Economies of IT systems at Wal-Mart--an historical perspective.
Wang, Jianfeng
ABSTRACT
This paper takes a retrospective look over Wal-Mart's IT
systems. Major types of IT systems used by Wal-Mart are listed
chronologically. The paper then explains the economies of IT systems at
their application areas and how such economies have contributed to
Wal-Mart's everyday low price strategy. The paper explores how
distribution centers and IT systems function strategically at Wal-Mart,
how Wal-Mart uses point-of-sale data and data warehouse technology, how
Wal-Mart has used Retail Link in inventory management, and how economies
of scale and scope and external economies are realized in the
implementation of IT systems at Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. The paper
concludes with the challenges Wal-Mart is facing.
INTRODUCTION
Researchers have attempted to reveal the importance of the
relationships between retailers and suppliers using Wal-Mart as a case
(Bloom et al., 2001; Bloom and Perry, 2001; Kumar, 1996). Stalk et al.
(1992), on the other hand, have advocated capability-based competition
by comparing Wal-Mart and Kmart. They have suggested that
Wal-Mart's strategic vision was fully expressed in Wal-Mart's
cross-docking system. None of the previous studies, however, have ever
tried to take a comprehensive overview of Wal-Mart's IT systems and
reveal how its IT systems have helped Wal-Mart in realizing its everyday
low price strategy. This case study takes a retrospective look over
Wal-Mart's IT systems. Major types of IT systems used by Wal-Mart
are listed chronologically. The paper then explains the economies of IT
systems at their application areas and how such economies have
contributed to Wal-Mart's everyday low price strategy. IT systems
at Wal-Mart are applied in major areas such as inventory management,
administrative management, customer management and supplier management,
etc. Efficiency and performance of IT systems in these areas apparently
affect each other. Wal-Mart seeks to achieve not only the efficiency of
individual systems, but also that of the integrated systems. Finally,
the paper clarifies the existing challenges that Wal-Mart is facing.
Cost control and inventory management are one of major concerns for
Wal-Mart, though cost control goes beyond inventory management. Wal-Mart
also has to control and reduce its cost of operation and administration
and cost of sales.
The case is divided into a few sections. Section one is a brief
overview of Wal-Mart's IT systems; section two explain the case
study approach and data; section three discusses the strategic role of
Wal-Mart's distribution centers; section four describes how
Wal-Mart uses Point-of-Sale systems to collect customer data and uses
data warehouse and datamining to analyze customer behavior; section five
is about Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) and Retail Link systems at
Wal-Mart; section six discusses productivity improvement from IT
systems; section seven shows the economies of scale and scope at the
distribution centers with IT systems; section eight is about the
business process standards and external economies with IT systems.
Section nine covers Wal-Mart's integrated structure and major
challenges Wal-Mart is facing. The final section concludes the case
study with a summary.
THE CASE STUDY APPROACH
The case study approach in this paper follows Yin (1994). Yin
(1994) gives very detailed instructions of how to conduct a case study.
According to Yin (1994),
A case study is an empirical inquiry that investigates a
contemporary phenomenon within its real-life context, especially
when the boundaries between phenomenon and context are not clearly
evident. The case study inquiry copes with the technically
distinctive situation in which there will be many more variables of
interest than data points, and as one result relies on multiple
sources of evidence, with data needing to converge in a
triangulating fashion, and as another result benefits from the
prior development of theoretical propositions to guide data
collection and analysis (p.13).
This paper explores the economies of IT systems at Wal-Mart from
the perspectives of transaction cost theory, information asymmetry,
information sharing, economies of scale and scope, and externalities are
useful in explaining the economies of IT systems at Wal-Mart. The author
collected data about Wal-Mart from a variety of resources: SEC filings,
Wal-Mart annual reports, news reports, available interviews with
Wal-Mart officers, and publications about Sam Walton and Wal-Mart.
Wal-Mart annual reports often provide valuable information about
information systems or technologies used in prior years. Especially when
some information systems were successfully implemented and applied, the
annual report for a given year often tells stories and gives comments by
Wal-Mart officers. News reports about Wal-Mart are scattered around
numerous sources. They also provide very important evidence about
Wal-Mart IT systems. The author did not have the opportunities to
interview the Wal-Mart officers, whose comments are cited in this paper,
and thus must rely on the sources for veracity. Editors or journalists
of many magazines such as Fortune, Information Week, Computer World,
CIO, etc, interviewed Wal-Mart executives at different times. This paper
incorporates those interview reports. The Wal-Mart Corporate Office
provided all the annual reports and answered some of the author's
questions.
