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Grocery Stores – Module 1. Industry overview Junichi Hara, Edward Hjerpe , Ewa Nelip , Megan Wiethoff Walmart Junichi Hara. Industry Overview. Definition. Retailer of food and non-food products. Major competitors. Definition not as clear. Key statistics. Revenue: $517.8 B
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Grocery Stores – Module 1 Industry overview Junichi Hara, Edward Hjerpe, EwaNelip, Megan Wiethoff Walmart Junichi Hara
Definition • Retailer of food and non-food products
Key statistics • Revenue: $517.8 B • Profit: $6.7 B (1.3%) • Annual Growth 2008-2013: -0.4% • Expected Growth 2013-2018: 0.8%
Industry life cycle: Mature • Low profit across industry: ~1.29% • Industry to grow slower than economy • US GDP: 2.1% • Industry: 0.4% • Smaller stores to be consolidated
Threat of Entry Threat of Suppliers Threat of Competition Threat of Buyers Threat of Substitutes
Threat of Entry Threat of Suppliers Threat of Competition Threat of Buyers Threat of Substitutes
Threat of competition: High • Top four players own 30.9% of revenue • Consolidation to slow due to regulation • Mainly compete on cost leadership
Threat of Entry Threat of Suppliers Threat of Competition Threat of Buyers Threat of Substitutes
Threat of suppliers: Medium • Commodity products • Brand products • Private labels
Threat of Entry Threat of Suppliers Threat of Competition Threat of Buyers Threat of Substitutes
Threat of buyers: High • Loyalty and rewards cards • One stop shop • Close proximity of competitors • 75% shop in 5+ retailers for lower prices
Threat of Entry Threat of Suppliers Threat of Competition Threat of Buyers Threat of Substitutes
Threat of entry: Medium • Mass retailers already entered • Drug stores and dollar stores entering • Economies of scale/Capital investment • Distribution network relationships • Online grocery shopping?
Threat of Entry Threat of Suppliers Threat of Competition Threat of Buyers Threat of Substitutes
Threat of substitutes: Low • Only real substitute is eating out • Groceries are necessity
Largest company in world Source: Forbes.com
Largest grocery company in US Annual Grocery Sales (2012) • Walmart: $151 billion • Kroger: $96.8 billion
How did it get here? • Initially targeted isolated, rural areas • Benefited from lack of competition • Distributors unwilling to deliver • Walmart forced to do its own distribution • Led to Walmart’s core competencies
Walmart’s strengths S W O T
Walmart’s assets and practices • Warehouses and fleets • “Cross-flowing” • “Everyday Low Prices” • IT system and data • Information sharing • Profit sharing • Store within store Core competency in inventory management Lower Prices
Walmart’s opportunity S W O T
Walmart’s experiments Leveraged core competencies • International expansion • Operates in 27 countries • Sam’s Club • Walmart Supercenter • Based on European concept of “Hypermarket”
Advantages over supermarkets • World class logistics • Investment and scale • Bargaining power • Diversification • One stop shop
Walmart’s weaknesses S W O T
Incompatible business model? Source: NyTimes.com
Incompatible business model? • Not enough workers to stock shelves properly • Fresh foods more labor intensive and wasteful • Safeway: 71% confident in fresh produce • Walmart : 48 % confident • Internal memo: “Lose Trust”
Walmart’s threats S W O T
Questions to answer • Business environment’s effect on Walmart? • Walmart’s effect on business environment? • Effect on financial statements?