What lies ahead for Plano-based JCPenney?

Edward Fox, marketing professor at SMU's Cox School of Business, talks about the next steps for JC Penney after departure of ousted CEO Ron Johnson.

By Teresa Woodard

Outside JCPenney's Dallas stores on Monday, shoppers showed little concern about a change at the top.
 
"As long as we have some good deals, that's all we care about," said Sanjay Gangaih.
 
Shopper Lamar Howard agreed that cost matters most. "It's all about the price, taking care of your family, getting the best deal, best bargain," he said.  "That's what consumers want."
 
But consistency matters too, said SMU Cox School of Business Marketing Professor Edward Fox.  And perhaps that's where JCPenney's ousted CEO Ron Johnson went wrong.
 
That message was delivered with brutal honesty by JCPenney's largest shareholder and member of the board of directors, Bill Ackman.
 
"There've been some big mistakes, and I think one of the big mistakes was perhaps too much change, too quickly," he told Reuters during an interview.
 
Ackman called the last year under Johnson "something very close to a disaster."
 
That was said on Friday. Ron Johnson left Monday, replaced by former Penney CEO Mike Ullman.
 
"To me the big question is, 'What do they do now?'" Fox asked. He said people believe the concept Johnson tried to implement was interesting and potentially profitable, but "there was too much to do in too short of a time."...