It’s not just about Kraft Heinz, it’s about how we think, lead, and adapt in real time.
Too often, mergers are sold on projected synergies that never materialize. As someone who’s historically been cautious around M&A, I’m trying to better understand the gap between expected value and real outcomes. This story is a clear reminder that even the largest companies can miscalculate. But what stands out most is the courage to acknowledge a bad decision, pivot, and try to unlock new value.
That’s the kind of thinking we need on any board. It’s not about being right all the time, it’s about being willing to change direction when the scoreboard tells you you missed. That’s real governance.
This article also surfaces something deeper: systemic risk. Consumer preferences shift. Processed foods are under scrutiny. And here’s what’s often overlooked, when public support programs like food stamps change, it impacts the very demand models some companies are built on. A cut in SNAP benefits doesn’t just hurt households, it hits the bottom line of businesses that serve them. Public policy and private strategy are more connected than we sometimes care to admit.
For leaders on Main Street, this isn’t just about big brands. These are lessons in agility, humility, and alignment. Trends don’t just shape Wall Street, they shape how we serve real people in real places.
Strategy isn’t just about bold moves, it’s about staying awake enough to reverse them when they aren’t working. Let me know what you think.
Every now and then, someone sends a message that doesn’t just land, it crashes in.
It grabs your breath mid-sentence.
Not because it flatters you.
But because it finds you.
It speaks in the language of survival, the unspoken dialect of those who’ve walked with pain, tucked it away, and tried to build something resembling a life around it.