Remarkable Retail Podcast

Amazon's and Saks' Retail Reset, Plus Live from the Big Show: NRF Top Voices Billy May and David J. Katz

Episode Summary

Steve Dennis and Michael LeBlanc open with a fast-paced news round on Amazon shutting its Fresh stores, big layoffs across retail, Saks Global’s bankruptcy fallout, weak luxury signals from LVMH, and Starbucks’ fragile comeback. They then welcome fellow NRF Top Voices Billy May, Brooklinen CEO and David J Katz, Randa Apparel's EVP and CMO, for a wide-ranging conversation on value, pricing strategy, consumer trust, AI, leadership, and disruption recorded live together in the Narvar podcasting studio at the NRF Big Show. The episode closes with remarkable stories on the expanding AI bubble and TikTok’s shifting and dubious commerce model.

Episode Notes

The episode opens with a sweeping look at the biggest retail stories shaping January. Amazon dominates the headlines again, this time with the closure of all Amazon Fresh grocery and Go stores and a renewed reliance on Whole Foods and online grocery. At the same time, Amazon is laying off tens of thousands of employees, part of a broader wave of cuts across retail and adjacent industries, including UPS, Home Depot, and Nike. The hosts explore whether this is a post-pandemic correction, an AI-driven efficiency shift, or an early signal of bigger structural change.

The news turns to Saks Global's bankruptcy, in which most Saks off-price stores will be shut down. This is expected to benefit rivals like Nordstrom Rack and Bloomingdale’s Outlet. Earnings signals offer a mixed outlook: LVMH posts weaker results, reinforcing concerns that luxury’s recovery will be uneven, while Starbucks shows early signs of traction with traffic growth and the return of tiered loyalty rewards.

The second half features an energetic, insight-rich discussion with fellow NRF Top Voices Billy May, Brooklinen's CEO, and David J Katz, EVP and CMO, Randa Apparel, recorded live in the Narvar podcasting studio on the NRF Big Show show floor in New York. Together, they explore how consumer behavior is changing, why value is now deeply contextual, and how trust has become the most fragile currency in retail. They discuss pricing strategy in an era of tariffs, geopolitical risk, and algorithmic pricing, warning that transparency and clarity matter more than ever.

The group dives into AI reality—what’s working, what’s hype, and why AI should be treated as a power tool, not a decision-maker. They examine leadership in the post-COVID era, arguing that execution, speed, and disciplined focus now define winning organizations. Don’t miss these rapid-fire takes on rising retailers and the future of the department store—listen now and join the conversation to stay ahead in retail’s next chapter.

The conversation then shifts to the week’s remarkable stories. highlighting the staggering scale of AI investment, including Anthropic’s rumored $350 billion valuation and Amazon’s possible $50 billion stake in OpenAI. Michael reflects on growing wealth concentration in the U.S. and many developed countries, noting the economic and social implications. Looking around the corner, Steve unpacks TikTok’s shifting algorithms, political influence concerns, and TikTok Shop’s move to force sellers into its proprietary logistics network—changes that could reshape social commerce.