Bob Evans

Senior VP, Global CIO


 Email  Print  Share

1 Comments

Channel: Global CIO

See all blogs by Bob Evans

Wal-Mart IT Links Online, Retail Channels -- 80 Million Times

Wal-Mart's Web-based "Find-In-Store" capability has been used about 80 million times since last year as part of its drive to give customers more choice in how to buy and take delivery. Wal-Mart says customers want more information and more convenience, and are relying more on mobile devices. With Wal-Mart's sales rising in a lousy economy, there's a lesson here for all CIOs.

The key to stronger results for the company overall is to vigorously link the operations and goals between online resources and the physical stores, according to Wal-Mart's Raul Vazquez, president of walmart.com and senior VP of Wal-Mart Stores. He recently explained the strategy to a meeting of securities analysts:

"We know that [customers are] accessing this information and they want this convenience in mobile devices much more so than they ever have in the past. What we do at walmart.com is we want to address those needs that the customer has by more closely connecting the stores that we have today with our online channel and we believe that through the integration, the close integration, of these two channels we can drive more traffic to Wal-Mart and to walmart.com, more sales, and therefore improve the return of our company."

With the find-in-stores feature, Vazquez said, a customer on walmart.com can find a desired product, provide her ZIP code, and then click a button to find out in real time if the product is available at her local store. "So at that point she can decide she either wants to buy it from dot.com and have it delivered to her home or she can go pick it up at her store immediately," Vazquez said. "This capability has already been used over 75 million times so we know it is driving traffic and knowledge about our products for our customer base."

Based on that success to date, Wal-Mart is planning to expand the capability to new categories of products -- starting with grocery, health, and beauty -- that have been big sellers in stores but have only very recently been made available online. Vazquez said the rationale is that "...if you think about this desire for more information, the best thing that we can do is expose more of the product offering to our customers and let her know about the products that are available in her local Wal-Mart."

On the mobile side, Wal-Mart has launched an iPhone application that the company believes will often be used as a customer is standing in a competitor's store and making a purchase decision. The mobile app lets the customer see if the product's available at the local Wal-Mart store and at what price, and also lets the consumer evaluate the product ratings from other Wal-Mart customers.

That's one example of the online community work Vazquez's team has been leading "to complement the self-service model" Wal-Mart uses in its stores. In that context, walmart.com has added "Q&A functionality" so one customer can ask a product question to customers who've already purchased that item.

Often, Vazquez said, the information consumers are seeking isn't "standard in our product descriptions but they're things that are important to customers, and this is a very cost-effective way to allow customers to help each other -- again, hopefully driving traffic and sales for our business."

No matter what business you're in, the three fundamental points Wal-Mart cites at its rationale for pursuing these efforts will ring true for your customers as well: they want more information about what they're looking to purchase, they want more convenience in making that purchase and arranging fulfillment, and they're increasingly using mobile devices as part of that process. In Wal-Mart's case, 80 million uses of the find-in-store application prove that CIOs need to lead the way in forcing internal issues -- e.g., online versus stores -- to take a back seat to what customers want and need.



This is a public forum. United Business Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. United Business Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.

Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of United Business Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in United Business Media's Terms of Service.

Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.


CIO TV

National Semiconductor Company takes the top spot on the InformationWeek 500 list of the nation’s business-technology innovators. ; 2008 InformationWeek 500 winner; collaboration; InformationWeek500 conference; innovation; National Semiconductor; product development; Techweb TV; Ulrich Seif; virtual inventory; Fritz Nelson spoke with Kent Kushar, the CIO of E&J Gallo Winery about what it takes to be the best and what qualities tomorrow's CIO should possess.; CIO's Uncensored; Gallo Winery; Kent Kushar; TechWeb; Tomorrow's CIO; One of the industry's leading CIOs, Ralph Szygenda, talks about what it takes to be a CIO and what tomorrow's CIO will have to do to prepare.; CIOs; General Motors; Informationweek; Ralph Sygenda; TechWeb; Techweb TV; Tomorrow's CIO; Fritz Nelson spoke with Dan Drawbaugh, last year's InformationWeek Chief of the Year, about what qualities tomorrow's CIO should possess. Dan is the CIO of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.; CIO's Uncensored; Dan Drawbaugh; Techweb TV; Tomorrow's CIO; CIOs from State of Michigan and National City Corporation Talk About the Innovative Projects their Teams Have Been Executing On, Including Core System Replacement and Business Portals; CIO Innovation; CIO Symposium; CIOs; Informationweek; MIT; TechWeb; Techweb TV; Scott offers his perspective on software innovation, the role of analytics in Disney's business, and more.; analytics; career; CIO; customer relationships; digitization; innovation; software; software as a service; Carter says the notion that innovation is dead is "preposterous!"; access; career; CIO; Connectivity; globalization; offshore outsourcing; software as a service; software innovation; Web 2.0; Redshaw sees a resurgence in software innovation and talks about the benefits of software as a service and SOA at Motorola.; business process management; career; CIO; software as a service; software innovation; Web 2.0; web services; Phillips talks about the benefit of global IT standards, innovation spending, and the future of IT careers.; business process management; career; CIO; global standards; governance; IT education; metrics; scorecards; Bailar discusses the role of IT in business growth, his must-read business book, agile development and he offers up some advice to the software vendor community.; agile development; business books; business performance; business process management; Call Center; CIO; customer relationships; innovation; IT effectiveness; productivity; Project Management; roi; scorecard; time-to-market; The co-authors of "The New Age Of Innovation" talk about their basic concepts of N=1 and R=G. ; CIO; customer intimacy; e-commerce; General Motors; globalization; Ralph Szygenda; re-engineering; GM's tech leader talks about consolidating, re-engineering, upgrading the company's application infrastructure. ; CIO; complexity; General Motors; globalization; integration; legacy systems; privacy; Ralph Szygenda; security; What does it take to be a CIO in the customer-oriented, globalized business environment today? Ask Ralph. ; business; CIO; customer intimacy; General Motors; infrastructure; Ralph Szygenda; supply chain; Learn how GM is building a global IT environment and what it takes to be labeled a dinosaur around his organization.; architecture; business acumen; business process outsourcing; collaboration; complexity; consumer technology; Global IT standards; globalization; IT management; real-time; roi; security; virtualization; Hear Randy's vision for the data center of the future and how he intends to slay the legacy monsters.; applications; business acumen; business processes; business-IT alignment; centralization; CIO career; complexity; data center consolidation; data centers; Data Warehouse; Efficiency; leadership; portfiolio management; reducing risk; roi; scalability; His challenge? Creating open environment for Internet users without compromising information security and privacy.; broadband; business acumen; capacity; CIO; CIO role; content generation; data centers; infrastructure; internet; privacy; security; social networking; video; Web 2.0; She considers business acumen just as important as technical knowledge for a CIO. Here's why.; business acument; Business continuity; career development; disaster recovery; IT recruitment; IT-Business Alignment; roi; security; wireless;