5 Year Annivesary Of Steinhoff

Loading player...
Khaya Sithole – Independent Analyst talks about The various topics covered in the case study – Steinhoff’s business vision and fast-expanding operation over the years, and the company’s approach to governance and leadership – provide some important business lessons for small entrepreneurial concerns and large corporates alike.

Lesson #1: Be true to your strategic vision and ‘stick to the knitting’

Strategy theory suggests (ref: 1) that strategy development over time is more about making wise choices initially and deepening one’s competitive position than going too broad and trying to be all things to everyone.

Although the diversity of the Steinhoff businesses might give some people the impression that the company lacks a core identity and has chased acquisitions in a somewhat random fashion, the company’s long-term vision has always been to control its various value chains, thereby moderating costs, keeping competitors at bay and striving for ever-higher levels of efficiency and market share.

This is an important element in its fundamental strategy of sourcing and manufacturing goods in low-cost countries and selling them to value-conscious buyers in more lucrative markets.



Former Steinhoff chairman Christo Wiese and the company’s executives appear at a parliamentary hearing into the Steinhoff scandal on January 31, 2018 in Cape Town, South Africa. Replying to questions, Wiese said, detecting fraud within a company was hugely difficult for board members‚ especially if the CEO was allegedly involved. (Netwerk24 / Adrian de Kock)

Although Steinhoff’s operation is today very geographically dispersed and it has progressed from being primarily a furniture supplier to a more holistic supplier of ‘lifestyle’ products, the company has not deviated too far from its fundamental business strategy and target market. In making the strategic choice to expand its product and service offerings but operate as a vertically integrated business, Steinhoff acknowledges that benefits can be derived from moving almost seamlessly into ‘adjacent market space’ using its pre-eminent position in related value chains.

Whereas a horizontal integration approach would require a business to operate alongside myriad other businesses in a ‘value chain neighbourhood’, with a vertical integration approach Steinhoff effectively ‘owns the neighbourhood’.

Lesson #2: Growth does not equate to profit or success

Organisations that deliver consistently strong performance over extended periods of time invariably practise a controlled growth strategy in which future expansion and investments are carefully planned and executed. (ref: 2) The hallmark of truly great companies is that they have the discipline to hold back and moderate their growth plans so as not to experience resource constraints and fatigue, or end up in financial difficulties during lean times when the cash they accumulated during bumper years is all but exhausted.

Steinhoff’s extremely rapid acquisition drive, particularly in more recent years, was clearly unsustainable. The nature of its investments (large, new regions and new product lines) signalled a high-risk approach which should have raised more questions from shareholders and the board about the company’s ability to sustain all the new acquisitions and ensure their profitability.

Although strong growth always seems impressive, it does not equal cash flow or profits. Such was the case with Steinhoff whose frenetic investment activity concealed highly complex business structures, high levels of debt and less-than-stellar performance within the Steinhoff group. The management team, and Markus Jooste in particular, painted a picture of a fast-growing and practically invincible corporate giant which was too good to be true, and this should have set off alarm bells among different stakeholder groups.

Lesson #3: Strong governance is not just about financial and regulatory compliance; it is a mindset

Most organisations extol
5 Dec 2022 1PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Inside Your Business: Liquidations hit SME sectors the hardest

South Africa’s business landscape remains under strain. New data from Stats SA shows that 135 companies were liquidated in February—a slight improvement from last year, but still a sign of persistent financial pressure across the economy. Aroni Chaudhuri, Chief Economist at Coface Africa, helps explain what these numbers mean for…
1 Apr 4PM 9 min

SARS delivers record-breaking revenue collection

The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (SARS), Edward Kieswetter, today tabled the strongest annual revenue collection numbers in democratic history. He joins us to reflect on the numbers and his tenure at SARS as he steps down from the role.
1 Apr 4PM 15 min

SA's New vehicle sales surge in March

South Africa's new vehicle market extended gains in March 2026, growing by 17.3 percent from a year ago. Dr. Paulina Mamogobo, Naamsa Chief Economist, joins us to unpack fresh numbers out today.
1 Apr 4PM 14 min