A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF WAL-MART IT SYSTEMS
Accounting systems were first introduced into Wal-Mart in the late
of 1960s. In 1972, Wal-Mart reported to have "considerable
additions in Accounting, Data Processing and other management areas. A
number of new programs and control systems were activated in 1972, both
at store and management levels." (Annual Report, 1972)
In 1973, Wal-Mart developed a complete vendor system for its
distribution center rebuyers and converted from an IBM 360/20 to an IBM
370/125 computer. That required physically changing all the existing
programs (Annual Report, 1973).
In 1974, Wal-Mart reported that the Company realized significant
freight savings through the Traffic Department's ability to obtain
the most economical landed cost on merchandise purchased and to utilize
the most economical modes of transportation (Annual Report, 1974).
In 1975, Wal-Mart leased an IBM 370/135 computer system, which was
utilized to maintain inventory control on an item basis for all
merchandise in the warehouse and distribution centers and on a
classification basis for each Wal-Mart store, and to prepare income
statements on a store-by-store basis. Singer electronic cash registers
in 64 Wal-Mart stores and NCR mechanical and electronic registers in 61
Wal-Mart stores recorded point of sale data used to maintain inventory
control (Annual Report, 1975).
In 1977, Wal-Mart built a company-wide computer network. With this
communication network, messages pertaining to any phase of its
operations could be sent to and from the stores immediately. The system
was also used by the stores to place orders for merchandise, which
expedited processing. Wal-Mart, as well, installed the cross-docking
system in the Searcy Distribution Center. With the cross docking
systems, merchandise in incoming trucks is unloaded at an entrance,
processed, and conveyed automatically onto trucks on an exit, which are
bound to branches stores (Annual Report, 1977).
Wal-Mart also developed a system for management of the corporate
payroll. This system allowed store management to know, on a daily basis,
their exact payroll costs and also permitted the stores to forward their
payroll data to the general office without delay (Annual Report, 1977).
In 1978, the fashion distribution center utilized a
computer-programmed split-ticket system of marking, where over a half a
million fashion tickets could be received in an average week and quickly
evaluated by buyers. Items were pre-marked and inspected for quality
before leaving the distribution centers to ensure the condition of
merchandise and uniform low prices in all stores. Buying decisions,
reorders on hot-selling items, markdown percentages, and the automatic
replenishment program could be calculated rapidly and with more accuracy
(Annual Report, 1978).
Because of rapid growth in its computing power, Wal-Mart built a
computer center in 1979. The first installed store computer terminal was
the IBM 3774 (Annual Report, 1979).
Wal-Mart's computer development group set priorities on
projects and studied the constant changes in computer technology. The
aim of this department, in addition to rapid company communication, was
to refine the information acquired and render it more useful and easier
to read. Computer specialists and management constantly evaluated
programmed data for accuracy, simplicity, and usefulness. As a result,
Outdated reports can be discontinued immediately and necessary
adjustments can be made to improve existing computer programs. The
financial savings and the number of personnel hours saved daily by using
the computer center is incalculable---even by the computer. (Annual
Report, 1978)
In 1981, Wal-Mart implemented a new purchase order system and
successfully tested a point-of-sale scanning system (Annual Report,
1981).
In 1983, Wal-Mart finished a two-year project to upgrade its
in-store, backroom computers in all stores. Wal-Mart began to use
Uniform Product Code as its product barcode in electronic scanning of
point-of-sale (POS) data (Annual Report, 1983).
As the number of stores continued to increase, the timeliness of
data became more critical. In 1984 Wal-Mart decided to establish a
satellite communication network to allow the simultaneous sending and
receiving of information to all stores (Annual Report, 1984). As the
Wal-Mart Annual Report of 1985 noted,
The network will assure direct store-to-store and store-to-general
office voice and data communication at a fixed future cost in a general
environment of escalating cost. Communications will be enhanced further
by WSN's capacity to beam live video presentations from the general
office to the balance of the system.
Wal-Mart's Satellite Network (WSN) was successfully set up in
1987.
In 1984, Texlon handheld terminals were used as a direct assistance
to store associates in reordering merchandise. Upon scanning a shelf
label, the unit provided a description of the merchandise and
information on prior quantities ordered, cost and retail of the
merchandise item and the extended cost and retail of quantity being
ordered. This device and accompanying system saves significant time in
the ordering cycle, which in turn improves services to Wal-Mart
customers (Annual Report, 1984).
