Wal Mart
Wal Mart
Wal Mart
Introduction
Wal-Mart is one of the most popular chain stores in the United States today and has
effectively spread all over the globe in recent years. All of that is a result of the efforts of
one man, Sam Walton. Sam Walton is an entrepreneur that built Wal-Mart up from
nothing and into a force to be reckoned with in the retail industry. As such, he provides a
perfect and timeless plan of how anyone else could follow in his footsteps.
Walton’s management style was popular with employees and he founded some of the
basic concepts of management that are still in use today. After taking the company
public in 1970, Walton introduced his “profit sharing plan”. The profit sharing plan
was a plan for Wal-Mart employees to improve their income dependent on the
profitability of the store. Sam Walton believed that “individuals don’t win, teams do”.
Employees at Wal-Mart stores were offered stock options and store discounts. These
benefits are commonplace today, but Walton was among the first to implement them.
Walton believed that a happy employee meant happy customers and more sales.
Walton believed that by giving employees a part of the company and making their
success dependent on the company’s success, they would care about the company.
By the 1980s, Wal-Mart had sales of over one billion dollars and over three hundred
also Walton’s idea, created the edge needed to further spur growth in the 1980s amidst
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growing complaints that the “superstore” was squelching smaller, traditional Mom and
Pop stores. By 1991, Wal-Mart was the largest U.S. retailer with 1,700 stores.
Wal-Mart pushed the retail industry to establish the universal bar code, which forced
manufacturers to adopt common labeling. The bar allowed retailers to generate all kinds
became especially good at exploiting the information behind the bar code and is
considered a pioneer in developing sophisticated technology to track its inventory and cut
the fat out of its supply chain. The central goal of Wal-Mart is to keep retail prices low
and the company has been very successful at this. Experts estimate that Wal-Mart saves
technology and corporate culture feeds into that ultimate goal of delivering the lowest
prices possible. Wal-Mart also pushes its suppliers, some say relentlessly, to cut prices.
Marketing is also significant to the success of Wal-Mart since it has aided in identifying
and gratifying customer needs, as well as the shifting demands of the customers.
Currently, most store locations have incorporated an optical center, banking center, nail
shop, beauty salon, automotive center, and a fast-food restaurant. For example, Wal-Mart
is the only store that specializes in the low price guarantee. To sum it up, marketing has
played a very important role in Wal-Mart’s overwhelming success. With the addition of a
coffee shop, Wal-Mart would only enhance their ability to increase revenue, while at the
same time meeting the current demands of its clientele. Additionally, marketing has
helped Wal-Mart to obtain, preserve, and expand the most valuable customer base.
Marketing is essential due to the fact that this technique also emphasis specialization. For
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instance, the company may offer snow removal equipment in New York and year-round
swim gear in Florida due to climate differences. In addition, the concept has also served
as the determining factor for what market to target certain products that are distributed by
the company assisted in generating enhanced sales and revenue. It has contributed to
analyzing the customer needs and preserving a continuing relationship with the customer.
For example, Wal-Mart has added various stores within its super-centers to meet the
needs of its consumers with complex schedules. This allows the customer to enjoy the
Regarded by many as the entrepreneur of the century, Walton had a reputation for caring
about his customers, his employees (or “associates” as he referred to them), and the
community. In order to maintain its market position in the discount retail business, Wal-
Walton was a man of simple tastes and took a keen interest in people. He believed in
three guiding principles: customer value and service; partnership with its associates; and
enrich, and train his employees (Longo, 1994). He believed in listening to employees and
challenging them to come up with ideas and suggestions to make the company better. At
each of the Wal-Mart stores, signs are displayed which read; “Our People Make the
Difference.” Associates regularly make suggestions for cutting costs through their “Yes
We Can Sam” program. The sum of the savings generated by the associates actually paid
for the construction of a new store in Texas (The story of Wal-Mart, 1995). One of Wal-
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Mart’s goals was to provide its employees with the appropriate tools to do their jobs
efficiently. The technology was not used as a means of replacing existing employees, but
to provide them with a means to succeed in the retail market (Thompson & Strickland,
1995).
Wal-Mart’s popularity can be linked to its hometown identity. Walton believed that every
customer should be greeted upon entering a store, and that each store should be a
reflection of the values of its customers and its community. The key features of Wal-
Mart’s approach to implementing the strategy put together by Sam Walton emphasizes
building solid working relationships with both suppliers and employees, being aware and
taking notice of the most intricate details in store layouts and merchandising techniques,
capitalizing on every cost saving opportunity, and creating a high performance spirit.
