The
efforts are key to Walmart’s aggressive plan to grow its
advertising business by more than 10 times within the next five
years, according to a source familiar with the matter.
Reuters previously reported Walmart’s annual advertising
revenues were expected to be nearly $1 billion in 2020.
The Bentonville, Arkansas-based company, with nearly 5,000
stores nationwide, has set a goal to become one of the top 10
advertising platforms in the United States within the next five
years, a “slightly conservative,” goal, the source said.
Walmart has expanded its advertising business after years of
stuttering progress, even as a deal to buy a 7.5% stake in
video-sharing app TikTok remains in limbo.
Walmart refocused its strategy starting in early 2019, cutting
ties with its external advertising partner and taking the
business in-house as Walmart Media Group. Now, it will be named
Walmart Connect, the company said.
“This is about us really digging in and pivoting the business
from one which was really focused on search and display with our
biggest suppliers,” Walmart’s chief customer officer Janey
Whiteside told Reuters. “We want to continue to do that,
leverage our physical properties, and find ways to help
advertisers make better use of their dollars.”
Walmart said it will build a new advertising platform in
partnership with ad technology company Trade Desk Inc. It will
allow brands to use Walmart’s ample shopper data to make ads
more effective, even on websites and apps Walmart does not own.
Brands will be able to target ads to audiences using Walmart’s
data on shopping behavior across categories and brands.
Advertisers can then monitor sales inside Walmart stores in
real-time and adjust ad campaigns as needed, Whiteside said.
Accurately measuring whether an ad led to a purchase has been a
long-term technological challenge. Walmart is betting that
allowing brands to use its data on ads across streaming video or
smart TVs will draw in more ad dollars.
The retailer said it will take advantage of its brick-and-mortar
stores to compete with online retailer Amazon, and will sell ads
on over 170,000 screens inside more than 4,500 U.S. stores,
including on TVs and screens of self-checkout kiosks.
“We have this unparalleled source of data that we can bring to
bear,” Whiteside said. “Who else can actually tell you if a
customer saw something online and then a week later, physically
bought it in the store?”
(Reporting by Melissa Fares in New York and Sheila Dang in
Dallas; editing by Vanessa O'Connell, Kenneth Li and David
Gregorio)
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