Wal-Mart low prices - NOT

Tapir Caper

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Spent an hour walking through this place today. Seems to me that this place is trading on legacy of low prices that no longer exist.

When you're selling a smallish package of bubble wrap for $5, you're not in the low-price niche, no many how many brainwash yellow smiley posters you put up. Wal-mart prices are significantly higher than dollar-store prices for every single item i was familiar with.

So now we have chintzy Chinese goods AND high prices. Who benefits from crap jobs, crap products and high prices? Not average Americans. Globalism sucks.
 
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gardenweasel

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much of their stuff is cheaper...

for example,breatheright nose strips are $9.99.....at walgreen or cvs their $12.99...at the supermarket even higher....


boost protein drink is around $6.99...in the drug retailer it`s like $8.99...

you may not like walmart,but,many of their prices are cheaper than any competitor...

free market...shop where you please...it`s the american way...;)
 

Tapir Caper

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much of their stuff is cheaper...

that's not true anymore. not compared the dollar stores. sure, they'll beat the drug stores on most stuff, but for average items, they're considerably more expensive than the strip mall dollar stores.

for example,breatheright nose strips are $9.99.....at walgreen or cvs their $12.99...at the supermarket even higher....

items much more expensive in walmart than dollar stores: spices, liquid soap, kitchen utensils. wal-mart meat is considerably higher than aldi. wal-mart's main benefit now, in small towns, is selection, not price.

boost protein drink is around $6.99...in the drug retailer it`s like $8.99...

you may not like walmart,but,many of their prices are cheaper than any competitor...

i didnt say what i like. i made an objective observation about the marketplace: wal-mart markets itself as the low-price leader, but there are fewer and fewer items for which it actually offers low price. apart from the bins in the middle of the aisle, wal-mart staples are often about 1/3 higher than you'll find in strip-mall dollar stores.
 

Tapir Caper

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What is a dollar store anyway?

Is that the modern version of a five-and-dime?

Honest question.

i guess. i'm in the boonies. small town with about fifteen dollar stores and one wal-mart supercenter.

by dollar store i mean that general run of stores, often with dollar in their names, that sell staples out of small box stores in strip malls. most items are $1, $2, $3 or $5-8. small, cheap, quick-trip stuff, but with better prices than you'd get at a convenience store. dont know how it is where you are, but these stores are the staple of the new global economy.
 

Tapir Caper

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All items are $1 or two for $1.

That's what it is here anyway...

well...that would be a true or pure dollar store, like you see on a beach boardwalk. i just mean, and maybe i'm using the wrong term, stores that sell cheap items in mostly one-dollar increments. like, maybe 90% of the items in the store are under $5, most are $1 to $3.
 

Morris

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well...that would be a true or pure dollar store, like you see on a beach boardwalk. i just mean, and maybe i'm using the wrong term, stores that sell cheap items in mostly one-dollar increments. like, maybe 90% of the items in the store are under $5, most are $1 to $3.

Here the Dollar Store, Dollar General, and a few others are just $1 per item.

I know what you're saying but around here the Dollar stores are just that 1 dollar.
 

Tapir Caper

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Here the Dollar Store, Dollar General, and a few others are just $1 per item.

I know what you're saying but around here the Dollar stores are just that 1 dollar.

yeah, that's what we got here, plus another dozen. but they sell stuff for more than $1.
 

IntenseOperator

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Make sure you gents check the codes (expiration/sell by dates) on all the perishable items you buy at that dump. Even then, you could be getting product in date, but that was left in the hallway for a couple shifts.

cheap help = bad rotation (and a case of the shitts)

I'll pay more elsewhere for better quality
 

Tapir Caper

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Make sure you gents check the codes (expiration/sell by dates) on all the perishable items you buy at that dump. Even then, you could be getting product in date, but that was left in the hallway for a couple shifts.

cheap help = bad rotation (and a case of the shitts)

I'll pay more elsewhere for better quality

that's the thing - in much of america there is no option. there is a giant wal-mart and a dozen dollar stores and not much else.
 

Morris

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Above the Clouds....
Make sure you gents check the codes (expiration/sell by dates) on all the perishable items you buy at that dump. Even then, you could be getting product in date, but that was left in the hallway for a couple shifts.

cheap help = bad rotation (and a case of the shitts)

I'll pay more elsewhere for better quality

Don't get me wrong I don't shop there.

I am a firm believer in "You get what you pay for"
 

Kanuck

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All items are $1 or two for $1.


Too bad no one has come up with concept for Beer.

Just imagine a Walmart type Beer Store.

I would stop by for the 'lost leaders'




stpatrick.gif
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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that's the thing - in much of america there is no option. there is a giant wal-mart and a dozen dollar stores and not much else.


that's their business plan....

Come in to a market, undercut all existing businesses, drive them under, then rise prices when you've successfully monopolized the market. They're big enough to do this in any city, anywhere, and eat the losses of one or multiple stores for however long it takes to get their ends.

Too many do not think big picture and help them get their goals. Too many here as well.

I believe Europe told them to go blow a goat.
 

dawgball

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items much more expensive in walmart than dollar stores: spices, liquid soap, kitchen utensils. wal-mart meat is considerably higher than aldi.

You buy spices and meat at dollar stores?

Wal-Mart is not the devil.
 

Mags

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that's their business plan....

Come in to a market, undercut all existing businesses, drive them under, then rise prices when you've successfully monopolized the market. They're big enough to do this in any city, anywhere, and eat the losses of one or multiple stores for however long it takes to get their ends.

Too many do not think big picture and help them get their goals. Too many here as well.

I believe Europe told them to go blow a goat.

This sounds very similiar to what SouthWest has done to the airline marketplace. Granted, it was not just Southwest - it was also 911.

But SW is a BIG reason why carriers are not raising fares to appropriate levels, when they have every reason to do so due to fuel prices.
 

Tapir Caper

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You buy spices and meat at dollar stores?

Wal-Mart is not the devil.

some spices yes, meat no. dollar stores have very little meat. just making price comparisons. my main point is only that wal-mart's niche is not low price any longer but selection.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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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.
 

SixFive

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