Sustainability Of Walmart

1156 Words3 Pages

Wal-Mart has been a very successful company for many years for a very specific reason. The management listens to the needs and concerns of the community, or in this case, the world. Wal-Mart has done a very good job of overlaying their logistics department with a “green” mission. On their corporate website, there is a special section for “Environmental Sustainability” that outlines just a few of the things that is making Wal-Mart into a company that values green objectives. Outlined are three major sustainability goals:
• To be supplied 100% by renewable energy,
• To create zero waste, and
• To sell products that sustains people and the environment (corporate.walmart.com, 2014).
This is a huge example of Wal-Mart listening to the consumer and making decisions that make shopping there a more pleasurable experience. The website also states that “environmental sustainability has become an essential ingredient to doing business responsibly and successfully. As the world’s largest retailer, our actions have the potential to save our customers money and help ensure a better world for generations to come,” (corporate.walmart.com, 2014).
According to Inbound Logistics.com, Wal-Mart has recently differentiated itself through leadership, vision, innovation, and a capacity to change the marketplace (O’Reilly, 2013). What makes Wal-Mart different, they say, is the ability to do business with a green emphasis and be able to roll back prices instead of charging more as many businesses do. Wal-Mart has created a business case for sustainability that permeates all facets of its organization, and extends to suppliers and customers as well (O’Reilly, 2013). This green mission also extends into the logistics department. Wal-Mart believ...

... middle of paper ...

...or inbound trailers without the requirement form extra storage. Wal-Mart’s fleet of non-unionizes drivers deliver goods continuously to the distribution centers (average of 130 miles from each store), where they are stored, repackaged if required and distributed without sitting in inventory. Materials cross from one loading dock to a different dock, normally in less than 24 hours, to another truck that may otherwise return empty.
Wal-Mart invented an ingenious hub-and-spoke distribution network which utilizes warehouses to service retail stores within a single day’s truck drive. This removes need for middlemen and quickly replenishes shelves and reduces costs. At the DC’s, scanning technology tracks the merchandise as it flows at approximately 6 mph on miles of conveyor belts onto the trucks. Items will spend less than 45 minutes at the center in some cases.

Open Document