Photo: Unsplash | Marques Thomas
Retail giant Walmart is constantly investing in new technology to stay ahead of the competition. In the last few years, the company has rolled out a number of new initiatives, including drones to help with quick and effective deliveries.
Partnered with companies like DroneUp, Walmart has expanded its delivery operations in an exciting way. Drone deliveries are currently available in seven states: Texas, Florida, Virginia, Arizona, North Carolina, Arkansas, and Utah.
This technology, which companies like Amazon have also taken advantage of, has allowed customers to get items delivered to their doorsteps in as little as 30 minutes. They can even use the InHome service, “where they can get those orders placed right into their refrigerators,” according to David Guggina, senior vice president of innovation and automation at Walmart.
Drones aren’t the only tech that Walmart has introduced in recent years in order to improve its e-commerce business. Thanks in part to the pandemic, the retail industry has had to embrace technology like never before to keep up with customers’ growing desire for online service, and Walmart is fighting to keep its hat in the ring.
Beyond the tech conveniences for customers, Walmart has also implemented supply-chain automation to improve efficiency in its warehouses. Robot pickers have taken over some of the monotonous tasks from human workers, and this automation has led to fewer mistakes and improved inventory control. The bots retrieve products and deliver them to workstations, where Walmart employees scan and bag them.
This new technology is helping Walmart keep up with companies like Amazon that are using robots in their warehouses.
At the 2023 Investment Community meeting in April, Walmart’s leadership highlighted its plan for “reengineering its supply chain to fulfill customer needs with a more intelligent and connected omnichannel network that is enabled by greater use of data, more intelligent software and automation.”
Walmart is creating a “scaled system of supply chain capabilities that uses a combination of data, software and robotics” in order to provide better delivery service to customers and stores and react to customer demand more efficiently. As its president and chief executive officer, Doug McMillon, stated, Walmart is a “people-led, tech-powered omnichannel retailer.”
By the end of the fiscal year 2026, Walmart plans to have around 65% of its stores serviced by automation, and it expects that automated fulfillment centers will complete about 55% of orders by this time. This should reduce the average processing costs for products by up to 20%.
Walmart also hopes this automation will give them room to open up roles that don’t require as much physical labor but offer higher pay rates.
Ultimately, these are just a few ways that Walmart is using technology to improve its customer experience and compete with other retailers like Amazon, Target, and Costco. The company is also investing in tech like artificial intelligence and augmented reality, which have the potential to revolutionize the retail industry.
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