Sears
Sears, Roebuck and Company, commonly known as Sears, was an American retailer founded in 1893 by Richard W. Sears and Alvah C. Roebuck as a mail-order business initially focused on watches and jewelry in Chicago.[1] The company revolutionized consumer access to goods through its expansive catalogs, which by the early 1900s offered everything from household items to prefabricated homes, serving rural America before expanding into urban department stores starting in 1925.[1] At its peak in the mid-20th century, Sears became the world's largest retailer, employing over 300,000 people and introducing enduring private-label brands such as Craftsman tools in 1927, Kenmore appliances, DieHard batteries, and Allstate insurance in 1931.[2] Sears maintained retail supremacy into the 1980s, operating thousands of stores and pioneering credit options like the Discover Card, but began faltering in the 1990s amid competition from discount chains like Walmart and failure to modernize inventory and customer experience.[3][4] The 2005 merger with Kmart under hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert intensified decline through real estate sales, cost-cutting that neglected stores, and financial maneuvers prioritizing shareholder payouts over operational investment, culminating in Chapter 11 bankruptcy in October 2018 with $11.3 billion in debt against $6.9 billion in assets.[3][5] Post-bankruptcy, Sears emerged under Transform Holdco but continued shrinking, closing most locations due to persistent unprofitability and e-commerce disruption; by March 2025, only eight stores remained operational nationwide.[6][7] This trajectory underscores causal failures in strategic adaptation and leadership accountability over exogenous market shifts alone.[3]