Tractor Supply may have thought it solved a big problem. Now it has a few more.

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Amid a three-week firestorm on social media against policies like diversity and climate initiatives, Tractor Supply issued a lengthy statement abandoning them. At the end of June, the retailer said it will eliminate all diversity, equity and inclusion roles, withdraw its carbon emissions goals and end support for Pride events and voting. 

Now the retailer’s move has incited a backlash. 

The company cited customer feedback for its action, though activist Robby Starbuck, who had stoked the online protest against Tractor Supply for “going woke,” has taken credit for the outcome. While Starbuck’s followers may have perceived Tractor Supply’s inclusivity and sustainability measures as problematic, other customers view its retraction that way.

Tractor Supply may hope that the fracas will subside. The retailer didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment for this article, and it has shut off comments on its social media accounts, where there’s been no update on the issue since the statement’s release. But here are four new problems it now confronts, according to several experts:

1. Tractor Supply abruptly retreated from longstanding values and goals.

The retailer hasn’t confirmed or denied that Starbuck’s campaign was the impetus for the significant changes to its corporate policies. But that is the impression it has left, suggesting that its retreat was not well thought out, experts say.

“Being bullied on social media is tough, and all firms need to have some contingency and emergency plans in place to deal with them,” Jo-Ellen Pozner, professor of management at Santa Clara University’s Leavey School of Business, said by email. “Engagement with activists can sometimes help, but my best advice is to think carefully about corporate values well in advance of any disruption and then use those values to guide decision-making. Capitulating to activists without reference to those values can be a dangerous move.”

Tractor Supply does appear to have thought through its policies. Until its most recent statement, executives were on the record touting years of work toward diversity and sustainability. In November, speaking to Morgan Stanley analyst Simeon Gutman, Tractor Supply Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Kurt Barton described the retailer as “a purpose-driven company.” In 2021 the company reinforced and raised its environmental, social and governance goals, with a focus on diversity, equity and inclusion and environmental sustainability, after meeting targets set in 2018, he said.


“With the launch of the ESG strategy and all the work on DE and I and our team members, the things that we’ve done in the last two years I think are pretty phenomenal.”

Kurt Barton

Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, Tractor Supply Company


In April, the company noted that it would work to reduce carbon emissions in line with the Science Based Targets Initiative, via its internal operations as well as its supply chain; it remains listed as “committed” at the SBTi dashboard.

“We are unapologetic with our investment in our people and the fact that our purpose in the stores or online is to be there to solve the problem and answer questions. We’re a relationship business, not transactional,” Barton told Gutman. “Our team members aren’t there just to load items on the shelf for a customer pickup. Our team members are there to engage. So it’s our number one asset. And so with the launch of the ESG strategy and all the work on DE and I and our team members, the things that we’ve done in the last two years I think are pretty phenomenal.”

Barton is the executive who signed the version of the pullback statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission last month.

In order to minimize any sense that its DEI efforts were overly political, the company could have shifted these efforts or clarified its position, depending on how that would fit with its marketing and corporate aims, according to Alison Taylor, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business and author of “Higher Ground: How Business Can Do the Right Thing in a Turbulent World.” But walking away from longstanding policies based on a heated campaign just left them open to more criticism, she said by phone.

“The entire problem with anchoring to reputational risk is that you look completely directionless if you’re shifting in the wind depending on who’s yelling at you,” she said. “I can understand that companies are afraid of retaliation. I’m talking to a lot of them in the background about how they’re altering their statements. But what Tractor Supply is doing wrong is looking reactive, like there’s no internal compass whatsoever.”

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