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A very eye-opening article about the very serious problems at Walmart.

jdcnow

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May I help you? There are very serious and very real business operations problems at Walmart. Has the world's largest retailer finally gotten too big for its britches? You ever notice how when you go into a Walmart, the shelves are always half-empty, and there's hardly a soul in the place to help you? Yesterday, Bloomberg News published a very revealing look at exactly why. In a word >> Management.

Good evening, everyone. I hope you're doing well, tonight.

Bloomberg News >> Customers Flee Wal-Mart Empty Shelves for Target, Costco

Margaret Hancock has long considered the local Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) superstore her one- stop shopping destination. No longer.

During recent visits, the retired accountant from Newark, Delaware, says she failed to find more than a dozen basic items, including certain types of face cream, cold medicine, bandages, mouthwash, hangers, lamps and fabrics.

The cosmetics section “looked like someone raided it,” said Hancock, 63.

Wal-Mart’s loss was a gain for Kohl’s Corp. (KSS), Safeway Inc. (SWY), Target Corp. (TGT) and Walgreen Co. (WAG) -- the chains Hancock hit for the items she couldn’t find at Wal-Mart.

“If it’s not on the shelf, I can’t buy it,” she said. “You hate to see a company self-destruct, but there are other places to go.”

It’s not as though the merchandise isn’t there. It’s piling up in aisles and in the back of stores because Wal-Mart doesn’t have enough bodies to restock the shelves, according to interviews with store workers. In the past five years, the world’s largest retailer added 455 U.S. Wal-Mart stores, a 13 percent increase, according to filings and the company’s website. In the same period, its total U.S. workforce, which includes Sam’s Club employees, dropped by about 20,000, or 1.4 percent. Wal-Mart employs about 1.4 million U.S. workers.

Disorganized Stores

A thinly spread workforce has other consequences: Longer check-out lines, less help with electronics and jewelry and more disorganized stores, according to Hancock, other shoppers and store workers. Last month, Wal-Mart placed last among department and discount stores in the American Customer Satisfaction Index, the sixth year in a row the company had either tied or taken the last spot. The dwindling level of customer service comes as Wal- Mart (WMT) has touted its in-store experience to lure shoppers and counter rival Amazon.com Inc.

Wal-Mart (WMT) traded at a 1.4 percent discount to Target last week on a price-to-earnings basis after averaging a 5.9 percent premium to its smaller rival in the past two years. Wal-Mart traded as high as a 22 percent premium to Target in January 2012. Wal-Mart fell 0.1 percent to $74.77 at the close in New York.

“Our in stock levels are up significantly in the last few years, so the premise of this story, which is based on the comments of a handful of people, is inaccurate and not representative of what is happening in our stores across the country,” Brooke Buchanan, a Wal-Mart spokeswoman, said in an e-mailed statement. “Two-thirds of Americans shop in our stores each month because they know they can find the products they are looking for at low prices.”

‘Getting Worse’

Last month, Bloomberg News reported that Wal-Mart was “getting worse” at stocking shelves, according to minutes of an officers’ meeting. An executive vice president had been appointed to work on the restocking issue, according to the document.

At the supercenter across the street from Wal-Mart’s Bentonville, Arkansas, home office, salespeople on March 14 handed out samples of Chobani yogurt and Clif Bars. Thirteen of 20 registers were manned -- with no lines -- and the shelves were fully stocked.

Three days earlier, about 10 people waited in a customer service line at a Wal-Mart in Secaucus, New Jersey, across the Hudson River from New York, the nation’s largest city. Twelve of 30 registers were open and the lines were about five deep. There were empty spaces on shelves large enough for a grown man to lie down, and a woman wandered around vainly seeking a frying pan.

Wal-Mart’s restocking challenge coincides with slowing sales growth. Same-store sales in the U.S. for the 13 weeks ending April 26 will be little changed, Bill Simon, the company’s U.S. chief executive officer, said in a Feb. 21 earnings call.

Target Premium

“When times were good and people were still shopping, the lack of excellence was OK,” said Zeynep Ton, a retail researcher and associate professor of operations management at the MIT Sloan School of Management in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “Their view has been that they have the lowest prices so customers keep coming anyway. You don’t see that so much anymore.”

