San Francisco Chronicle

Google and Walmart team up — with eye on Amazon

- By Daisuke Wakabayash­i and Michael Corkery

Google and Walmart are testing the notion that an enemy’s enemy is a friend.

The two companies said Google will start offering Walmart products to people who shop on Google Express, the company’s online shopping mall. It’s the first time the world’s biggest retailer has made its products available online in the United States outside of its own website.

The partnershi­p, announced Wednesday, is a testament to the mutual threat facing both companies from Amazon.com. Amazon’s dominance in online shopping is challengin­g brick-andmortar retailers like

Walmart, while more people are starting Web searches for products they might buy on Amazon instead of Google.

But working together does not ensure that they will be any more successful. For most consumers, Amazon remains the primary option for online shopping. No other retailer can match the size of Amazon’s inventory, the efficiency with which it moves shoppers from browsing to buying, or its many home delivery options.

The two companies said the partnershi­p is less about how online shopping is done today, but where it is going in the future. They said that they foresaw Walmart customers reordering items they purchased in the past by speaking to Google Home, the company’s voice-controlled speaker and an answer to Amazon’s Echo. Walmart customers can also shop using the Google Assistant, the artificial­ly intelligen­t software assistant found in smartphone­s running Google’s Android software.

Walmart customers can link their accounts to Google, allowing the Mountain View firm to learn their past shopping behavior to better predict what they want in the future. Google said that because more than 20 percent of searches conducted on smartphone­s these days are done by voice, it expects voice shopping to grow soon.

“We are trying to help customers shop in ways that they may have never imagined,” said Marc Lore, who is leading Walmart’s efforts to bolster its e-commerce business. He came to Walmart last year after the retailer bought the company he founded, Jet.com.

Google is a laggard in e-commerce. Since starting a shopping service in 2013, it has struggled to gather significan­t momentum. Initially, it offered free same-day delivery before scrapping it. It also tried delivery of groceries before abandoning that, too.

If Amazon is a department store with just about everything inside, then Google Express is a shopping mall populated by different retailers. There are more than 50 retailers on Google Express, including Target and Costco. Inside Google Express, a search for “toothpaste” will bring back options from about a dozen retailers.

Google said it plans to offer free delivery — as long as shoppers met store purchase minimums — on products purchased on Google Express. Google had charged customers a $95-a-year membership for free delivery. Amazon runs a similar program called Amazon Prime, offering free delivery and other services for members who pay $99 a year.

The partnershi­p with Google represents one of several steps that Walmart has taken over the past year to strengthen its online business.

In January, Walmart began offering free, twoday shipping on more than 2 million items — a move that takes direct aim at Amazon Prime.

Walmart has also been trying to integrate its digital business with its vast network of more than 4,690 stores.

Many brick-and-mortar retailers are struggling with what to do with their increasing­ly empty stores, but Walmart is partially repurposin­g its stores into e-commerce fulfillmen­t centers.

Customers can order groceries online and pick them up at hundreds of stores. For some items that they purchase online and pick up in a store, they receive a discount. In-store pickup reduces shipping costs for Walmart, but offers a similar level of convenienc­e to the shopper as home delivery.

The efforts seem to be paying off. Walmart said last week that its online sales — including online grocery — increased 60 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier. It was a big driver in the company’s overall increase in quarterly sales.

Efforts like online grocery seem to be growing, but Walmart hopes the benefits of other moves — like its $3.3 billion acquisitio­n of Jet.com, an online retailer focused on urban Millennial­s, and its purchase of the boutique clothing businesses Modcloth and Bonobos — will come down the road.

Some analysts question how Walmart will add to its core low-price retail business at the same time it is trying to manage bolt-on acquisitio­ns. Google Express will offer items only from Walmart.com, and not from Jet.com or Walmart’s online clothing sites.

“Walmart can’t lose on the low-cost propositio­n,” said Erich Joachimsth­aler, chief executive of Vivaldi, a brand consulting firm. “But convenienc­e, convenienc­e — that is where the game lies.”

Walmart has a long way to go to catch Amazon. Walmart’s website sells 67 million items, up from 10 million early last year. Amazon sells hundreds of millions.

In July, about 83.6 million people visited Walmart’s website, nearly half as many visitors as Amazon had, according to com Score, a media measuremen­t company. Jet drew an additional 10.9 million visitors.

“I am not saying Walmart is ever going to catch Amazon online,” said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, a retail research and consulting firm. “But instead of being embarrasse­d by Amazon, it can be a strong No. 2.”

 ?? Patrick T. Fallon / Bloomberg ?? An employee restocks shelves of school supplies at a Walmart store in Burbank.
Patrick T. Fallon / Bloomberg An employee restocks shelves of school supplies at a Walmart store in Burbank.
 ?? Roger Kisby / New York Times ?? Walmart’s products will be available through Google Express, the company’s online shopping mall.
Roger Kisby / New York Times Walmart’s products will be available through Google Express, the company’s online shopping mall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States