This strategic formula is used to provide customers access to quality goods, to make these
goods available when and where customers want them, to develop a cost structure that
enables competitive pricing, and to build and maintain a reputation for absolute
trustworthiness.
because they follow the two competition principles the key to a firm’s success in
depends on how sustainable its competitive advantages are competitive Advantages are
what customers’ value and what a firm is better than its competitors in. Wal-Mart’s
customers value the value of the dollar and being able to buy brand names at low
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discount prices. Sam Walton’s philosophy was that he believed in the value of the dollar
and keeping prices below everybody else’s. He made providing value part of the culture
convenience, good brand image and reputation associated with products and services and
many other factors. Customers determine what competitive advantages are relevant to
them and price, quality, convenience and brand image were what Wal-Mart customers
There were interactions among departments and individuals were ideas and suggestions
were shared on how to improve the business, and this included everyone from the bottom
to the top of the ladder. They also developed a “Buy American” program was they
in management seminars, and programs were instituted to involve the associates in the
business. Information systems made this possible through “traiting,” a process that
indexed the product movements in a store to over a thousand store and market traits. Its
operation capability consisted of its stores and its warehouses where the inventory was
stored. Some of the stores, including the super centers were open 24 hours a day. Local
store managers using inventory and sales data, could choose which products to display
based on customer preferences, and allocated shelf space for a product category
Wal-Mart stores operate according to their “Everyday Low Price” philosophy. Wal-Mart
has emerged as the industry leader because it has been better at containing its costs,
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which has allowed it to pass on the savings to its customers. Wal-Mart has become a
capability competitor. It continues to improve upon its key business processes, managing
them centrally and investing in them heavily for the long-term payback.
3. Explain how the various elements of Sam Walton’s cultural legacy contribute to
Building a culture that could support such a structure has been a crusade at Wal-Mart
from the beginning. It is a culture based on profit derived, not from the pricing end, but
from the cost end of every transaction. The plan, always, has been to drive costs out of
the system in the stores, from the manufacturers’ profit margins, and from merchandise
brokers and other middlemen, all in the service of driving down prices at the retail level.
Every associate’s opinion is respected. Managers are considered “servant leaders” who
help new associates realize their potential through training, praise and constructive
The customer is the boss. Everything possible is done to make shopping at Wal-Mart and
Sam’s Club a friendly, pleasant experience. The “Ten-Foot Attitude” means that
associates are to greet each person they see. The “Satisfaction Guaranteed” refunds and
exchange policy allows customers to be fully confident of Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club’s
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Strive for Excellence
satisfaction. At the start of each day, store associates gather for the Wal-Mart or Sam’s
Club cheer and review sales from the previous day, as well as discuss their daily goals.
“The Sundown Rule” requires a continual sense of urgency, with questions asked in the
The culture, established by Walton, also plays into Wal-Mart’s success. The company has
been criticized for the relatively meager wages and health care plans that it offers to rank-
and-file employees. It has also been accused of demanding that hourly workers put in
overtime without pay. Store managers often work more than 70 hours per week. They are
are expected to pinch pennies wherever they can, even on things like the heating and
cooling of the stores. In the winter, stores are kept at 70 degrees Fahrenheit, and in the
summer, they stay at 73. This culture is also present at the company’s headquarters. Wal-
York. The building is drab and dull. Executives fly coach and often share hotel rooms
with colleagues. They work long hours, typically arriving at work before 6:30 a.m. and
Driving out costs has evolved into some of the basic rules of operation. The first of these
is to form partnerships with vendors. More than once Sam Walton, the company founder,
demanded lower costs from vendors only to be told that goods were already selling
essentially at the manufacturing cost. Walton would insist that manufacturing processes
be analyzed in a search for lower costs. He didn’t tell his vendors how to do things, but
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he insisted that they look for a better way. Often the result was increased efficiency in
manufacturing and a lower price for Wal-Mart. With that lower price, Wal-Mart could
4. Sam Walton’s 1992 book Made in America identifies key factors in building a
and success?
At the heart of Wal-Mart’s growth is the unique culture that “Mr. Sam” built. His
business philosophy was based on the simple idea of making the customer No. 1. He
believed that by serving the customer’s needs first, his business would also serve its
is to bring Mr. Sam’s culture and philosophy from Wal-Mart stores to the Internet. Sam
Walton had three basic beliefs the company was built on. Sam Walton built Wal-Mart on
2) Share your profits with your associates and treat them like your partners.
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7) Listen to everyone in your company.
Wal-Mart’s biggest and most obvious effect is that it provides lower prices to consumers.
The competitive pressure the firm creates for competitors have lowered prices that
consumers pay even when they do not shop at Wal-Mart; but they also reduce the
profitability of other stores, and in some cases lead stores, especially small ones, to shut
down. Wal-Mart’s investment in technology and its tight control over the supply chain
have also changed the competitive environment upstream. As Wal-Mart’s size has made
direct sourcing more profitable, and as the fixed costs of doing business with Wal-Mart
have increased (due to factors ranging from the need for a local once in Bentonville, to
shipments), small producers have made room for larger ones, and local producers have
been displaced by foreign ones. Wal-Mart has therefore contributed to the trend of
References
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Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (1995). The story of Wal-Mart. Bentonville, Arkansas:
Thompson, A. A., Jr. & Strickland, A.J. III. (1995). Strategic management
Longo, D. (1994). New generation of exec’s leads Wal-Mart into the next century.
Cleeland, Nancy and Abigail Goldman. “An Empire Built on Bargains Remakes
Cleeland, Nancy and Abigail Goldman. “Grocery Unions Battle to Stop Invasion
Cleeland, Nancy, et al. “Scouring the Globe to Give Shoppers an $8.63 Polo
Cleeland, Nancy. “Seams Start to Unravel.” Los Angeles Times, November 24,
2003.
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