Walmart

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Walmart’s Competitive Advantage Walmart is one of the most extraordinary success stories in business

history. Started in 1962 by Sam Walton, Walmart has grown to become the world’s largest corporation.
In 2008, the discount retailer whose mantra is “everyday low prices” had sales of $410 billion, 7,400
stores in 15 countries and 2 million employees. Some 8% of all retail sales in the United States are made
at a Walmart store. Walmart is not only large; it is also very profi table. In 2008, the company earned a
return on invested capital of 14.5%, better than its well- managed rivals Costco and Target, which
earned 11.7%and 9.5%, respectively. As shown in Figure 1.1, Walmart has been consistently more profi
table than its rivals for years, although of late its rivals have been closing the gap. Walmart’s consistently
superior profi tability refl ects a competitive advantage that is based on a number of strategies. Back in
1962, Walmart was one of the fi rst companies to apply the self-service supermarket business model
developed by grocery chains to general merchandise. Unlike its rivals such as Kmart and Target who
focused on urban and suburban locations, Sam Walton’s Walmart concentrated on small southern
towns that were ignored by its rivals. Walmart grew quickly by pricing lower than local retailers, often
putting them out of business. By the time its rivals realized that small towns could support large
discount, general merchandise stores, Walmart had already preempted them. These towns, which were
large enough to support one discount retailer—but not two— provided a secure profi t base for
Walmart. The company was also an innovator in information systems, logistics, and human resource
practices. These strategies resulted in higher productivity and lower costs than its rivals, which enabled
the company to earn a high profi t while charging low prices. Walmart led the way among American
retailers in developing and implementing sophisticated product tracking systems by using bar code
technology and checkout scanners. This information technology enabled Walmart to track what was
selling and adjust its inventory accordingly so that the products found in a store matched local demand.
By avoiding overstocking, Walmart did not have to hold periodic sales to shift unsold inventory. Over
time, Walmart linked this information system to a nationwide network of distribution centers where
inventory was stored and then shipped to stores within a 250-mile radius on a daily basis. The
combination of distribution centers and information centers enabled Walmart to reduce the amount of
inventory it held in stores, thereby devoting more of that valuable space to selling and reducing the
amount of capital it had tied up in inventory. With regard to human resources, the tone was set by Sam
Walton. He had a strong belief that employees should be respected and rewarded for helping to
improve the profi tability of the company. Underpinning this belief, Walton referred to employees as
associates. He established a profi t-sharing plan for all employees and, after the company went public in
1970, a program that allowed employees to purchase Walmart stock at a discount to its market value.
Walmart was rewarded for this approach by high employee productivity, which translated into lower
operating costs and higher profi tability. As Walmart grew larger, the sheer size and purchasing power of
the company enabled it to drive down the prices that it paid suppliers, passing on those saving to
customers in the form of lower prices, which enabled Walmart to gain more market share and hence
demand even lower prices. To take the sting out of the persistent demands for lower prices, Walmart
shared its sales information with suppliers on a daily basis, enabling them to gain efficiencies by
configuring their own production schedules to sales at Walmart. By the 1990s, Walmart was already the
largest general seller of general merchandise in America. To keep its growth going, Walmart started to
diversify into the grocery business, opening 200,000-square-foot supercenter stores that sold groceries
and general merchandise under one roof. Walmart also diversified into the warehouse club business
with the establishment of Sam’s Club. The company began expanding internationally in 1991 with its
entry into Mexico. For all its success, however, Walmart is now encountering very real limits to
profitable growth. The U.S. market is approaching saturation, and growth overseas has proved more diffi
cult than the company hoped. The company was forced to exit Germany and South Korea after losing
money there and has found it tough going into several other developed nations, such as Britain.
Moreover, rivals Target and Costco have continued to improve their performances and are now
snapping at Walmart’s heels.

Case discussion questions

what do you think are think are sources of walmarts sustained superior profitability ?

why do the rivals of walmart target and costco have continued to improve their performance currently?

what were the reason that cause wal mart to encounter a problem in its profitable growth currently

what strategies do you think shall wal mart adopt to sustain its winning position in retail market or
sustain its profit improvement or in general to deal with its crrent situation

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