『The Commerce Collective』のカバーアート

The Commerce Collective

The Commerce Collective

著者: Deanah Baker
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The Commerce Collective is a podcast hosted by Deanah Baker that explores the future of retail and the sophisticated "art of the buy". Drawing on her experience as a former Walmart senior executive overseeing $25 billion in P&L, Deanah hosts deep-dive conversations with high-growth CPG and B2C leaders to dissect the strategies behind product innovation, omnichannel scaling, and go-to-market execution. From the mechanics of multi-billion-dollar brand launches to the evolution of the modern shopping experience, the show provides founders and executives with the strategic blueprints and insider perspectives necessary to master the complexities of today’s global retail landscape.

© 2026 The Commerce Collective
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  • Ep. 2 - Inaction Is Risky: Karen Stuckey on Leadership Boldness
    2026/06/10

    The silent killer of market relevance is the corporate paralysis that comes from waiting for perfect data. In an era dominated by market disruption and shifting consumer behaviors, the instinct to slow down and protect current margins often feels like the safest route. We sit down with Karen Stuckey, former Walmart Senior Leader and corporate board director, to dissect why the greatest threat to your organization or your career isn't making a wrong call, it is the refusal to make a call at all.

    We get into the critical mechanics of driving growth through uncertainty, transitioning from a reactive stance to a strategic offensive. Karen shares her firsthand experience balancing leadership judgment across retail and CPG sectors, outlining the exact point where a delayed decision morphs from responsible caution into reckless stagnation. Our conversation highlights the difference between calculated risks that carry firm contingencies and blind gambles, the mental shift required to manage large-scale corporate transformations, and the specific signals that tell a leader the market has already moved. Karen also opens up about her own high-stakes career moves, including stepping away from a president title and a comfortable P&L role to jump into a completely unfamiliar corporate ecosystem.

    The reality of executive leadership is that nobody can guarantee a flawless outcome, and trying to shield a company from every variable creates an entirely new category of operational risk. True organizational speed requires rigid discipline in the metrics you can control so you have the remaining bandwidth to pivot when the market forces your hand. Viewers will walk away with a functional framework for auditing their own decisiveness, evaluating innovation budgets without chasing shiny objects, and understanding how unique past expertise can become a primary differentiator in a brand-new role.

    If you care about driving corporate transformation, sharpening executive judgment, and building the operational discipline required to move fast in volatile markets, you’ll get a lot from this episode. Please remember to subscribe to the channel and share this conversation with a colleague who needs to hear it. For those listening: What is the biggest decision your team is currently delaying in the name of gathering more data, and what is the actual cost of that waiting? Let us know in the comments below.

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    40 分
  • Ep. 1 - Managing AI Anxiety: People-First Tech Integration
    2026/05/13

    The pace of technological change is no longer measured in years or months, but in days, leaving many leaders feeling like they are perpetually behind before the work day even begins. When businesses are forced to move faster while simultaneously rethinking their entire workforce skill set, the traditional "check-the-box" approach to software adoption fails. Cheryl Yarbrough, VP of Partnerships at New Nexus Group, joins the show to discuss how to guide a corporate team through the "Wild West" of AI integration without creating a culture of anxiety.

    In this first episode of The Commerce Collective we sit down to discuss the necessity of moving beyond technical stacks to focus on the ground-level human experience of adopting new tools. We get into specific strategies like utilizing low-risk use cases for meeting prep and client communication, the shift from formal training to "granting permission" to fail, and the emerging role of early adopters as natural organizational leaders. Cheryl shares her philosophy on why AI should be treated like a highly capable but unaccountable summer intern, requiring constant human oversight and context to remain effective.

    The unglamorous truth of AI adoption is that it often exposes existing organizational gaps faster than it solves them, and the risk of "flattened thinking" is real when everyone uses the same prompts. Practical progress comes from carving out fifteen minutes of "scroll time" to experiment with simple tasks, like meal planning or grocery lists, to build the muscle of curiosity. Viewers will walk away with a framework for identifying where AI can act as a productivity multiplier rather than a replacement for the unique competitive advantage of human experience.

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    27 分
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