Shoppers are “so sick of this,” said Ton, whose research, published in Harvard Business Review, examines how retailers benefit from offering good wages and benefits to all employees. “They’re mad about the way they were treated or how much time they wasted looking for items that aren’t there.”

Retailers consider labor -- usually their largest controllable expense -- an easy cost-cutting target, Ton said. That’s what happened at Home Depot Inc. (HD) in the early 2000s, when Robert Nardelli, then chief executive officer, cut staffing levels and increased the percentage of part-time workers to trim expenses and boost profit. Eventually, customer service and customer satisfaction deteriorated and same-store sales growth dropped, Ton said.

‘Too Expensive’

“When you tell retailers they have to invest in people, the typical response is: ‘It’s just too expensive,’” Ton said.

Adding five full-time employees to Wal-Mart’s (WMT) U.S. supercenters and discount stores would add about a half- percentage point to selling, general and administrative expenses, according to an analysis by Poonam Goyal, a Bloomberg Industries senior analyst based in Skillman, New Jersey. Assuming the workers earned the federal minimum wage and industry standards for health benefits, the added costs would amount to about $448 million a year, she said. In the year ended Jan. 31, Wal-Mart generated $17 billion in profit on revenue of $469.2 billion.

Barren Landscape

At the Kenosha, Wisconsin, Wal-Mart where Mary Pat Tifft has worked for nearly a quarter-century, merchandise ready for the sales floor remains on pallets and in steel bins lining the floor of the back room -- an area so full that “no passable aisles” remain, she said. Meanwhile, the front of the store is increasingly barren, Tifft said. That landscape has worsened over the past several years as workers who leave aren’t replaced, she said.

“There’s a lot of voids out there, a lot of voids,” said Tifft, 58, who oversees grocery deliveries and is a member of OUR Walmart, a union-backed group seeking to improve working conditions at the discount chain. “Customers come in, they can’t find what they’re looking for, and they’re leaving.”

Years ago, supervisors drilled a message into employees’ heads: “In the door and to the floor,” Tifft said. That mantra now seems impossible to execute.

‘No Manpower’

“There’s no manpower in the store to get the merchandise moving,” she said.

At the Wal-Mart store in Erie, Pennsylvania, 26-year-old meat and dairy stocker Anthony Falletta faces a similar predicament.

“The merchandise is in the store, it just can’t make the jump from the shelf in the back to the one in the front,” said Falletta, who works the second shift. “There’s not the people to do it.”

In both stores, departments have merged, leaving some areas with limited or no staff coverage, they said, and workers rarely have time to finish all their tasks by the end of the day. In the morning, employees scramble to set out new merchandise, put returns back on shelves and handle customer inquires, they said.

“There is definitely some links broken in the chain, and I don’t know how long they’re going to go on like this,” Tifft said.

Vicious Cycle

Wal-Mart is entangled in what Ton calls the “vicious cycle” of under-staffing. Too few workers leads to operational problems. Those problems lead to poor store sales, which lead to lower labor budgets.

“It requires a wake-up call at a higher level,” she said of the decision to hire more workers.

Falletta, the meat and dairy stocker in Erie, said his weekly hours are unpredictable. He would like to work a full 40 hours and sometimes gets only 25. Falletta and others interviewed for this story said management bonuses are based partly on minimizing store payroll.

According to Rochelle Jackson, who works at the jewelry counter at a store in Springfield, Missouri, a supervisor recently explained the number of hours available to schedule employees corresponds to sales performance: The worse the sales number, the fewer hours available.

“We’re not getting as many sales because there’s simply no one to help the customers throughout the stores,” said Jackson, 24, who has worked at two Wal-Mart stores since 2009. “I asked, ‘Why can’t we have enough hours to make the store work?’ They said, ‘It’s orders from Home Office,’” she said.

Cutting Hours

Jackson said her store began cutting hours a year ago, adding that “it hasn’t been really bad until this year.”

Staff shortages at cash registers during peak hours require Jackson and her co-workers on the sales floor to check shoppers out “while we are trying to restock the shelves, help customers and do other assigned projects,” she said. The so-called Code 7 to the registers leaves a vacuum across the store’s departments, she said.

