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miaclear
09-07-2006, 08:15 PM
MARCUS KABEL
AP Business Writer

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will retool its 3,256 U.S. stores over two years to give them a more customized mix of goods and layout for six key groups of customers, including Hispanics, African-Americans and affluent shoppers, the executive in charge of Wal-Mart's U.S. operations said Thursday.

The move is the latest strategy twist for the world's largest retailer as it struggles to revive growth rates that have fallen behind smaller rivals such as Target Corp. and after the company's first quarterly drop in profits in a decade.

The approach, called segmentation, follows months of new initiatives from Wal-Mart to make sure each store is better tailored to its locale and to lure more affluent shoppers, who may come to Wal-Mart for groceries and basics but skip the company's more profitable aisles like apparel and electronics.

Eduardo Castro-Wright, president and chief executive of Wal-Mart U.S., said stores will get a more specific mix of products and layout to appeal to one of the six target groups — based on what market research showed was the best approach for that location.

"Driving customer relevancy will drive growth," Castro-Wright said in a Webcast of a presentation to financial analysts.

The target groups identified by Wal-Mart's market researchers are Hispanics, African Americans, "empty-nesters/boomers," affluent, suburban and rural shoppers, according to Castro-Wright's slide presentation.

But he said the approach will not require changing more than a small part — about 3,000 — of the roughly 200,000 items sold by a typical Supercenter, the retailer's largest stores that combine merchandise with a full grocery section.

And each demographic category will include hundreds of stores, so Wal-Mart will not be sacrificing the economies of scale that have allowed it to offer low prices, Castro-Wright said.

"At the end of the timeline, anywhere from 18 to 24 months, we will have all of this implemented across the chain," he said. He did not specify a starting point for that timeline.

For now, Wal-Mart is testing the approach in 20 to 40 stores.

In Houston, one store is adopting a Hispanic identity, in part by offering more Hispanic grocery products, a fresh-from-scratch bakery and selling 300 to 500 breakfast tacos a day.

The results relative to other Houston Supercenters include sales per square foot that are 7.6 percent higher and a higher gross margin, which means more profits per item sold.

In the Chicago area, Wal-Mart has defined a store in Evergreen Park as African-American, including offering more urban apparel, a music selection that is all gospel, rap and urban and what it describes as "ethnic hair care" products. Gross margin in that store is also far above other Chicago-area Wal-Marts, Castro-Wright said.

In March, Wal-Mart opened a new upscale store in Plano, Texas, aimed at shoppers in that affluent Dallas suburb. It includes high-end electronics, more fine jewelry, hundreds of types of wine ranging up to $500 a bottle, and even a sushi bar.

I found this interesting that I hadn't heard anything about this and it was the front page of my hometowns newspaper (pop. 12,000).


...make sure each store is better tailored to its locale and to lure more affluent shoppers, who may come to Wal-Mart for groceries and basics but skip the company's more profitable aisles like apparel and electronics. This is me completely. I have not been to the Plano Walmart that was mentioned but I might have to go check it out now given it's where I live. Gotta see what WalMart thinks about marketing to me.

Leia
09-07-2006, 11:31 PM
Mia - Thanks for posting that. Do you have a link to the original article source? I'd like to share it with some colleagues.

chrisinluv
09-08-2006, 02:13 AM
That is fine with me, I never shop at Wal-Mart anyhow- and where I live, I am definitely a minority. I know they won't be catering to my demographic.

bookworm
09-08-2006, 05:15 AM
Leia, I saw it on CNN yesterday: http://money.cnn.com/2006/09/07/news/companies/wal_mart.reut/index.htm?postversion=2006090709

And I had a geeky moment of "I guess that HBR case study will have to be rewritten..."

miaclear
09-08-2006, 11:43 AM
Thanks for the link bookworm, I forgot to post my own and now it's off my hometown website :( As a funny note today's headline is that the schools cook got trapped in the freezer:eek:

{b}
09-09-2006, 08:17 AM
We have a so-called upscale Walmart here. Still not impressed.

DiscoDiva
09-10-2006, 04:23 PM
Customizing stores along key customer lines is a normal part of retail that takes place in pretty much every chain. Why was this important to make headlines and be on the AP?

bookworm
09-10-2006, 05:21 PM
Customizing stores along key customer lines is a normal part of retail that takes place in pretty much every chain. Why was this important to make headlines and be on the AP?

Because a major and well-publicized part of Wal-Mart's strategy has been not to do this (to the extent that a gazillion articles and more than one business school case study have been written about it).

DiscoDiva
09-10-2006, 05:25 PM
Ah... now it makes sense! :D If they really didn't do it, that would be stupid. It's a part of retail.

jnettie
09-10-2006, 05:53 PM
Well, I've been in Wal-marts across the country (well, at least in the North East and Midwest) and they are always Exactly. The. Same. So, yes, this would be something new.

I've noticed that Wal-mart clothing has made it's way into Lucky Magazine. I thought it was odd, because the $20 Walmart skirt would be next to a $250 skirt. I wonder if it's related. (As a side note - I haven't really had time for fashion magazines for a few years now while I was in school, so it's all new to me.)

DiscoDiva
09-10-2006, 06:35 PM
Well, I've been in Wal-marts across the country (well, at least in the North East and Midwest) and they are always Exactly. The. Same. So, yes, this would be something new.
They're not all exactly the same. A store in a largely Asian neighborhood has more clothing and shoes in smaller sizes, and stocks more Asian foods (or they have more shelf space). A store in a primarily Hispanic neighborhood has more shelf space for Hispanic foods. People think that the stores are always the same, but they're not.

The same could be said for Payless Shoes. You think they're exactly the same and have the same inventory, but they don't. The shoe sizes and inventory of certain types of shoes are adjusted according the the general population in that area.

greenbunny
09-11-2006, 07:02 AM
You think they're exactly the same and have the same inventory, but they don't. The shoe sizes and inventory of certain types of shoes are adjusted according the the general population in that area.

The people who track sales and run the numbers to figure all that out make gooood money. A friend of mine doing this job is doing very well for herself.

Our WalMart has a lot of food and cleaning products with only Spanish labels. It has been that way for several years now. But tweaking actual product content is a different idea, I guess.

DiscoDiva
09-11-2006, 08:38 AM
It sounds like they're just going to make the customization a lot more obvious and in-depth.