Wal-Mart low prices - NOT

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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From fortune Magizine
Wal-Mart puts the squeeze on food costs
The retailer is using its clout with vendors to hold onto its everyday low prices.
By Suzanne Kapner, writer

(Fortune Magazine) -- With gas, grain, and dairy prices exploding, you'd think the biggest seller of corn flakes and Cocoa Puffs would be getting hit by rising food costs. But Wal-Mart has temporarily rolled back prices on hundreds of food items by as much as 30% this year. How? By pressuring vendors to take costs out of the supply chain.

"When our grocery suppliers bring price increases, we don't just accept them," says Pamela Kohn, Wal-Mart's general merchandise manager for perishables. To be sure, Wal-Mart (WMT, Fortune 500) isn't the only retailer working to cut fat from the food chain, but as the largest grocer - Wal-Mart's food and consumables revenue is nearly $100 billion - it has a disproportionate amount of leverage. Here's how the retailer is throwing its weight around.

Shrink the goods. Ever wonder why that cereal box is only two-thirds full? Foodmakers love big boxes because they serve as billboards on store shelves. Wal-Mart has been working to change that by promising suppliers that their shelf space won't shrink even if their boxes do. As a result, some of its vendors have reengineered their packaging. General Mills' (GIS, Fortune 500) Hamburger Helper is now made with denser pasta shapes, allowing the same amount of food to fit into a 20% smaller box at the same price. The change has saved 890,000 pounds of paper fiber and eliminated 500 trucks from the road, giving General Mills a cushion to absorb some of the rising costs.

Cut out the middleman. Wal-Mart typically buys its brand-name coffee from a supplier, which buys from a cooperative of growers, which works with a roaster - which means "there are a whole bunch of people muddled in the middle," says Wal-Mart spokeswoman Tara Raddohl. In April the chain began buying directly from a cooperative of Brazilian coffee farmers for its Sam's Choice brand, cutting three or four steps out of the supply chain.

Go locovore. Wal-Mart has been going green, but not entirely for the reasons you might think. By sourcing more produce locally - it now sells Wisconsin-grown yellow corn in 56 stores in or near Wisconsin - it is able to cut shipping costs. "We are looking at how to reduce the number of miles our suppliers' trucks travel," says Kohn. Marc Turner, whose Bushwick Potato Co. supplies Wal-Mart stores in the Northeast, says the cost of shipping one truck of spuds from his farm in Maine to local Wal-Mart stores costs less than $1,000, compared with several thousand dollars for a big rig from Idaho. Last year his shipments to Wal-Mart grew 13%.

In fact, it's the small suppliers that are feeling the pain from Wal-Mart's pushback the most. Bushwick has seen its costs rise 10% over the past year, but has passed only half that amount on to Wal-Mart and its other retailers. For consumers who are having a hard time paying $3.80 for a gallon of milk, however, without those measures that sticker shock would be a lot worse.

Walmart also damages much of the vendor product put on display. They have no regard for product they know they will get full credit for. They will pull product off their sales floor and crush it into shopping carts or any type container they feel. They have no regard for the labor put into shipping, handling, and displaying that product or the additional time and costs involved in sorting out the damaged units and redistributing whatever quality product is left. Walmart also has no problem renigging (spell?) on deals it makes with outside vendors. Dictating what they will be charged, then screwing over the company on price and length of promotion or display activity. Vendor have to order, maufacture and ship product for the thousands of walmart dumps across the nation only to find out at the last minute that not all is needed to to some change from the chain.

Walmart also enjoys making outside suppliers jump through hoops every fuking chance they get. Trucks and drivers sitting aimlessly around till Walmart personal are up to taking in product. Mgnt at Walmart store level constantly wasting suppliers time and never cooperating with them, yet expecting every deal under the sun. Getting deals and NOT passing along the entire allowance on to the consumer.

The consumer will pay for all these added costs one way or another.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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the Dollar General Corporation is big here. Lots of variety, good prices, some off-brands and some name brands.

I like D.G. Clint Good prices--and most of all no crowds and very quick. Can leave house be in and out of D.G. and back home in 5 minutes. Thats my kind of shopping.
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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Would like to see the two all-stars I had to deal with an hour ago in a wally commercial.....

Got checked in today by Kenya (obviously named so because of her extreme gerth) and a snooty female security type auditor. If the two of them took off their shoes, they could have counted to 40
















eventually
 

Tapir Caper

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I like D.G. Clint Good prices--and most of all no crowds and very quick. Can leave house be in and out of D.G. and back home in 5 minutes. Thats my kind of shopping.

yeah, that's exactly it. walmart has time friction of ten minutes minimum, whereas dollar general has 15 seconds. and the exact same goods are more expensive at wal-mart. which is the one point of this thread, not bashing wal-mart.
 

THE KOD

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As for the stench, it comes specifically from three sulfur-containing gases: hydrogen sulfide, methanethiol, and dimethyl sulfide, which have odors that University of Minnesota scientists compare to "rotten eggs," "decomposing vegetables," and something "sweet," respectively. (Disgusting trivia: If you've ever wondered why flatulence varies in odor and intensity, it's simply determined by the mix of these gases. What's more, the researchers found that women's gas contains higher concentrations of hydrogen sulfide ? and a worse odor ? than men's.)
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In thinking about this thread I came upon this information.

organic farts are more healthy ?.
 
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