Customers looking for groceries ask salespeople in the shoe department for help because they can’t find what they’re looking for, Jackson said.

In the fall, Tim White, a 36-year-old attorney, tried to buy wall paint at the Wal-Mart near his home in Santee, California.

“You wait 20, 25 minutes for someone to help you, then the person was not trained on mixing paint,” White said. “It was like, you have to help them help you.”

‘Maddening Inability’

White, who has six children, said while long checkout lines irritated him, “the number-one reason we gave up on Wal-Mart was its prolonged, horrible, maddening inability to keep items in stock.”

The store would go weeks without products he wanted to buy, such as men’s dress shirts, which he found only in very large or small sizes and unpopular colors, he said.

“Pretty soon, they were even out of those,” White said. “I would literally check every so often at different Wal-Marts. They would go two or three months with the shelves looking exactly the same.”

When Wal-Mart was out of stock of his preferred types of shaving lotion or razors, White would “drive next door to Target where they had it in stock all the time,” he said.

The White family’s visits to Wal-Mart -- which had been a several times a week occurrence -- became less and less frequent until they stopped this year. The eight-member clan now shops at Target and Costco Wholesale Corp (COST).

“Things might be a little bit more expensive, but not so much so that it would keep me away,” he said.

Costco Productivity

Ton’s research has centered on retailers that include discount club Costco, whose chief executive officer, Craig Jelinek, offered his support publicly earlier this month for legislation to raise the federal minimum wage.

Costco, which offers a starting hourly wage of $11.50 in all states and employee schedules that are generally predictable, has higher worker productivity and a lower rate of turnover than its competitors, Ton found.

Hancock, the retired CPA in Delaware, said she hasn’t abandoned Wal-Mart altogether because she likes the low prices on the items she can find in stock. White, the shopper in California, said those low prices were crucial to his family as he started out his career.

“When I was in law school, it really helped us out,” White said.

Wal-Mart shoppers for more than a decade, White’s family continued to shop there even once he started earning more money.

“I was pro-Wal-Mart even when our friends rolled their eyes,” he said. “I don’t defend them anymore.”

He added a caveat: “They could get us back if they fixed these problems.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Renee Dudley in New York at rdudley6@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Robin Ajello at rajello@bloomberg.net
 
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Wal-Mart has so much stuff, that it hardly has anything anymore. This is what happens when you try to jam pack every type of item under one roof... you lose selection! Plus, it used to be the place to go if you wanted to save money, but everything is so expensive now!
And yes, the aisles being blocked up with crap is so irritating, especially when you can't even access what's on the shelves!

It seems that when you need help, there's not an employee in sight. When you just want to run in and pick up a few things, they stop you every single step you take, asking if you need help. Also... aren't the greeters supposed to greet you? they don't seem to do that anymore. I don't mind, as I never really cared about that whole thing, but they're basically getting paid to sit there all day.
 
The only reason I shopped at a Walmart recently was because I heard on the internet allegedly that they were selling Star Wars: The Old Republic time cards for $15 accidentally as a discount. I bought the remaining lot in the store [4 of them] for $60 so that was something on the internet that was true!

Still would never shop at Walmart or Ikea [the furniture store version of Walmart] ever again.
 
Also... aren't the greeters supposed to greet you? they don't seem to do that anymore. I don't mind, as I never really cared about that whole thing, but they're basically getting paid to sit there all day.

Well, take this from someone who works in storefront retail. And as someone who previously worked for a Walmart in the past (although, I absolutely will not disclose where I work, now). The people greeters at the front door are supposed to be used for, and the originally intended use of the job position is to A) greet customers who enter and leave, thus projecting a PR image of friendliness (retail is partly a PR job, just like any other profession that deals with the general public directly, so this is actually important and relevant), B) check in guests who have merchandise they want to return, by putting a sticker on each item (this was done as a security measure to prevent return fraud, so that a customer couldn't just grab stuff off the shelves, walk up to Customer Service, and say, "Well, I need to return this..." - no sticker on the item meant the customer did not check in with the door greeter, and this *might* - not for certain, but *might* be a possible instance of theft), C) to prevent shoplifters already in the store from just waltzing out with merchandise just as big as you please (seeing someone sitting at the front door may not have been much of a deterant, but it was a decent deterant, nonetheless).