In 1987, the Universal Product Barcode (UPC) was applied to all the
stores and distribution centers. A check-in system designed to take full
advantage of container bar code labeling, was also in the backroom of
every Wal-Mart store in summer 1987. The use of the UPC brought new
convenience in inventory control and distribution management: more
accurately sorted shipments and immediate paperless billing; cost
efficiencies in the stores' backroom freight processing and
automated receiving (Annual Report, 1987).
In 1988, Wal-Mart deployed EDI systems.
In 1990, a prototype of data warehouse system was created at
Wal-Mart, which stored historical sales data. In 1992, as a response to
the suppliers' request for sales data sharing, Wal-Mart deployed
the Retail Link system to further their partnership by moving beyond
electronic data sharing. With the Retail Link system, Wal-Mart provides
its vendors quality information concerning sale trends and inventory
levels to facilitate genuine partnering. The actual system capitalizes
on UPC and satellite communications capacity to bring its suppliers
closer to its individual stores.
Wal-Mart invested $2.5 billion in capital expenditures in 1990 and
$2.8 billion in 1993 for building and maintaining systems, distribution,
and transportation infrastructure capacity. The goals are to not just
sustain growth, but improve its productivity and reduce expense in the
existing operation (Annual Report, 1993).
In 1996, Wal-Mart made Retail Link and EDI available through the
Internet and began to use the Internet as an application platform. As
one report estimated, up to the year 2001, Retail Link cost Wal-Mart
about $4 billion and its suppliers $40 billion (Technological Review
03/2002). Wal- Mart, in 2001, further invited Atlas Commerce to add to
Retail Link functions of a private online marketplace.
Wal-Mart and Sam's Club went online in June 1996. The online
sites use Secure Socket Layer and Secure Transaction Protocol for secure
online card transactions. In November 2004, WalMart Stores launched
one-hour digital photo service online. Wal-Mart customers and Sam's
Club members can now upload digital photos online and pick up prints at
local stores and clubs after one hour.
In 1997, Wal-Mart further increased the size of its data warehouse
to 24 terabytes with 30 decision support applications. The data
warehouse could process up to 50000 queries per week. In the same year,
Wal-Mart installed data mining software developed by NeoVista Software,
Inc. in Cupertino, Calif. (now part of the JD software group). NeoVista
data mining system allows Wal-Mart to analyze point-of-sale data from
each store down to the item level and assists automated product ordering
and replenishment systems. Rob Fusillo, director of replenishment
systems at Wal-Mart, explained that the system can further help Wal-Mart
reduce inventory costs. In 2004, the storage of data warehouse amounted
to 423 terabytes.
In 2002, Wal-Mart chose Internet Protocol for electronic data
exchange with thousands of its suppliers in the world. With the use of
the Electronic Data Interchange-Internet Integration Applicability
Statement (EDIINT AS2) protocol can lower costs for the company and its
suppliers. The adoption of EDIINT AS2 means that Wal-Mart suppliers will
not need to resort to deploying value-added networks, which are usually
expensive to use.
In 2004, Wal-Mart started to deploy RFID (Radio Frequency
Identification) tags or electronic product codes. In April, it first
tested the RFID tag in seven stores and a regional distribution center
in Texas. Wal-Mart required its top 100 suppliers to have cases and
pallets RFID tagged starting January 2005. Wal-Mart has plans to
implement the electronic product code in its stores and distribution
centers one after another. And Wal-Mart is urging its top suppliers to
follow suit. Though there are debates about the functionality and cost
problems of the RFID tag, Wal-Mart top management believe that the
electronic product code is going to bring huge benefits to Wal-Mart and
its suppliers and further cut their inventory and supply chain costs.
Electronic product code through RFID tag will allow more data to be
packaged and collected and speed up checkout for customers and provide
better visibility in inventory management. RFID, together with EDI and
UCCnet, can provide a huge convenience in synchronizing the supply chain
(1).
The Wal-Mart Information System Division agenda includes projects
such as revamping supply chain processes, synchronizing product data
with suppliers using the UCCnet standard, and improving E-commerce
platform, developing talent, and fostering regulatory compliance across
the globe.
DISTRIBUTION CENTERS
Wal-Mart was not the first organization to set up a distribution
center. In 1969 it built a distribution center, following Kmart and
WoolCo's (2) lead. Before 1969, Wal-Mart bought most of its
merchandise from wholesalers and some directly from suppliers. The
distribution centers changed the way the merchandise was purchased and
distributed. The distribution centers internalized services that were
previously provided by external suppliers: manufacturers, trucking
companies, and wholesalers.
