Allen Lenzmeier stared hard at the numbers, trying to absorb the long line of zeros.
You want $475 million in sales? In just five years? This company barely had five months left to survive, he thought.
The 39-year-old accountant had arrived in St. Paul in 1982 to interview for a job at an electronics retailer that was literally in ruins. A tornado had destroyed the Sound of Music's flagship store in Roseville, forcing employees to hawk turntables and speakers out of a large tent in the middle of the State Fairgrounds.
But the company's founder, Richard Schulze, was far from calling it quits, Lenzmeier recalled. Schulze pulled out a piece of paper and described how Sound of Music, which he would later rename Best Buy, would soon dominate the world of consumer electronics.
"I thought, 'That guy is goofy,'" Lenzmeier said.
And yet, there was something about the brash Air Force veteran -- the confidence, the fierce will -- that won over Lenzmeier. "You get a one-in-a-million chance to participate in something like that," said Lenzmeier, who would rise to president and chief operating officer.
Together, Schulze, Lenzmeier and former CEO Brad Anderson would build a global retail empire, an economic powerhouse in Minnesota that generates $50 billion in sales with more than 100,000 employees.
But the empire is showing cracks, as Internet-focused businesses have broken through the monopoly Best Buy long enjoyed over gadget-hungry consumers. The company's stock price has plummeted, and its vaunted sales machine has lost steam, forcing it to shut down stores and lay off employees.