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Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC) : des mains des membres à celles des investisseurs étrangers

Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC): Out of the Hands of Members and Into the Hands of Foreign Investors

Case 9 70 2022 002
Case published in the International Journal of Case Studies in Management, Vol. 20, No. 4
Languages : 
  • French,
  • Coopératives,
  • Marketing coopératif,
  • Produits de plein air,
  • Gestion des membres,
  • Investisseurs étrangers
  • Cooperatives,
  • Cooperative marketing,
  • Outdoor products,
  • Member management,
  • Foreign investors
Year of production : 
2022
Registration date : 
2022-10-11
Teaching notes included : 
Yes

Lorsque le modèle coopératif séduit le modèle capitaliste, les ristournes des membres propriétaires s’évaporent dans les dividendes des actionnaires privés. Les membres de Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC), un des fleurons de l’économie canadienne, l’ont appris à leurs dépens dernièrement, lorsque leur coopérative est passée entre les mains d’investisseurs américains, sans avertissement et en pleine pandémie. Cette nouvelle a ébranlé le monde des affaires au Canada et a créé une onde de choc dans le mouvement coopératif. Toutefois, ce revirement nous apprend davantage sur les stratégies de marketing appliquées à ce modèle d’affaires et, par voie de conséquence, sur le niveau de résilience relative des entreprises canadiennes devant la voracité de leurs voisins du Sud.

Only the abstract is available in English.

When a cooperative entices capitalist interests, member-owners’ dividends evaporate into those of private shareholders. Members of Mountain Equipment Co-op (MEC), one of Canada’s economic flagships, learned this the hard way recently when the coop was sold to U.S. investors without warning and in the midst of a pandemic. The news shook the Canadian business community and sent shock waves through the cooperative movement. However, this reversal says more about the marketing strategies applied in this business model and, consequently, about the relative resilience of Canadian businesses to the voracity of their neighbours to the south.

Primary domain : 
Cooperative and nonprofit sectors
Secondary domain : 
Marketing
Sectors : 
  • Consumer goods
Source : 
Elsewhere
Type : 
Traditional case (Descriptive or analytical case)
Type of data used in the production of the case : 
Factual data that is public and free of potentially litigious content
Event location : 
Canada
Year of start of the event : 
2018
Year the event ended : 
2020
Business size : 
Large enterprise
Objectifs pédagogiques
  • Élaborer un plan de marketing stratégique (PMS) campé sur la culture coopérative de l’entreprise et sur l’évolution de son environnement.