Why Wal-Mart is Worried about Amazon
By David
Welch | BusinessWeek
Five years ago, the world’s largest retail chain didn’t
have to worry much about the world’s largest online mall. Only about a quarter
of Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) customers shopped at Amazon.com (AMZN), according to data from researcher Kantar Retail. Today,
however, half of Wal-Mart customers say they’ve shopped at both merchants.
That’s leaving the mega-retailer—which long ago bested local brick-and-mortar
merchandise stores and supermarkets across America—with a massive online
competitor that is too tough to ignore.
Threatening
Wal-Mart’s dominance are two trends: The discounter’s traditional
customers—bargain hunters making less than $50,000 a year—are getting more
tech-savvy, and more-affluent shoppers who began frequenting Wal-Mart during
the recession are returning to Amazon as their finances improve. Amazon has
moved into merchandise categories that Wal-Mart traditionally has sold, from
diapers to vacuum cleaner bags. In its last fiscal year, Amazon posted 41
percent revenue growth, to $48.1 billion, vs. 8 percent at Wal-Mart. The
chain’s 2011 online sales amounted to less than 2 percent of its $264 billion
in U.S. revenue, says Kantar. “Amazon is always in our sights,” says Jeremy
King, chief technology officer at the retailer’s @ WalmartLabs skunkworks in Silicon
Valley. “My biggest issue is playing a catch-up game.”
In the
last year Wal-Mart has increased its investment in its online business. The
company has spent more than $300 million acquiring five tech firms since May
and hired more than 300 engineers and code writers in the U.S. and India.
Wal-Mart is also launching a program to allow the 20 percent of its customers
without credit cards or bank accounts to make online purchases.
Wal-Mart’s
acquisitions include Kosmix, a social-media firm, and iPhone app creator Small
Society. The company hopes the newcomers can find a way to stop shoppers from
engaging in scan and scram. That’s when would-be customers use their
smartphones in stores to scan an item’s bar code and then buy it online from a
rival merchant. The chain’s tech team also is working on a concept called
Endless Aisle, which would let shoppers immediately order from Walmart.com via
smartphone if an item is out of stock. “You can’t ask people to leave their
phones at the door. So you have to give them value and an experience,” says
Venky Harinarayan, @WalmartLabs’ senior vice president of global e- commerce.
The former Amazon executive joined from Kosmix.
Wal-Mart is trying to improve links between its store
inventory, website, and mobile phone apps so that more customers can order
online and pick up their purchases at stores, which half of Web customers do
already. Wal-Mart is trying Web-based shopping tactics, like its Pay With Cash
program for Wal-Mart customers who don’t have credit cards. The new program
allows them to reserve products online and pay cash at their nearest store. To
cater to its affluent customers, Wal-Mart is selling more expensive items—for
example, high-end televisions from Sony (SNE) and Samsung—only online.
Harinarayan’s team is also trying to tackle a new problem for
Wal-Mart. Last year the chain was the No. 1 destination for holiday shoppers, with 53 percent
of U.S. customers visiting its stores. That was down from 59 percent the year
before. To lure gift shoppers, the techies have developed a Shopycat feature
that scans the social media preferences of a consumer’s Facebook friends and
suggests gift ideas sold on Walmart.com. About 150,000 users have installed the
app.
To roll out more such innovations, Wal-Mart must improve
its in-house e-commerce technology, so King will hire 87 engineers and coders
to bolster the links between the stores and the website. “We’re starting from
scratch to build a foundation,” says the EBay (EBAY) veteran. “Ideally, we’d have this platform built a couple
of years ago.”
The bottom line: Wal-Mart, which gets less than 2 percent of its U.S. sales online, aims
to bolster its technical capabilities to compete with Amazon.
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