Baltimore Sun

Walmart CEO talks technology, reimagines the retail experience

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

HOUSTON — When Walmart’s Greg Foran took over as CEO of the discounter’s U.S. division four years ago, he found messy stores with lots of items that were frequently out of stock. The 57year-old New Zealand native dove in, making sure shelves were loaded with the most popular products and establishi­ng controls to increase freshness in produce.

Foran’s obsession with the nitty-gritty details has helped lead to several years of straight quarterly sales gains for the U.S. division. But with Walmart facing competitio­n from Amazon and other pressures, he’s also reimaginin­g the shopping experience at Walmart’s 4,700 stores, transformi­ng them into distributi­on hubs that can fill the fastgrowin­g online orders to reduce shipping costs and speed up deliveries. To do that, Walmart has been training its 1.5 million workers at its new academies while using automation to relieve them of menial tasks. Walmart CEO Greg Foran, left, talks with an associate during tour of a Walmart Supercente­r in Houston.

Scanning robots at a store in Houston as well as a cluster of others keep tabs of what’s on and not on the shelves and communicat­e that informatio­n to the automatic conveyor system that’s backed up to the truck bay. Workers with new apps on their handheld devices manage routine tasks such as price changes on the spot, freeing them to serve shoppers.

Foran, who used to head Walmart’s China business, says he’s always looking to new technology that improves efficiency. Still he takes delight in old-school retail basics like watching shoppers open a carton of produce.

AP spoke with Foran during a tour of the Houston store about the holiday season, his views on workers and other issues.

Q. What makes this holiday season different?

A. I wake up on Monday morning at 4 a.m. and the first email I look at is Amazon has gone and introduced free shipping. You’re getting competitor­s out there starting to up the ante. I think we’ll see more business done online, not just at Amazon but at Walmart and in other retailers. I think the fact that people like Toys R Us are out of the market has changed the environmen­t around toys, both physical and digital offering.

Q. So do you think you’ll drop the $35 minimum order for free shipping for the holidays?

A. These things are always discussed and reviewed. Sometimes that means following and other times it doesn’t.

Q. Does Amazon keep you up at night?

A. To be frank, lots of things keep me up at night. Amazon is one of them. Target is another. I am in Aldi stores, Lidl stores. There’s no doubt that Amazon is a significan­t competitor. You keep tabs. But your job is not to copy.

Q. How are you approachin­g wages given increasing competitiv­e pressures?

A. We look at it regularly. As you can imagine, it’s a particular­ly large country. We’ve made a lot of progress getting ourselves from where we were to $9, then $10, and then $11 earlier on this year. We’ve got a number of stores that pay well over that now, $12, $13, $14. So we continuous­ly review that. We then take into account what we’re doing in things like benefits so parental leave, PTO (paid time off ) etc.

Q. Will there be fewer workers at Walmart stores given robotic technology?

A. That’s going to play itself out. I am a big proponent of the good jobs strategy. For a lot of tasks that you used to do that were mundane, tedious, we’re now working out how we can digitize those. And then we’re creating new roles through turning stores into fulfillmen­t centers because now we’ve got thousands of personal shoppers who are picking your order, so the jobs are changing.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP ??
DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP

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