The
retailer, which said it has about 100 drivers at present,
expects to be able to reach 30 million homes by the end of the
year. It now services 6 million homes.
Bentonville, Arkansas-based Walmart in 2019 launched its InHome
delivery service through which workers deliver groceries
directly into shoppers’ homes, sometimes placing items straight
into kitchens or garage refrigerators when people are not in the
house.
The driver uses a one-time access code to unlock the customers'
doors or garages through an app that pairs with a "smart" entry
lock.
Fearing COVID-19, many shoppers have turned to online grocery
delivery since the start of the pandemic, sparking aggressive
competition in the industry from the likes of Amazon.com Inc's
Whole Foods, Instacart and Uber Technologies Inc.
Walmart has experimented for years with last-mile delivery
options. In 2017, for instance, Walmart established a program
through which its own store employees would bring online orders
directly to shoppers’ homes after completing their usual shifts
on sales floors.
In August, ahead of the U.S. holiday shopping season, Walmart
launched a last-mile delivery service for other merchants. Last
year, it also tested company-branded "last-mile" delivery vans,
taking a page from Amazon's playbook as online demand pressures
United Parcel Service, FedEx Corp and the U.S. Postal Service.
(Reporting by Richa Naidu in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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