Source: Walmart
Walmart’s Store No. 8 has announced the impending launch of a new tech incubator program focused on funding Web3-related initiatives. It is now accepting applications for the first cohort of its dCommerce Base Camp Accelerator program, which it is launching in conjunction with Web3 investor/accelerator Outlier Ventures, according to a press release.
The 12-week accelerator program, which will begin in mid-August, will fund and provide mentorship and subject matter expertise to chosen startups working in areas such as “decentralized infrastructure, data and growth solutions, immersive experiences and the metaverse, and the intersection of AI and blockchain technology.”
The website to apply for the program touts Web3 technologies or “dCommerce” as “the future of retail.” It points to Walmart’s “large customer base and strategic reach” as a perfect platform for developing revolutionary retail technologies.
Store No. 8, the tech incubation arm of the everyday low-priced retailer, is one of the fixtures introduced by Marc Lore during his tenure as CEO of U.S. e-commerce at Walmart. Walmart has had its share of technological successes and failures since Mr. Lore introduced (and in the form of Jet.com, brought with him) a slew of initiatives to boost and modernize Walmart’s tech positioning.
Walmart’s e-grocery capabilities made it popular throughout the novel coronavirus pandemic. Axios reported the findings of a Chicory study early in 2022, which said that one-third of customers chose Walmart for online grocery shopping, compared to 20 percent preferring Amazon.com and 10 percent picking Instacart and Target.
When Walmart wound down Jet.com in 2020, CEO Doug McMillon pointed to the initial acquisition as “jump-starting” the retailer’s progress on important offerings like curbside pickup and home delivery.
On the other hand, were initiatives like Jetblack. The AI-driven, text message-based personal shopping service from Store No. 8 was shuttered for good in February 2020. Walmart was reportedly losing $15,000 per member on the service when it was wound down.
Walmart this year also jettisoned the last of its Marc Lore-era brand acquisitions, Bonobos, selling the retailer (which it acquired in 2017) to WHP Global in a deal valued at $75 million. Walmart earlier sold off Millennial-focused brands Moosejaw and ModCloth.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.