The problem with the greeters is that management companywide, basically saw them as not their intended job and purpose, but instead as extra hands out on the salesfloor, away from their intended posts at the front door. "Gotta keep the labor/personnel costs low, so lets pull them off their posts, and have them go stock so-and-so departments, instead of actually hiring people for those departments."

It's all about [strike]getting away with[/strike] doing more work with less people.
 
Always wondered when they were going to find a way to somehow self-destruct, insightful article.

Being a Target snob, I fear if I were to step foot in Wal-Mart I may burst into flames.
 
Cutting labor, especially ones that are underpaid, is always a sign of bad business. Best Buy cut back the commission-based salespeople for a flat wage and sales plummeted. Coincidence? I think not.
 
Sadly, that's starting to become the norm for most employers now.

Unfortunately so. Now, from what I have seen, from over 11 and a half years in this profession, I say "getting away with", because businesses like Walmart only do what they do, because retail in general gets away with the shady business practices it gets away with as a whole. I personally have worked for Kmart Supercenter, Walmart, Dollar Tree (4 years, almost 2 as an hourly assistant manager), as well as smaller and mom-and-pop businesses.

Tying in with shady business practices in order to trim the budget, I'll tell you one of Dollar Tree's dirty little secrets >> When you are clocked out for lunch, even though lunch is your UNPAID personal time, under penalty of being written up, up to and including getting fired, you are strictly forbidden from leaving the store. Because they want to keep just two people in the stores. They don't want to have to have a third person to cover for another person's lunch - that would require them to spend money on hiring and employing that third person. So you literally were not allowed to leave, even though you saw no payment for that time you still stayed at the store. And that's if you were even allowed a lunch, if your store mgr or district/regional manager allowed it. Dollar Tree got into a huge class-action lawsuit last year, and it's still going on, as a matter of fact.

Or the 2010 news story by local Dallas ABC station WFAA-TV Channel 8. It was an attenton-drawing News 8 report that caused Dollar Tree to stop selling China-made plastic copies of the American Flag - with 61 stars.

Believe me when I tell you - Not just Walmart, Not just Dollar Tree, Not just this store or that one, but Retail as a whole has been virtually getting away with murder FOR YEARS!!! Customers notice here and there - long lines at Walmart, empty shelves abound, but don't really know why. Well, now, you know. Now, you know the ugly truth - Anything to trim the budget and save a buck for that omni-important bottom line.
 
Anything to trim the budget and save a buck for that omni-important bottom line.

What's even more scary is on top of everything you mentioned there, most retailers operate in the red the majority of the year (or so they say). Their saving grace is the all important Black Friday sales events and subsequent Christmas and New Years sales. Sometimes I do wonder when it will all come tumbling down (oooh, a good old Ziggy Marley song).
 
Well, take this from someone who works in storefront retail. And as someone who previously worked for a Walmart in the past (although, I absolutely will not disclose where I work, now). The people greeters at the front door are supposed to be used for, and the originally intended use of the job position is to A) greet customers who enter and leave, thus projecting a PR image of friendliness (retail is partly a PR job, just like any other profession that deals with the general public directly, so this is actually important and relevant), B) check in guests who have merchandise they want to return, by putting a sticker on each item (this was done as a security measure to prevent return fraud, so that a customer couldn't just grab stuff off the shelves, walk up to Customer Service, and say, "Well, I need to return this..." - no sticker on the item meant the customer did not check in with the door greeter, and this *might* - not for certain, but *might* be a possible instance of theft), C) to prevent shoplifters already in the store from just waltzing out with merchandise just as big as you please (seeing someone sitting at the front door may not have been much of a deterant, but it was a decent deterant, nonetheless).

The problem with the greeters is that management companywide, basically saw them as not their intended job and purpose, but instead as extra hands out on the salesfloor, away from their intended posts at the front door. "Gotta keep the labor/personnel costs low, so lets pull them off their posts, and have them go stock so-and-so departments, instead of actually hiring people for those departments."

It's all about [strike]getting away with[/strike] doing more work with less people.
Greeters? I haven't seen a greeter in years, and I'm in WalMart all the time. And I agree with the article, about merchandise not being stocked. I tried all summer to buy some ordinary Bermuda shorts, and they never had them in my size even once. And I've literally never seen an employee in the menswear department.
 
