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An urban liberal loves Walmart
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smn1256 Offline
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Post: #1
An urban liberal loves Walmart
The lib even takes a shot at unions.

Quote:Like most good urban liberals, I’ve been engaged in a lifelong near-boycott of Walmart. Not so much out of any deeply felt, principled objections to the store, but because they don’t really build Walmarts in big liberal cities. When the company tries to set up shop in a liberal town, it’s frequently stymied by union groups and their allies. The myriad zoning and permitting rules surrounding urban land create many avenues for groups with political clout to block disfavored stores, and such moves have, for example, kept Walmart out of New York City for years.

But on Wednesday, after running a gantlet of political obstacles, two new Walmarts opened in Washington, D.C. And the one I visited, at least, is pretty great. Walmart simply crushes the brick-and-mortar competition available in the city, and its competitors were quite right to try to rig the game against it. The only real question is whether these kinds of big-box stores have any real future at all in the age of Amazon.

The store, at H Street and First Street NW, is designed in an appealing way to fit into the urban landscape. Parking is below ground, the shopping is on a single level, and apartments are above. Eventually, the exterior of the building will be ringed by several smaller shops—build-out is nearly complete on a Starbucks and a branch of Capital One Bank.

Inside, the store has been squeezed into a smaller-than-usual footprint without doing much to sacrifice what’s appealing about traditional suburban Walmarts. There’s a bit less stuff for sale (no guns, for example) than I’ve seen in visits to Walmarts in Maine and North Carolina. But to see the store’s true power, you need to wander over to the grocery section. The United Food and Commercial Workers are at the center of the labor alliance against Walmart, and it’s no coincidence. UFCW represents workers at the region’s Safeway and Giant supermarkets, and the Walmart grocery shopping experience is like what they offer—only much, much better.

It’s a decidedly downscale shopping experience. A range of Hamburger Helper (and Chicken Helper spinoff) was on sale for a dollar a box, you can snag a jar of Ragu meat-flavored pasta sauce for $1.98, and the dairy aisle dedicates more shelf space to conventional yogurt than to strained Greek-style brands. The only real selling point for foodies is the availability of beef tongue, prominently labeled as lengua de vaca and clearly marketed more at Latin American immigrants than gentrifying taco lovers. But compared with the union stores, the aisles are pleasantly wide, the shopping carts all have functioning wheels, and the shelves have every kind of boxed macaroni and cheese a person could want. It even offers some financial services, like a check-cashing operation where you can get up to $1,000 for a $3 fee. Because a good deal on check cashing is a way to get customers in the door and ready to shop, Walmart can offer a much better rate than a stand-alone storefront check-cashing operation that needs to rely on fees as a profit center.

Most damningly, the store is well-staffed with friendly and helpful people who make the Safeway experience seem like shopping in a Russian customs line. The (I assume) lower pay lets Walmart hire more people. And however meager the wages may be, they were high enough that 23,000 people applied for 600 positions at the stores, meaning the people who got picked are probably pretty good at their jobs.

Still, while wandering around, it was hard to avoid the conclusion that the urban-format Walmart may be an idea whose time has already passed. The store was actually surprisingly busy for a midmorning Wednesday, with seemingly half the off-duty shift workers and scooter-bound disabled residents of the city plying the aisles. But there was nothing I wanted to buy.

I wasn’t in the market for any fresh meat or produce, and the vast majority of the store is dedicated to dry goods. But why would I buy some socks or a no-stick frying pan or a coffee maker at Walmart when Amazon Prime would ship almost anything to my door in 36 hours? In fact, this past November, just as the finishing touches were being put on the new Walmart, I was getting serious about putting Amazon’s Subscribe & Save feature to use. Paper towels, toilet paper, dish soap, hand soap, laundry detergent, whatever you call the stuff that goes in a dishwasher, dried pasta, canned beans, and basically anything else that won’t rot are now scheduled for drop-off on the 22nd of every month. For now, less-wired demographic groups are still eager for the brick-and-mortar shopping experience. But delivery—no parking, no schlepping—is the future of urban commerce, not reengineered big-box stores.

