, I fell in love with the business. And it's a love affair that's alive and well today.
SIMEON GUTMAN
So you took over Dick's in 1984. What were your aspirations back then?
ED STACK
To be honest with you, it was a small family business. We had two little stores in Binghamton, New York. And the vision was really merely: survive. You know, we really weren't very well capitalized. We had a line of credit from the bank that we had to clean up every single year for 30 days. And Adidas wouldn't sell us, Puma wouldn't sell us. And they were the two hot athletic brands at that time.
SIMEON GUTMAN
How has Dick’s become more intentional about culture, and how do you scale that across 850 plus stores?
ED STACK
Culture is difficult to define because you can't pick up and look at culture. You can't kind of put it in a box and distribute it out to the stores. It's something that's got to be learned through osmosis. It's got to be led through the values that the company has.
And one of the things that I think helped with our culture: the easiest thing to say when you're having a business conversation of a new idea is to say, “No, you know, no, that won't work.”
And we made a change, probably, I don't know, six, seven, eight years ago, and said, whenever there's an idea—we're having a meeting and somebody comes up with a new idea—nobody can lead with, “No, because.” Every comment after that has to be, “Yes, if. Yes, we could do that, if we can do this, this, and this.” And it's made a huge change.
SIMEON GUTMAN
So we're sitting in this House of Sport. For those that haven't experienced [it], how would you describe it? And then what is the return on the experience here?
ED STACK
If you see pictures of it or you try to describe it, it's very difficult. You have to get into the space to really understand it, because of the—not only the size of it, but the products that are here, the interactivity that's here. This has really been a journey that's ten years in the making.
As we did that, we designed it and we walked through it. I said, “It's not different enough from what we're doing today.” So we scrapped it, put it on hold, and came back about six years ago and started the project again.
The first one we did was roughly 100,000 square feet. There is a field right next to it: have kids come and practice. You can have events there. We've got 25 now, we'll have 35 by the end of the year, and by the end of ‘27, we'll have somewhere between 75 and 100. We couldn't be more excited about it.
SIMEON GUTMAN
In a retail industry that's struggling to get people to come to stores, here’s a category sporting goods and a physical box that people want to come to and experience.
ED STACK
If you're an athlete, this is the place you want to come to. If you talked to an analyst five, six, seven years ago, they would say, “I don't really know how many stores you have, but you have too many. And I don't really know how big your store is, but it's too big, because you should shrink your store and have less stores.”
And when people would ask me, you know, six, seven years ago, “In ten years, what will your footprint look like?” I would tell them, “I think we will have approximately the same amount of stores, but we'll have a lot more square footage.” They didn't particularly like that because they didn't understand what House of Sport was going to become. When Nike first came in to see the store, they said, “This is the best expression of sport anywhere in the world.”
In 2016, we thought there was a huge opportunity to be the ecosystem of youth sports. GameChanger has been just terrific.
SIMEON GUTMAN
It's grown into $100 million SaaS business with 9 million members. Did you always see it as a scalable platform, or did it evolve into something bigger than it is?
ED STACK
Every month we stream more baseball games—Little League games, high school games—than all the Major League Baseball games played since the beginning of time. We're doing this now with basketball. We're looking at soccer. Technology is an important part of our business. So we want to be involved with the customer, who we refer to as athletes. We want to be involved with the athletes and their entire journey, whether that's what they're doing from a research standpoint, what we can do from provid[ing] them suggestions on what they should buy or how they can get better, what we can do from a retail standpoint of the product, how we can interact with them. People love GameChanger. You know, the satisfaction level is extremely high. If you're a mom or dad and you're traveling for work, you can stream that game right on your phone. And that's why the business continues to grow at roughly 40% a year. And that's what we're really heading toward with this idea to be the best sports company in the world. We’ll be evolving more into a platform where you can research product, you can buy product, you can try product. GameChanger would be involved with sports throughout the entire journey. We continue to expand what this whole youth platform could be.
SIMEON GUTMAN
Youth sports participation has faced some headwinds in recent years. What do you see as the biggest barriers, and how is Dick's working to address it?
ED STACK
Sports and culture is at an intersection: it’s never been like this before. And that's happening all around the world. We're seeing our youth sports business on fire right now. Our baseball business has been great. Our soccer business has been great. The lacrosse business, basketball business. The World Cup is going to be the biggest sporting event this country has ever seen, and that's going to really help drive youth participation. What's going on in women's basketball right now? With Caitlin Clark and A’ja and Sabrina. Our number one selling basketball shoe is Sabrina's basketball shoe. Because boys are buying that shoe too. We run a camp every year for five and six-year-olds that they come and every day, they play a different sport. So we introduce them to basketball one day, golf another day, baseball, football. There's a groundswell of what's going on in youth sports participation, and I think we're right at the center of that.
SIMEON GUTMAN
The Foot Locker acquisition has raised some eyebrows. What's the rationale behind it? And what do you say to the skeptics?
ED STACK
Foot Locker gives us the opportunity to have a global presence, which we don't have today. It gives us an opportunity to engage with the consumer that we don't have today. And we've always talked about this, that we don't make investments from one quarter to the next. We make investments for a lifetime. And we think the Foot Locker acquisition is an investment for a lifetime. People are starting to understand that, starting to get that, and I think as we go forward and we get Foot Locker turned around, I think they'll look back and say, “That was a pretty good idea.”
SIMEON GUTMAN
Dick's made headlines in 2018 with its decision to remove firearms, a move that cost the company more than $250 million. Would you make the same call today?
ED STACK
Absolutely. You know, after Sandy Hook, we really started to look differently at how we sold firearms, how we marketed it, take a bit of a backseat. And then when Parkland happened, I was on Good Morning America with Stephanopoulos, and he asked me, “You know, will you ever put these guns back in the store?” And I said, “Never.” I just didn't want to be a part of that story any longer. We exited the high-capacity magazines, the assault style weapons. We wouldn't sell a firearm to anybody under 21 years old. And then a number of people were really upset with us, and it cost us well over a quarter of $1 million. We then said, “Okay, you know what? Let's just test if we take all firearms out.”
We looked at every store, what was selling, what would be best for that community, and the margin rates were so much lower in the firearms business. We only had to recoup 60% of the sales to have the same kind of earnings number. When we did this, the team did such a good job on this that we captured about 110% of the sales. So it was a huge win for the company. And yes, I’d do it exactly the same way again.
SIMEON GUTMAN
What do you hope your legacy will be? Not just at Dick's, but in how retail leaders think about culture, innovation, and impact?
ED STACK
I don't really think about the legacy that I'm trying to leave. I think about how the business will grow and survive going forward when I'm not involved any longer. When my dad was on his deathbed, and he'd been sick for a long time, I said, “If it's time to go, it's okay for you to go. And I know you worry about the business, but I promise I will take care of the business. We'll continue this business for generations to come and set it up to be able to do that.”
And so what I'd like my legacy to be is to be able to fulfill that promise I made to my father on the day he died. And I think we're in really good shape. And to be able to do that, you have to have the right people. And Lauren Hobart is absolutely the right person. I couldn't be more proud of the team. The legacy for our company and for me would be that this continues to go on for generations.
SIMEON GUTMAN
Well, it's been a pleasure to watch a retail leader take a business through all the phases of retail evolution. Thanks for doing this.
ED STACK
Simeon, thanks. That was great. Yeah, that's great. Let's walk around the store a little bit.
SIMEON GUTMAN
Yeah, I’d love it.
So this is what happens on the executive board?
ED STACK
[Laughs] Yeah.
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