Doing A Ratner: Honesty In Business And The £500 Million Gaffe

Honesty In Business And The £500 Million Gaffe

As humans, we spend our entire lives walking a fine line between honesty and tact. We learn honesty first, tact second, and spend the rest of our lives trying to balance the two.

If we’re lucky, we’re mostly successful, with a few inevitable failures here and there.

But few of us can say that our failure ever cost us £500 million. And that’s exactly how much the Ratners Group lost in value in 1991 following an extraordinary gaffe by its CEO, Gerald Ratner.

gerald ratner


A Visionary

Gerald Ratner didn’t build Ratners Group from the ground up—but he did tear it down all by himself. Ratners Group was his family’s small jewelry business. He began to work there when he was just a teen in the 60s. Ratner eventually took over from his parents in the 80s, and he had a vision for the company. 

He wanted Ratners to be the biggest jeweler in the world. Does biggest necessarily mean best? In Ratner’s world, certainly not.

Gerald Ratner Editorial

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This Is How I Win

Ratner formally took over the business from his parents in 1984 and settled on a big and brash strategy for the company. He quickly made it into the Marks & Spencer of jewelry, with a Ratners store located on every “high street”

—the retail hub of any British town. A handful of stores also popped up stateside. Ratner was on his way to the top.

Gerald Ratner didn’t do all this by offering rare and expensive jewels to an ultra-exclusive crowd. Instead, Ratner did it by bringing precious metals and gems to the masses.

He gave working-class folk a reliable place to buy engagement and wedding rings, anniversary gifts, and more.

It was a taste of the finer things in life, but on a budget.

gerald ratner

The Telegraph

The Everyman's Jewelry

Ratners existed in a universe as far away as possible from the polished look of a Tiffany & Co. or Cartier. In fact, you could say that the exterior matched the product. Actually, that might flatter the exterior a bit too much.

Ratners stores looked like a liquidation sale at a store in the lowest-rent mall in the dodgiest end of town.

Were it not for the Ratner name, customers going in might expect to be sold a chain made of tin instead of silver. Ratners could be spotted from miles away, with their utterly garish “SALE!!!”

graphics on backgrounds of the most eye-searing orangey-red.

Gerald Ratner Editorial

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Living' It Up

Within a few years of taking over, Gerald Ratner had built the family business into a multi-million-dollar empire. Like any self-respecting CEO, he had the lifestyle to match. Ratner loaded up on cars, boats, and one would assume, a couple of whatever the British versions of McMansions are. 

But then, in 1991, he got an invite to make a speech at the Institute of Directors in front of a group of fellow business leaders. That speech would usher in the downfall of Ratner's empire.

gerald ratner

Business Leader

“Radical” Honesty

Considering what a debacle it turned into, it’s surprising that Ratner’s speech that day wasn’t just off the cuff. But according to his wife, he was honored by the invitation and took it extremely seriously.

Ratner prepared for the event for months, even enlisting the help of a Member of Parliament.

That fateful evening, just a few minutes into his speech, Ratner began to talk about the product at his stores and the concept of value. What he said next would go down in history:

“Ratners doesn’t represent prosperity—and come to think of it, it had very little to do with quality as well. We do cut-glass sherry decanters complete with six glasses on a silver-plated tray that your butler can serve you drinks on, all for £4.95. People say, ‘How can you sell this for such a low price?’ I say, because it’s total cr*p.”

Gerald Ratner Editorial

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