Hartford Courant

Anyone home? Walmart will deliver and put away groceries

- By Anne D’Innocenzio

NEW YORK — How much do you trust a stranger with your fridge?

Walmart is offering to have one of its employees deliver fresh groceries and put them in your refrigerat­or when you’re not home.

The nation’s largest grocer said it will be offering the service this fall for more than one million customers in three cities: Pittsburgh; Kansas City, Missouri; and Vero Beach, Florida. Later this year, the service, called InHome Delivery, will also accept returns for items purchased on Walmart.com.

The new service, announced last week, is part of the company’s drive to expand its shopping options that include curbside pickup and online grocery delivery and cater to time-starved shoppers.

And it comes as the world’s largest retailer is locked in an arms race with online leader Amazon.com to bring packages faster and faster to customers’ homes. Amazon offers a similar service in certain cities, dropping off packages inside homes, garages or car trunks. But its service does not deliver groceries.

“We will learn and then we will scale from there,” Doug McMillon, Walmart CEO told the crowd of Walmart workers and shareholde­rs last Friday at the University of Arkansas’ Bud Walton arena.

Two years ago, Walmart tested a similar service in the Silicon Valley area but teamed up with delivery startup Deliv and worked with August Home, makers of smart locks and smart home accessorie­s. That test has since been stopped.

With Walmart’s new service, customers place a grocery delivery order online and then select InHome Delivery and a delivery day at checkout.

Walmart workers will use smart entry technology and a proprietar­y wearable camera to access the customer’s home. That allows shoppers to control access into their home and give them the ability to watch the delivery remotely.

Walmart said that the workers will go through an extensive training program to prepare them for things like how to select the freshest groceries and how best to organize the refrigerat­or. Workers need to be with the company for at least one year. Walmart declined to give specifics on the technology. It said that ahead of the launch it will share the fee details for the delivery service, which in addition to fresh food will include grocery essentials such as canned pears and peanut butter.

The last mile from a transporta­tion hub to someone’s home has been the key logistical hurdle for delivery services.

“Now, we can serve customers not in just the last mile, but in the last 15 feet,” wrote Marc Lore, CEO of Walmart’s U.S. e-commerce division, in a corporate blog post.

Still, while analysts applauded the idea of in-home delivery, they noted challenges.

“What remains unclear for us is how much could this cost to rollout at scale, how much demand will there ultimately be, and how much are consumers willing to pay for the service,” wrote Moody’s vice president Charles O’Shea in a report. “We remain concerned that companies may end up overspendi­ng in their developmen­t of various delivery options by overestima­ting the potential demand, though that is a ‘down-the-road’ issue.”

Jason Goldberg, chief commerce strategy officer of Publicis Communicat­ions, noted that even with the body cameras, many customers may not trust a stranger into their home. That worry could ease over time, he said.

“Getting in a strangers’ car didn’t feel all that safe at first either, yet ride-share companies were able to get enough initial customers and then expand through customers’ changing perception­s,” said Goldberg.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP ?? Walmart is offering a service in which an employee delivers fresh groceries and puts them in your refrigerat­or.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP Walmart is offering a service in which an employee delivers fresh groceries and puts them in your refrigerat­or.

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