It only felt right that our final business visit was a trip IKEA Malmo. After two weeks of studying scandanavian bsuinesses, we ended at the brand that exported Scandinavia to the rest of the world, one Allen key at a time. However this was not just any IKEA. The Malmo facility sits directly across the street from Hubhult, the global headquarters of Ingka Group which is the company that operates majority of the IKEA stores worldwide. While we took a brief tour of what looked like a familiar blue and yellow box, we stood in the shadow of the building where many of IKEA’s biggest retail decisions are made.

A Chapman connection in southern Sweden
Our host, who, in one of the better surprises of the trip, turned out to be a Chapman alumni. Hearing someone who sat in the same classrooms we do now walk us through running one of IKEA’s flagship Swedish stores made the whole visit feel less like a tour and more like a preview.
She gave us a candid scope of the business and how the store operates day to day, how it fits into IKEA’s larger retail picture, and what it means to lead a location this close to headquarters, where the standard is naturally set high. What I found most interesting, as someone focused on digital marketing, was how the store handles its own marketing and social media. We tend to think of IKEA’s marketing as one massive global machine, but the Malmö store runs its own presence across every major platform and the director walked us through exactly how they do it.
The takeaway: even within one of the most recognizable brands on earth, there’s real room for local voice. The store creates content for its own community and its own promotions, its own personality, its own followers, all while staying inside the guardrails of a brand identity that has to look consistent from Malmö to Manhattan. It’s a balancing act between global consistency and local relevance, and seeing how a single store manages it across multiple platforms was a masterclass in something we discuss constantly in my digital marketing courses, executed in real life.
Closing the trip
It’s hard to imagine a better final stop. Swedish design philosophy, flat organizational culture, global expansion built on a deeply local identity. Ending across the street from where it’s all orchestrated, hosted by someone who started exactly where we are, tied the whole experience together.
Two weeks, four cities, and more company visits than I can count later, Sweden and Denmark gave us a business education no textbook could match. This trip didn’t just show us how Scandinavian companies operate, but it changed how I’ll think about brand, culture, and strategy going forward.
Tack så mycket, Scandinavia.

