# @michael-girdley on YouTube

- **Type:** Video
- **Original URL:** https://youtube.com/watch?v=4Z2cvEwZPz4
- **Gondola URL:** https://gondola.cc/posts/65999283-michael-girdley-youtube
- **Thumbnail:** https://img.gondola.cc/tr:w-,h-,fo-auto/postThumbnails/b4313bfc19.jpg
- **Posted:** 2026-05-27T17:53:23.000+00:00
- **Account Owner:** Michael Girdley (@michael-girdley) — https://gondola.cc/michael-girdley

## Caption

#RemitlyPartner Use code BUSINESS to get a $/£100 promo after you send a single business transfer of $/£300 or more from the USA, Canada or UK. To redeem, visit the ‘Rewards’ tab and enter the code https://www.remitly.com/us/en/landing/business New business customers only. One per customer. Offer expires 12/31/26. Terms: https://bit.ly/remitlyterms

What happened to 7-Eleven? This business breakdown explains how the company that invented the convenience store went from 85,000 locations to closing over a thousand stores in the span of a few months, after turning down a $47 billion buyout offer.

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The story of 7-Eleven starts in 1927 in Dallas, Texas, where a dock worker named Uncle Johnny noticed customers asking for milk, eggs, and bread when they came to buy ice after hours. That small observation led to the invention of the convenience store concept, a business built on selling everyday goods at a time and place that was convenient for the customer, not the retailer.

The rise of 7-Eleven is a genuinely impressive story. By the 1970s and 1980s, the chain had thousands of stores, had invented the Slurpee and the Big Gulp, and had become so synonymous with convenience that its brand name essentially replaced the category. But the seeds of its decline were planted in 1973, when 7-Eleven licensed its brand to a small Japanese chain called Ito Yokado. When the Thompson family took the company private in 1987 using junk bonds and then got caught in the Black Monday crash, it was the Japanese licensee that had the cash to bail them out, buying the whole chain for $430 million, less than 10 percent of what the Thompsons had paid.

The fall of 7-Eleven in America is really a story about strategic neglect and misaligned incentives. While the Japanese operation built deeply integrated neighborhood stores with fresh food, tax payments, and daily deliveries, the American business drifted on cigarettes, packaged goods, and gas margins. As cigarette sales fell by more than half between 2012 and 2023, competitors like Wawa, Sheetz, Casey's, and Buc-ee's went all-in on food and customer experience. Then DoorDash and Uber Eats removed the last thing 7-Eleven had going for it: pure convenience.

By 2024, foot traffic at 7-Eleven was down more than seven percent in a single month. That same year, Alimentation Couche-Tard, the Canadian company behind Circle K, offered $47 billion to buy the entire global operation. Seven and I Holdings said no, partly because of debt they had taken on to buy Speedway in 2021, partly because they wanted to stay Japanese. Couche-Tard came back with a raised offer. Seven and I still said no, eventually getting the Japanese government to designate 7-Eleven as national critical infrastructure. Couche-Tard walked away in July 2025 with a pointed exit statement about confusion, delay, and obfuscation. Months later, 7-Eleven announced another 645 store closures.

For founders and operators, the 7-Eleven story is a clear case study in what happens when a global parent loses focus on a key market, bets on acquisitions funded by cheap debt, and misses the product and experience shifts that competitors saw coming. If you want to understand why 7-Eleven is closing stores, why 7-Eleven declined, and how a company that invented an entire industry ended up here, this breakdown walks through the full story.

## Stats

- **Views:** 174,013
- **Likes:** 7,510
- **Shares:** 0
- **Comments:** 1,121

## Credits

| Name | Username | Profile | Role |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Remitly | International Money Transfer | @remitly | https://gondola.cc/remitly | Financial Technology Brand |
| Bruna Guedes | @brunaguedesol | https://gondola.cc/brunaguedesol | Head of Influencer Marketing |

## Tags

remitlypartner

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