Yep I work for Wal-Mart and this is exactly what they are doing
Yep I work for Wal-Mart and this is exactly what they are doing
Walmart is more or less experiencing the return of fate and karma. They became king of the hill and got cocky about it. They thought nobody could beat them at their own game. Now all stores are offering customers steals and deals. Target looked everything Walmart was doing wrong and used as a launch pad to build their stores into profit machines.
I spent 8 years in retail. I'm here to tell you the days of building a career and supporting a family in retail as a store employee are long gone. The only way to have a career is to work on the corporate side. 80% of the people who work the corporate side end up leaving after hitting a glass ceiling or being used and abused by the upper part of the food chain.
I predict automation and expansion of online pickup and home delivery will likely cut jobs in box stores to the bone. Most retail stores have 5-7 part time workers for every full time worker. Most retail operations only offer employee discount for benefits and nothing more. If you get more than that you usually have to be on for few years. The average part time worker is happy with this arrangement because they only working there to pick up a extra money for bills or spending money. Most have insurance coverage through their spouse, parents, or just simply don't want coverage.
On a side note this is only effecting new hires that work less than 24 hours a week. It sounds pretty logical to me. If you want their insurance you could always work more hours or go to full time. There lucky they get insurance when my wife worked at Sears all they offered her was a AAA style discount plan. Insurance was reserved for full time people.
Wal-Mart isn't the problem in these type of cases. The problem comes from letting Wal-Mart build on 20 acres on the edge of town. The small towns should embrace Wal-Mart, but make them build on Main Street and provide public parking garages instead of 15 acre parking lots. If small towns had done this they could have saved their downtowns. Throw in some TIF districts and Main Street America could have easily returned to its glory days (and probably have been better than ever).
Their is no way Walmart is gong to change their entire business model for a small town, the truly small town locations are generally expected to pull in people from the region and their are too many cities then competing to make them spend multiple times the cost upfront and higher maintenance later. For the town that gets the Walmart it means increased sales taxes, for any near it means massive losses of taxes. MsProudSooner is totally right at least a few if not the majority of the stores in downtown would have been taken out by Walmart, maybe some they could adjust or others move in but it would not be an outright win.
I hate to disagree with you, Brian. The fact is that it has nothing to do with free markets, it has to do with unfair markets and the decline of American industry (not to mention jobs). WalMart is able to sell things for what they do by buying in extremely large quantities from China, South Korea, Singapore, etc. Ever since so-called "free trade agreements" and MFN for China, the floodgates opened up with cheap goods pouring into the United States to large corporations who can afford to buy in huge bulk quantities. We went from being the biggest exporter of products to the biggest importer of products over a short 12 year period in the 80's and early 90's. Nothing has been the same since in this country. Manufacturing is down to almost nothing while the big box stores buy goods from China at corporate bulk pricing that has run most all Mom and Pop shops out of business. It's hard to "adapt" when our politicians sold our country out for "free" trade and corporate globalization.
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