The Borneo Post

Walmart’s built a ragtag alliance of technology firms to battle Amazon

- By Matthew Boyle

BATTLING Amazon isn’t easyeven for the world’s largest retail chain.

Fear of Jeff Bezos helps explain why Walmart has in recent years forged alliances with Google, Microsoft, China’s JD.com and other tech players. The members of the unofficial coalition all share a common goal: preventing Amazon from ruling the digital galaxy. It’s like a movie in which a ragtag alliance faces down an all-powerful foe, only in this case the plucky rebels also happen to be some of the world’s most powerful companies.

Walmart has created a formidable e- commerce business by investing billions to hire engineers and data scientists, building automated distributi­on centres tailored for web orders and rolling out curbside pickup for online grocery orders at more than 2,000 stores. The retailer generated US$ 11.5 billion in online sales last year in the US, and a redesigned website that better showcases apparel and home decor is expected to boost that total by 40 per cent in 2018.

But Walmart knows it can no longer go it alone. Amazon. com now captures 49 per cent of the US e- commerce market, according to researcher EMarketer Inc., up from 43.5 per cent last year. Amazon already dominates entertainm­ent and toys and is now pushing into areas that are dear to Walmart. The acquisitio­n of upscale grocer Whole Foods Market last year threatens a business that makes up more than half of Walmart’s US sales.

The Amazon menace has prompted a strategic shift inside Walmart’s headquarte­rs.

“It’s the classic build- or-buy conundrum,” says Sucharita Kodali, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc. “Walmart needs to innovate, but it just doesn’t make sense for it to build much of it inhouse.”

The massive retailer has been reluctant to cosy up with others, preferring to keep the benefits of any new venture to itself. The company’s track record with partnershi­ps isn’t great: Walmart’s first alliances in the key markets of India and China were eventually abandoned.

Walmart has studied those setbacks. “We’re learning to partner with others in new ways,” Chief Executive Officer Doug McMillon has said.

Take Google. A pact forged last year allows Walmart customers to link their store accounts to Google’s Express shopping service and-in a clear effort to counterbal­ance Amazon’s Echo-use voice- activated Google Home devices to buy everything from groceries to garden hoses. The purchase histories of Walmart shoppers will help Google make personalis­ed recommenda­tions, a key feature needed to empower voiceactiv­ated shopping. The deal was a big step for Walmart, which tends to guard customer data fiercely. But it was a necessary way to create an alternativ­e to Amazon’s voice- activated speakers that play music, turn on air conditione­rs and handle shopping orders. It also showed how the battlegrou­nd has shifted from prices- something Walmart knows well-to convenienc­e.

“For today’s customer, the experience we create has to be easy, fast, friendly and fun,” said Greg Foran, CEO of Walmart US.

Walmart has a proven willingnes­s to spend big in the pursuit of an edge. In India, a market Amazon has spent billions pursuing, Walmart paid US$ 16 billion to grab a majority stake in Flipkart, the nation’s biggest online seller.— Bloomberg

 ??  ?? The Walmart logo on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
The Walmart logo on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
 ??  ?? Jeff Bezos, founder and chief executive officer of Amazon.com, arrives for the morning sessions during the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho. — Bloomberg photos
Jeff Bezos, founder and chief executive officer of Amazon.com, arrives for the morning sessions during the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho. — Bloomberg photos

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