Walmart makes push to sell online goods at $10 and up to
capture elusive e-commerce profit
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[February 08, 2018]
By Nandita Bose
(Reuters) - Walmart Inc is asking vendors
to supply it with more merchandise priced at $10 and up, as part of a
major push to finally turn a profit at its online business, according to
four people with knowledge of the matter.
The new focus at the world’s largest retailer is on dry grocery products
such as sauces, soaps and general merchandise items such as toys and
home furnishings, the sources said.
Walmart’s goal is to see higher profit margins selling these more
expensive items given the built-in cost of delivering goods purchased
online, according to the people familiar with Walmart’s new strategy.
Shipping Gillette Mach 3 Disposable Razors at $6.97, for example, costs
the same as Gillette Fusion5 ProGlide Men's Razor Refills at $12.97.
In meetings last week with suppliers including Procter & Gamble Co,
Unilever PLC, Kimberly-Clark Corp and Clorox Co, Walmart's e-commerce
chief Marc Lore said Walmart.com wants to focus on merchandise priced at
least $5 and preferably, more than $10, the people said.
"Walmart has started to understand it cannot make money if they offer
the lowest prices online on every item and then spend $4 or $5 trying to
ship it over," said one supplier present at the meetings. "It is not
sustainable and more importantly their shareholders won't allow it."
Walmart’s directive to suppliers marks a shift in strategy. The retailer
for years has squeezed suppliers for pennies to drive the lowest prices
for shoppers, both online and at its brick-and-mortar stores. Walmart
will continue to press for bargain-priced items to sell at its 4,700
stores. But in addition, it will now implore suppliers to provide it
with more expensive goods for sale online.
This new emphasis on more higher-priced goods at Walmart.com comes after
the retailer acquired Jet.com in 2016 and is investing billions of
dollars to make its online business more competitive.
Walmart declined to comment on the meetings, but affirmed its commitment
to “Every Day Low Prices” and offering the best prices online.
“We are constantly looking for opportunities to expand our assortment
with new items, and want to ensure that the items we add to the
assortment are a great value but also make economic sense for the
channel,” a Walmart spokeswoman said.
Two people present at the Walmart meetings in Bentonville, Ark. - who
were not authorized to speak on the record - said Walmart wants to avoid
selling products online at a loss like rival Amazon.com Inc, where there
is much less of a focus on retail profit. Seattle-based Amazon profits
on many but not all transactions, depending on price-matching, an
order’s size, shipping speed and other factors.
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A man talks on his
mobile phone in front of a Wal-Mart store in Sao Paulo, Brazil,
February 16, 2016. REUTERS/Nacho Doce/File Photo
While Amazon has pressured suppliers for discounts usually given to bigger
retailers, a person familiar with the matter said, it has been happy to sell
popular items at cost or even at a loss if it means winning customers' loyalty
over the long term.
For a graphic, click http://tmsnrt.rs/2BGby73.
Amazon has a diverse array of profitable businesses to offset its retail losses,
including commissions for third-party sales on its site, advertising sales and a
business handling large enterprises' computing needs in the cloud.
Amazon accounted for 43.5 percent of U.S. e-commerce sales in the 12 months to
October 2017, compared to Walmart’s 3.6 percent, according to digital research
firm eMarketer.Walmart.com has tripled the items it sells to 70 million in the
past year. It is looking to grow that fast, as it plays catch up with Amazon’s
more than 300 million products for sale.
Walmart.com already had begun to raise prices on some items sold online last
year. By now enlisting suppliers to provide it with higher priced goods, it is
taking that strategy a step further.
The move to offer more $10-and-up merchandise for sale online carries
significant risk if bargain hunters reject the push and seek lower-priced goods
elsewhere. A majority of Walmart’s low-income customers still tend to shop at
its brick-and-mortar stores.
But the retailer, with $485 billion in annual sales, is trying to attract a
slightly more affluent audience to Walmart.com.
For some suppliers, Walmart’s directive will entail going back to the drawing
board and coming up with new items to sell on Walmart.com. That, in turn, will
require planning and investment in new product design, packaging, marketing and
sales. One Walmart vendor said that more than 95 percent of its merchandise
currently for sale on Walmart.com is priced between $3 and $8.
Procter & Gamble, Kimberly-Clark and Unilever declined to comment. Clorox did
not respond to requests for comment.
"They are no longer saying 'give us the lowest priced product for dot com,'"
said one person present at the meetings, referring to Walmart.com. "They want
items that retail for more than $10; those are the products that make money for
them online.”
(Additional reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco and Martinne Geller in
London; Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Edward Tobin)
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