Walmart knows this, of course, and is trying to get into the e-commerce game in a big way. But even if it succeeds (which will be very hard), urban stores seem unlikely to play a large role in a strategy that calls for goods to be distributed from very large suburban warehouses. In the meantime, cities that have been fending off Walmart have been shooting themselves in the foot. The multibrand physical retail store is a fading concept, but Walmart does it very well—and its downtown D.C. shop shows the company certainly can make it work in urban centers that deign to grant them permission to try.

http://www.slate.com/articles/business/m...assed.html
12-06-2013 08:45 PM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
Of course, the point the article makes about the future of brick and mortar retail puts one more nail in the coffin for the future of our retail/service economy. We've got to find another way.
12-06-2013 08:51 PM
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chargeradio Offline
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Post: #3
An urban liberal loves Walmart
I don't think this part of the economy will ever truly go away - it will just be substituted by delivery services. Amazon.com and UPS will replace many of the jobs that Walmart has now. There will also be items which will never work in a delivery context, so we'll always have some form of grocery stores and retail outlets.

Honestly, if one of the pizza chains ever got serious about it, delivery of groceries and prepared foods could be a massive opportunity for expansion and diversification. Why go to Kroger or Wal-Mart to pick up something from the deli and a gallon of milk when Domino's or Papa John's could deliver it?
12-07-2013 12:51 AM
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Jedi Master Sipho-Dyas Offline
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Post: #4
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
The idea that no one wants to leave their house to shop anymore is just asinine.

People will taken any excuse to get out of the house. Buy milk, soap, paper towles, TP.

Wal-Mart isn't going anywhere during our lifetimes. Its here to stay.
(This post was last modified: 12-07-2013 07:52 AM by Jedi Master Sipho-Dyas.)
12-07-2013 07:49 AM
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UConn-SMU Offline
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Post: #5
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
It's amazing what happens to libs when they confront reality. Their opinions change every time.

This is why so many people are libs while in college, but they're conservatives by the time they are 40.
12-07-2013 09:32 AM
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Owl 69/70/75 Offline
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Post: #6
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
In theory, theory works well in practice; in practice, it doesn't.
12-07-2013 09:43 AM
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UofMemphis Away
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RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
(12-07-2013 09:32 AM)UConn-SMU Wrote:  It's amazing what happens to libs when they confront reality. Their opinions change every time.

This is why so many people are libs while in college, but they're conservatives by the time they are 40.

Age makes everything turn sour.
12-07-2013 01:04 PM
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smn1256 Offline
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Post: #8
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
(12-07-2013 01:04 PM)UofMemphis Wrote:  
(12-07-2013 09:32 AM)UConn-SMU Wrote:  It's amazing what happens to libs when they confront reality. Their opinions change every time.

This is why so many people are libs while in college, but they're conservatives by the time they are 40.

Age makes everything turn sour.

Do most people get smarter or dumber with age?
12-07-2013 02:01 PM
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RaiderATO Offline
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Post: #9
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
(12-07-2013 12:51 AM)chargeradio Wrote:  Why go to Kroger or Wal-Mart to pick up something from the deli and a gallon of milk when Domino's or Papa John's could deliver it?

Atlanta's http://www.Zifty.com is just one of these services. I see the cars all around the city. You could get anything from Ruth's Chris takeout to a gas station candy bar to toilet paper and milk.

I'd imagine they're only workable within cities right now, but there's money to be made here.
12-07-2013 04:02 PM
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DrTorch Offline
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Post: #10
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
(12-07-2013 02:01 PM)smn1256 Wrote:  
(12-07-2013 01:04 PM)UofMemphis Wrote:  
(12-07-2013 09:32 AM)UConn-SMU Wrote:  It's amazing what happens to libs when they confront reality. Their opinions change every time.

This is why so many people are libs while in college, but they're conservatives by the time they are 40.

Age makes everything turn sour.

Do most people get smarter or dumber with age?

That's funny, b/c memphis will site his personal experience and obviously choose dumber.
12-07-2013 09:33 PM
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dfarr Offline
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Post: #11
RE: An urban liberal loves Walmart
(12-07-2013 04:02 PM)RaiderATO Wrote:  
(12-07-2013 12:51 AM)chargeradio Wrote:  Why go to Kroger or Wal-Mart to pick up something from the deli and a gallon of milk when Domino's or Papa John's could deliver it?

Atlanta's http://www.Zifty.com is just one of these services. I see the cars all around the city. You could get anything from Ruth's Chris takeout to a gas station candy bar to toilet paper and milk.

I'd imagine they're only workable within cities right now, but there's money to be made here.

I'd pay extra to avoid Atlanta traffic too!
12-07-2013 09:44 PM
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