Walmart discovers why the 'last mile' is the hardest
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[July 30, 2018]
By Nandita Bose
EAST BRUNSWICK, N.J. (Reuters) - Standing
before an audience of 14,000 people last year, Walmart Inc executives
described a radical plan to help it fend off Amazon.com Inc and other
online delivery services from stealing its customers.
Walmart's own store employees would bring online orders directly to
shoppers' homes after completing their usual shifts of up to nine hours
on the sales floors. Aiming to lower the retailer's shipping costs by
tapping its massive workforce, the program was part of a multi-pronged
strategy to boost its $11.5 billion U.S. ecommerce business and tackle
one of the biggest challenges in retail: the so-called "last mile" of
delivering goods to online customers.
Its workers, meanwhile, could earn extra money on top of their hourly
pay, which starts at $11 an hour.
"Just imagine associates all over the world delivering orders to
customers on their way home," Marc Lore, head of Walmart's e-commerce
operations, said at its annual meeting in June 2017. "That can be a real
game-changer."
But months later, Walmart quietly retreated from its original vision for
the pilot program - launched in New Jersey and Arkansas - and ended it
altogether in January, according to company documents obtained by
Reuters and interviews with more than two dozen Walmart employees.
The story behind the foundering employee delivery initiative, which has
not been reported, offers insight into Walmart's ongoing attempts to
find unconventional ways to close the gap with Amazon in the game of
cheap, rapid, doorstep delivery of packages. According to Walmart data,
people who shop in stores and become online customers spend nearly twice
as much as those who shop at one or the other.
Here in New Jersey, Walmart started the program with the idea that store
employees could courier all items that would fit in a car. But the
initiative failed to gain traction with skeptical employees who had to
use their time after work, according to sixteen workers who participated
in the trial.
Walmart is now testing a more modest service with just four Walmart
employees who deliver goods from a single store in Woodstock, Georgia,
Reuters has learned. In this latest initiative, Walmart is also
overhauling the guidelines for employees and limiting deliveries to
groceries and related items such as paper plates.
Walmart spokeswoman Molly Blakeman confirmed that the retailer ended its
first experiment early this year, without elaborating. Walmart is
testing a variety of ways to deliver merchandise, she said, and is
"encouraged by what we're seeing" in the Georgia store.
Despite having 4,700 U.S. stores within 10 miles (16 km) of 90 percent
of the U.S. population, Walmart is still trying to figure out how to
efficiently make deliveries and has poured billions of dollars into
ecommerce in recent years.
But as recently as the last holiday season, its online sales
disappointed some investors.
Walmart caters to U.S. online shoppers by having them drive up to their
local store themselves to collect merchandise they ordered online. It
also partners with shippers such as FedEx Corp, the United States Postal
Service (USPS) for routine deliveries.
Still, Walmart aims to be able to deliver groceries to more than 40
percent of households in the country by the end of this year. Globally,
Walmart is experimenting with deliveries by motorbike in Mexico and with
new small supermarkets in China to make deliveries in 30 minutes or
less. In Japan, Walmart is opening a new warehouse to support orders,
and expanding its online offerings to include meal kits.
Earlier this year, Reuters reported the retailer's delivery partnerships
with Uber and Lyft ended after the ride-hailing services struggled to
deliver people and packages together. It continues to rely on
third-party companies such as Postmates, Deliv and Doordash to help
deliver groceries, and last week partnered with Alphabet Inc's Waymo.
SKEPTICAL DRIVERS
Walmart's associate delivery pilot program in the leafy, middle-class
suburb of East Brunswick, New Jersey, started with store managers
pitching employees an unusual new way to boost pay. Those who passed
background checks could moonlight as drivers for the Walmart.com
delivery service, they said.
Some staffers, who did not wish to be named fearing retribution for
speaking to the media, told Reuters they balked at having to use their
own cars and personal insurance policies for a program that would
benefit Walmart.
To entice them to sign up, Walmart offered free TVs and iPads as gifts,
they said. Eventually, about 50 of the store's more than 150 associates
initially signed up, they added, though many had no prior experience as
couriers with a delivery service.