Sometimes I do wonder when it will all come tumbling down (oooh, a good old Ziggy Marley song).

Prediction - and you read it here, first! I don't know when it will happen, but I have a friend who studies businesses, kinda like a consultant. His girlfriend is a store manager for a "health and beauty goods"-type store. He and I talk and we also watch shows like "Undercover Boss". And we don't know precisely when, but we do see a huge bubble in retail - not from a Wall Street perspective, although, kinda. But more from a business operations standpoint - kind of when Kmart almost went under, in the early 2000s, before Sears bought them. We do see a HUGE business operations-type bubble in storefront retail. And by retail businesses doing what they're doing, and kind of these almost Faustian business practices of, the example of the skeleton crew in the Walmart Supercenter, keeping as few people on as humanly possible, sacrificing customer service and in-stocked shelves for profit at the bottom line created by running the business on less people to begin with. I seriously don't know how long this can go on, either. But know that when this bubble we see, when it collapses, as all bubbles do - expect it to make Enron and Too Big To Fail look like Sunday Brunch. If a giant like Walmart were to actually go under, seeing as how many people in the USA alone it employs - you wanna talk about Too Big To Fail - I believe the nation's unemployment rate would double almost overnight!
 
Greeters? I haven't seen a greeter in years, and I'm in WalMart all the time. And I agree with the article, about merchandise not being stocked. I tried all summer to buy some ordinary Bermuda shorts, and they never had them in my size even once. And I've literally never seen an employee in the menswear department.

And my post you quoted is exactly why you don't see greeters anymore. Save that dollar by scraping by and using the greeters elsewhere in the store. They're actually still there at Walmart, believe it or not - it's actually the lowest, bottom-rung pay grade in the company. :) They're just being used somewhere else.
 
What do "greeters" do?

Our stores have people who check give directions if you ask for them and they check your bags when you leave.
 
What do "greeters" do?

Well, take this from someone who works in storefront retail. And as someone who previously worked for a Walmart in the past (although, I absolutely will not disclose where I work, now). The people greeters at the front door are supposed to be used for, and the originally intended use of the job position is to A) greet customers who enter and leave, thus projecting a PR image of friendliness (retail is partly a PR job, just like any other profession that deals with the general public directly, so this is actually important and relevant), B) check in guests who have merchandise they want to return, by putting a sticker on each item (this was done as a security measure to prevent return fraud, so that a customer couldn't just grab stuff off the shelves, walk up to Customer Service, and say, "Well, I need to return this..." - no sticker on the item meant the customer did not check in with the door greeter, and this *might* - not for certain, but *might* be a possible instance of theft), C) to prevent shoplifters already in the store from just waltzing out with merchandise just as big as you please (seeing someone sitting at the front door may not have been much of a deterant, but it was a decent deterant, nonetheless).

10 characters
 
I just noticed that I haven't seen a greeter at Wal-Mart in a long time. There was a Wal-Mart located a few miles from my house, but last year it shut down and it moved a few miles further away in a new location. And this was 6 months after the original location went through renovations to add refrigerator units for Frozen Foods and Liquor!

I've heard rumor that Wal-Mart will actually shut down stores if they're forced to allow unions, so my guess is that the workers in the area unionized, then Wal-Mart jumped ship to a new location to fuck them over. The original location is now split into a Bealls Outlet and a Big Lots.

Around the same time as this, the K-Mart across the block from Wal-Mart shut down. It's still been empty since.

I suspect the ease and great deals offered by online shopping has put a dent in Wal-Mart's bottom line, as well as word spreading about their shitty treatment and low-pay their employees get.
 
I've heard rumor that Wal-Mart will actually shut down stores if they're forced to allow unions, so my guess is that the workers in the area unionized, then Wal-Mart jumped ship to a new location to fuck them over.

Yup. They view unions kinda like killer bees.
 
OMG, I'd forgotten all about this video, then it hit me. This old 2005 political cartoon video by JibJab - "Big Box Mart". Trust me - you don't even wanna know how much real truth-telling there actually is in this.

 
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