Top of the agenda is the supermarket price war. Tesco has done little more than skirmish so far, for example by offering repeat shoppers cheaper fuel. Lewis has to get bigger guns blazing. He needs to stem the flow of custom to mainstream and upstart hard-discount rivals, notably Asda and Aldi. Tesco founder Jack Cohen piled it high and sold it cheap. The best of his successors have done the same. In joining that cohort, Lewis should focus the fight on one front, and the mass market is more important than the upmarket.
To succeed, Lewis also needs to rebuild the management. He will be the only permanent executive director on the Tesco board. A new finance director, currently serving out notice from Mark & Spencer, will join him in December. The CEO of a company of Tesco's size probably needs three executive lieutenants. These need not be outsiders but could be. Some promotion from within would boost confidence for morale-sapped middle ranks.
Third, Lewis should put Tesco's international business under strategic review. This isn't the time for value-destroying knee-jerk disposals. Tesco generates around one-third of its sales overseas. There's a risk that radical restructuring will distract from the crucial job of securing command of its domestic market. But the UK must come first. It is problems at home that lead to the super-sized profit alert. Tesco expects to make between £2.4 billion and £2.5 billion of trading profit in the current year - down by a quarter on last year.
If there is any doubt about a strengthened management team's ability to defend the home turf while running a global operation, Tesco should withdraw from battles abroad. This is Britain's biggest supermarket. Its primary ambition should be to stay that way.
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