Walmart declined comment on this.
Fourteen of the sixteen Walmart employees told Reuters that they were
put off by the program's poor compensation. And all of them expressed
concern over who would be responsible if they got into an accident or if
merchandise was lost.
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A worker sets up a
display of dish washing liquid in prepare for the opening of a
Walmart Super Center in Compton, California, U.S., January 10, 2017.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
For example, the East Brunswick Walmart paid store associates $2 per package,
with participants making three to five total drop-offs during a typical trip
within a ten mile radius, participants told Reuters. It also reimbursed them 54
cents for fuel per mile, over the federal fuel reimbursement rate of 53.5 cents
in 2017, and offered them an extra hour of overtime pay.
But every employee Reuters spoke to who signed up said they typically lost at
least 30 minutes of time, waiting at the store after their shifts ended to
collect the items and were never compensated for it.
Walmart didn't offer more than one hour of overtime even if it took more than an
hour to deliver orders after finishing their 40 hour work week, former
participants said. Walmart disputed this saying it paid workers overtime when
they exceeded 40 hours.
All sixteen workers who had participated in the program said delivery of five
packages would generally take them more than two hours to complete. If a worker
drove 10 miles to drop five packages, that would earn them $15.40 in
compensation per package and fuel, before overtime pay.
Rival Amazon pays independent drivers $18 to $25 an hour for deliveries, and the
fuel costs belong to the driver, according to the Amazon Flex website. Amazon
declined to comment on the story.
One of the Walmart employees said in only one instance did she earn an
additional $100 at the end of the week – after making nearly a dozen deliveries.
"The money was never worth it... and they stopped paying mileage in the end,"
said an employee who did not wish to be named.
Twelve out of sixteen employees said they were not paid mileage for the final
deliveries they made before the program was shut. Walmart did not comment on
mileage payments that employees said were not made.
As for insurance, risk and liability for accidents and lost packages, many of
the employees Reuters spoke with said they were unclear if Walmart would
shoulder the responsibility or not.
DOWN TO A TEAM OF FOUR
Now, an initiative known internally as 'Associate Delivery 2.0' is being run
with four employees hired specifically as delivery drivers in Woodstock,
Georgia, according to company documents and interviews.
To build demand, Walmart will waive the fee for the first delivery order if it
is for $50 or more, according to a Walmart promotional pamphlet at the store.
For subsequent orders, the retailer's mobile app offered delivery on a minimum
$30 order for a fee of $7.99 to $9.95.
The team of three men and one woman, working separately, load up their cars to
make deliveries to shoppers within ten miles.
Maurice Thomas, who is one of the four Walmart employees, illustrates the
retailer's new tack. A hybrid between a delivery driver and a store employee,
Thomas's role is newly created to revive the initiative, he and other store
employees in Georgia said.
Thomas took a job at the Woodstock store three years ago unloading trucks. Now
he uses his own car, fuel and personal insurance to deliver 6 to 7 packages to
shopper's homes every day.
"I have a fixed schedule and doing this is much better than unloading trucks,"
said Thomas, who is 28.
Walmart pays Thomas $12.50 an hour and reimburses 54.5 cents a mile, comparable
to the 54.5 federal fuel reimbursement rate in 2018, he said. If Thomas drove 10
miles within an hour to make deliveries, he would earn $18.30.
Thomas said every two weeks he is usually left with about $130-$140 dollars
after buying fuel.
Walmart informed employees in Georgia they would have to use their own car
insurance policies when they were hired, Blakeman said. But the retailer will
cover any expenses that their personal insurance policies won't cover, she
added.
An internal document seen by Reuters provides Walmart delivery workers with a
specific new protocol. Among the guidelines: "do not mix orders" and "make sure
you have your 'thank you' cards ready" to leave inside their deliveries.
"We're testing and learning how best to use associates," said Walmart spokesman
Greg Hitt. "There's a reason for pilots."
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in East Brunswick, New Jersey and Woodstock, Georgia;
Additional reporting by Michelle Conlin in New York, Editing by Vanessa
O'Connell and Edward Tobin)
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