A distribution center is usually equipped with many advanced
information systems and robotics. Advanced systems in a distribution
center includes: a system for product barcode, a cross-docking system, a
stock location system, systems for tachograph analysis, vehicle routing
and scheduling, systems for information processing and flow between a
distribution center and the Merchandising Division such as ordering and
accounting systems. Wal-Mart has been upgrading its distribution centers
with new advanced systems. McKinnon (1990) analyzed four ways through
which distribution centers can improve inventory control at levels of
both distribution centers and stores and thus reduce inventory costs. In
the case of Wal-Mart, the benefits of distribution centers include:
1. Volume buying from manufacturers brings huge savings. As its
Annual Report of the year 1973 read, "The Distribution Center does
not carry any item that would not result in at least a 5 percent
savings, unless there were other reasons involved." Later annual
reports have further confirmed this principle.
2. Better scheduling control of its own trucks dramatically reduces
freight costs: "Approximately 60 percent of the trucks returning to
the distribution centers from store deliveries are used to backhaul
merchandise from suppliers" (Annual Report, 1973). The year 1977,
1980, and 1997 Annual Reports emphasized that Wal-Mart private truck
fleets brought in large savings in freight costs, and was a key source
of competitive advantage.
3. Reduction in inventory cost because of frequent and quick
replenishment from distribution centers to local stores instead of slow
replenishment from suppliers to local stores. All stores are
one-day's drive away from the distribution centers. The year after
building the first distribution center, 66 percent of merchandise was
distributed to local stores through the distribution center. In 1984,
this percentage rose to approximately 77 percent of the merchandise sold
in Wal-Mart stores. Now this percentage rate is kept around 80 percent.
4. More effective quality control results in less shrinkage loss
and reduces return service from local stores to manufacturers, saving
money.
Distribution centers internalize a variety of services that were
previously provided by manufacturers, wholesalers, and outside carriers.
Efficient managerial hierarchies and smooth information flow enabled by
IT systems have replaced market mechanisms in coordinating distribution
and logistics activities. Building a distribution center, however, needs
a large amount of investment. Only when the business scale is big enough
will this be possible and justifiable. Without adequate economies of
scale, a distribution center can be prohibitively costly. Information
systems and automations from robotics almost fix the costs of running a
distribution center when the merchandising volume increases, because
marginal cost of handling an additional unit of commodities or
additional transaction is very small or insignificant in the short term.
Comet, a British retailer, has also reported that centralized distribution centers save costs by delivering merchandise from its
centers to branch stores (McKinnon, 1990). It should be noted that small
and medium sized retailers have to buy distribution service from
wholesalers.
Wal-Mart has described the importance of distribution centers in
its annual reports (1974, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, and 1998):
Distribution is a key in our ability to remain competitive.
Logistics, distribution centers and transportation-the Wal-Mart
distribution team is a key in our ability to remain competitive. Our 22
centers, averaging almost one million sq ft, received and shipped more
than 769 million cases to our stores this past year. Our private fleet
enables customized cost-efficient delivery to our stores, accommodating
peak seasonal periods, night deliveries, and accelerated delivery. Our
2500 drivers and 16 000 distribution associates hard work and commitment
to continuous improvement make this investment in centers and equipment
pay by improving the in-stock position of our stores and making
just-in-time inventory management a reality for us and our vendors.
(Annual Report, 1992)
Combine these information systems with our logistics--our
hub-and-spoke system in which distribution centers are placed within a
day's truck run of the stores--and all the pieces fall into place
for the ability to respond to the needs of our customers, before they
are even in the store. In today's retailing world, speed is a
crucial competitive advantage. And when it comes to turning information
into improved merchandising and service to the customer, Wal-Mart is out
in front and gaining speed. (Annual Report, 1998)
COLLECTION AND MANAGEMENT OF POS DATA
Wal-Mart recognizes that if it can control the sources of
information and intelligently analyze and process information, it can
influence those entities, which need these types of information for
their decision making. Wal-Mart, through its collection and analysis of
POS data, has tried to develop information asymmetry over its suppliers
and competitors. Though economies of information asymmetry may vary with
respect to specific situations, such asymmetry may enable Wal-Mart to
extend its business areas over production processes, devote its
resources for product development, and create a series of own-label
products.
