Wal-Mart
Struggles to Restock Store Shelves as U.S. Sales Slump
1
March, 2013
Wal-Mart
Stores Inc (WMT), already struggling to woo shoppers constrained by
higher taxes, is “getting worse” at keeping shelves stocked, the
retailer’s U.S. chief told executives, according to minutes of an
officers’ meeting obtained by Bloomberg News.
“We
run out quickly and the new stuff doesn’t come in,” U.S. Chief
Executive Officer Bill Simon said, according to the minutes of the
Feb. 1 meeting. Simon said “self-inflicted wounds” were
Wal-Mart’s “biggest risk” and that an executive vice president
had been appointed to fix the restocking problem, according to the
minutes.
Once
a paragon of logistics, the world’s largest retailer has been
trying to improve its restocking efforts since at least 2011, hiring
consultants to walk the aisles and track whether hundreds of items
are available. It even reassigned store greeters to replenish
merchandise. The restocking challenge emerged as Wal-Mart was
returning more merchandise to shelves after a previous effort to
de-clutter its stores.
Wal-Mart’s
inability to keep its shelves stocked coincides with slowing sales
growth. Same-store sales in the U.S. for the 13 weeks ending April 26
will be little changed, Simon said in the company’s Feb. 21
earnings call.
Comparable
sales increased 1 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with an
average of 1.4 percent from analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. This year
the shares have gained 3.7 percent, compared with a 6.2 percent
advance for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. Wal-Mart fell 1.2
percent to $70.78 at the close in New York.
Personal
Notes
“These
are personal notes from one participant in the meeting and are not
official company minutes,” David Tovar, a Wal-Mart spokesman said
in a telephone interview. “There are a number of significant
misinterpretations and misleading statements that do not accurately
reflect the comments by Bill Simon or any other participant in the
meeting.”
When
Simon said things were “getting worse” he was referring to
“modular changes,” the process of replenishing merchandise to
keep up with customer demand and changing seasons, Tovar said.
Wal-Mart is working to “manage this in the most efficient way
possible,” he said.
“We’re
very pleased with our in-stock position,” he said, adding that
products audited by the company and its consultants match or exceed
historical levels. He declined to disclose what those levels are.
Tovar
declined to make Simon available for comment.
‘Dead
On’
Evelin
Cruz, a department manager at the Wal-Mart Supercenter in Pico
Rivera, California, said Simon’s comments from the officers’
meeting were “dead on.”
“There
are gaps where merchandise is missing,” Cruz said in a telephone
interview. “We are not talking about a couple of empty shelves.
This is throughout the store in every store. Some places look like
they’re going out of business.”
Tovar
said Cruz’s “comment appears to be national in scope. I doubt she
had been to other Wal-Mart stores. I take issue with the quote.”
Cruz,
41, who has worked at Wal-Mart for nine years and oversees the photo
and wireless sections at her store, said it can take weeks or months
for merchandise to be replaced after it sells out.
“My
camera bar hasn’t had cameras since early January,” she said.
“They let the merchandise phase out but nothing new comes in to
replace them. We’re supposed to have 72 cameras but we maybe have
12. What are customers supposed to buy?”
Working
Conditions
Cruz,
a member of OUR Walmart, a labor-backed group seeking to improve
working conditions at the discount chain, also said the number of
photo and wireless employees she oversees has decreased from about 13
people to seven since the beginning of 2012.
“We
haven’t reduced staff,” Tovar said. “People may have been
shifted.”
In
her section at the store, the remaining workers have struggled to
clear out old displays and quickly replace them with new merchandise,
Cruz said. Meanwhile, they’re supposed to help customers with
things like mobile phone contracts, a transaction that can take up to
45 minutes, she said.
“All
of this is affecting customers,” Cruz said. “You see people
walking out because they’re looking for anyone to help them and
there’s no coverage.”
Simon
said at the Feb. 1 meeting that he is trying to improve operations.
“We
need to start with the intent that our shelves will be full,” he
said, according to the minutes.
John
Aden, executive vice president of general merchandise for Wal-Mart
U.S., will be put in charge of addressing the issues, according to
the minutes.
Logistics
Master
For
much of its history, Wal-Mart has been considered a master of
logistics, persuading suppliers to set up shop near its operations.
Yet in 2011, Wal-Mart hired consulting firms Acosta Inc. in the U.S.
and Retail Insight in the U.K. for advice on how to keep its shelves
stocked. Paul Boyle, the CEO of Retail Insight, didn’t return phone
calls seeking comment. Meredith Rovine, a spokeswoman for Acosta,
said representatives were unavailable for comment.
At
that time, Wal-Mart’s struggle to keep shelves stocked stemmed from
the return of about 8,500 items to stores, following a failed effort
to streamline its merchandise. At an investor conference in June of
that year, Simon said he was focused on improving the company’s
restocking operations.
“The
only thing that really matters to us is whether the product is on the
shelf or not,” he said at the time.
According
to the Feb. 1 meeting minutes, Simon said: “We have to get better
and remain laser-focused every day because momentum can turn against
you in a second.”
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