How Walmart is Dominating Amazon in the Battle for Grocery Supremacy

How Walmart is Dominating Amazon in the Battle for Grocery Supremacy

Why Walmart is trouncing Amazon in the ​grocery wars

When Amazon announced the $13.7bn acquisition of Whole Foods ⁤Market in 2017, it followed some oddball⁤ attempts to strengthen its grocery business, some conceived ​by Jeff Bezos himself.‌ One was ⁣to⁤ develop an “ice-cream truck⁢ for⁤ adults”, driving into neighbourhoods‌ with lights flashing and horns honking, to sell porterhouse steaks, Shigoku oysters, Nintendo games and other goodies. It was quietly shelved. Another was to ‌create a product so unique that only Amazon could supply it. The answer was the “single-cow burger”, a Wagyu beef patty made from ​the meat of one animal. ​You can still⁢ find them on its website—though they are ‍now permanently out ⁢of​ stock.

Amazon’s purchase of Whole Foods signalled ⁢it would take​ a​ more conventional approach to ‍the supermarket business. That ⁤is probably why, when the deal⁣ was announced, Amazon’s share price⁤ soared and those of‌ its rivals, such as ​Walmart, fell. ​But ⁣since then Amazon has treated grocery more like a science ‍experiment than an exercise ⁣in seduction, with weak results at Whole Foods and in other formats. Its ⁢best-known addition to the retail experience is ⁣the “just walk out” technology in‍ physical stores, equivalent to its one-click shopping online. Yet cashierless supermarkets​ sound ‍like something more beloved of geeks than ‍grocers. ‌What may cut down on‌ time-wasting queues also⁣ minimises what some⁤ people love about shopping: the human⁣ interaction at the till, the hunter-gatherer instinct as they jostle at the meat counter, ⁣the ⁣Columbian exchange between fellow​ foodies at the spice rack.

Amazon is trying to⁤ refresh the experience. Last year ​it recruited Tony Hoggett, a former executive from⁤ Tesco, a British ‍supermarket chain, to bring grocery nous to a business hitherto obsessed with overhead ‍cameras,⁣ QR codes ​and data collection. The Brit, who started ⁢out as‍ a Tesco “trolley boy” ⁢aged 16, has a⁢ big job. When Schumpeter visited an ‍Amazon Fresh store…

2023-07-24 12:05:06
Source from ⁢ www.economist.com

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