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posted by janrinok on Saturday October 24 2015, @11:54PM   Printer-friendly
from the bigger-they-come... dept.

James B. Stewart writes in the NYT that for the past 16 years Walmart has often acted as though it hoped Amazon would just go away. When Walmart announced last week that it was significantly increasing its investment in e-commerce, it tacitly acknowledged that it had fallen far behind Amazon in the race for online customers. Now, the magnitude of the task it faces has grown exponentially as e-commerce growth continues to surge globally. "Walmart.com has been severely mismanaged," says Burt P. Flickinger III. "Walmart would go a few years and invest strategically and significantly in e-commerce, then other years it wouldn't. Meanwhile, Amazon is making moves in e-commerce that's put Walmart so far behind that it might not be able to catch up for 10 more years, if ever."

In 1999, Amazon was a fledgling company with annual revenue of $1.6 billion; Walmart's was about $138 billion. By last year, Amazon's revenue was about 54 times what it was in 1999, nearly $89 billion, almost all of it from online sales. Walmart's was about three times what it was 15 years before, almost $486 billion, and only a small fraction of that — 2.5 percent, or $12.2 billion — came from Walmart.com. Walmart's superefficient distribution system — a function of its enormous volume and geographic reach — was long the secret to Walmart's immense profitability. Ravi Jariwala, a Walmart spokesman, says that Walmart is building vast new fulfillment centers and is rapidly enhancing its delivery capabilities to take advantage of its extensive store network to provide convenient in-store pickup and adds that 70 percent of the American population lives within five miles of a Walmart store. "This is where e-commerce is headed," says Jariwala, which is to a hybrid online/in-store model. "Customers want the accessibility and immediacy of a physical store," along with the benefits of online shopping.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Sunday October 25 2015, @03:17AM

    by MichaelDavidCrawford (2339) Subscriber Badge <mdcrawford@gmail.com> on Sunday October 25 2015, @03:17AM (#254214) Homepage Journal

    My mother still refuses to shop online. There are some shops such as Powells that offer live human salespeople; she will call them on the phone.

    The stores I shop in, I do so in large part because I like talking to the people there.

    I also want them to have jobs.

    A while back I tried to pay cash for my AT&T bill. They told me there would be a $15.00 surcharge were I to pay cash at the register, rather than with my debit card at the kiosk by the door.

    "I just rode the bus twenty miles so you would have a job."

    The next time I paid my bill, while there was still a kiosk, it would accept cash. Some progress, I guess.

    --
    Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
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