Los Angeles Times

Wal-Mart cuts cost of online-only items picked up at stores

-

Starting next week, WalMart Stores Inc. will offer discounts on thousands of online-only items when customers elect to have them shipped to one of the company’s stores for pickup.

The move is part of the retailer’s efforts to better compete with online leader Amazon.com.

Initially, the Wal-Mart discount will be available on about 10,000 items. But the Bentonvill­e, Ark., retailer says it will then expand the price cuts to more than 1 million items by the end of June.

Among the offers starting April 19: An infant car seat that was priced at $148.05 will have an additional discount of $7.40. A Lego Great Vehicles Ferry priced at $23.99 will have an additional pickup discount of $2.55.

Wal-Mart is able offer the discounts by delivering the products directly to its 4,700 stores, saving on costs by avoiding shipping to individual shoppers’ homes.

The offer builds on WalMart’s move in late January that replaced a pilot program offering free shipping but that came with an annual fee of $49, with one with a lower free-shipping threshold, faster delivery and no membership fee.

The retailer said it will reduce free shipping time to two days on 2 million of its most popular items, including essentials such as diapers and pet food as well as hot toys and electronic­s. Wal-Mart’s average shipping time has been three to five days. Also, at the time, it reduced the spending necessary for free shipping to $35 from $50.

These moves are being spearheade­d by Walmart .comChief Executive Mark Lore, who joined the company when Wal-Mart bought Jet.com, which he founded, last year.

It’s also another illustrati­on of how Wal-Mart is trying to figure out a way to compete with Amazon and its dominant Prime plan. Amazon’s membership program costs $99 a year, but includes services such as streaming music and video that create fierce loyalty. Amazon Prime members buy frequently and spend more money, analysts say.

“We’re creating price transparen­cy to empower customers to shop smarter and choose what’s best for them,” Lore wrote in a company blog post.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States