At Wal-Mart, a POS data table usually consists of: store number,
item number, department number, activity sequence number, selling unit
quantity, selling amount, selling cost, Monday unit quantity, Tuesday
unit quantity, Wednesday unit quantity, Thursday unit quantity, Friday
unit quantity, Saturday unit quantity, and Sunday unit quantity
(Westerman, 2001). Data are recorded with product bar codes, through
which product and supplier information is coded and can be read and
tracked. POS data can be analyzed for the studies and forecasts of
customer demand changes, processed to display instant inventory movement
down to the item level, and mined to find consumption patterns of
customer and desired patterns of product display. Today all the Wal-Mart
stores have POS systems connected with the Wal-Mart data center and
integrated with the Wal-Mart data warehousing systems.
Back in 1984, Wal-Mart found that the data amount became too large
and it became very burdensome to analyze without the aid of more
advanced information systems. To simplify the use of POS data, the Data
Collect system was developed in 1985 to speed data gathering and provide
decision support for people who needed to analyze these data. It
provides accurate tracking of merchandise sales by item for sale
management on a daily basis. The system creates opportunities to
maximize sales on "hot items" by maintaining proper in-stock
position. Scanning also serves to reduce shrinkage by providing control
over the capture and recording of markdowns (Annual Report, 1985).
Wal-Mart's IT department created an Executive Information
System (EIS) in 1988 (Westerman, 2001). The EIS incorporated information
from POS systems. Most of the data were about store operations, such as
yearly or monthly sales, some information down to store and department
level and article level. IBM's earlier version of SQL could be run
in the system. Data were usually updated nightly, but there was a
contest for computing sources between functional analysis and
transactional processing.
To relieve the conflict, a data warehousing project was suggested
and approved in 1990 to support analytical processing. The prototype
system was first tested at the Merchandising Division where buyers and
their assistants liked to do time series analysis over data concerning
orders, receiving, and articles. The prototype system was very welcomed
and proved to have a high return of investment (Westerman, 2001). POS
systems were the data sources for the data warehousing system and were
soon integrated with the data warehousing system. Two years later the
data warehousing system was expanded and became a company-wide system,
becoming an integral and fundamental block of the Wal-Mart information
system network. With data warehouse available, data mining was also
started in 1990 (Annual Report, 1998).
The control and analysis of POS data give Wal-Mart powerful sources
to better understand its customers, enable more delicate decision-making
processes, and motivate Wal-Mart to integrate some activities and risks
that are originally undertaken by manufacturers and suppliers. Lee
Scott, the current CEO and President of Wal-Mart, marked in the Annual
Report 2003 that Wal-Mart had made big strides in internal product
development. He noted, "our product development team, working with
Wal-Mart buyers, is driving significant improvement in key product
categories such as apparel, domestics and electronics." Wal-Mart
now owns a rich series of private label products, and makes decisions on
its own on how brand-name products should be presented and displayed.
Before 1992, there were few own label products at Wal-Mart. Own
label products consisted of a very small portion of its revenue. In
1992, a series of Sam's American Choice was introduced as private
label products. Actually Sam Walton began to plan such private labels in
1985 when Data Collect system was installed. Today Wal-Mart Stores'
own label products include: OI' Roy; Great Value; Equate; Spring
Valley; White Cloud; Glory; Sam's American Choice; Neighborhood
Market; EverActive; Member's Mark; Special Kitty. Wal-Mart is
deeply involved with private label products design, production,
packaging, etc. Own label products are more profitable than national
brand products because own label products do not need as large of
advertising fees as national brands.
In 1997, Rob Fusillo, Director of Replenishment Information Systems
at Wal-Mart, explained that Wal-Mart had started a data mining
application that analyzed sales of individual items "at a lower
level than we could ever have done previously."
Limited sharing of POS data with its supplier also enables new type
of collaboration and coordination and extends Wal-Mart's control
into the boundaries of its suppliers' business, such as production
planning, forecasting, and package size and design decisions.
Information sharing is limited to the sales data of suppliers'
products. A supplier can only know the inventory movement of their own
products. Wal-Mart discontinued the sharing of its POS data with
retailing consultancy companies in 2001 (retailinfo.com 2001). Wal-Mart
never shares any of its proprietary information with its suppliers, such
as Wal-Mart's cost information. That is, no information sharing is
intended to affect Wal-Mart's bargaining power when its buyers
negotiate with its suppliers. Information sharing is often designed to
increase mutual understanding between Wal-Mart and its suppliers and
help its buyers convince its supplier representatives to yield and
shorten negotiation processes.
INVENTORY CONTROL WITH EDI AND RETAIL LINK
In the early 1970s, Wal-Mart used computer systems to keep track of
inventory down to the item level. It also developed a vender system to
aid its distribution center rebuyers. To further reduce lead time,
Wal-Mart installed the purchase ordering system in 1981. EDI was
deployed to improve information coordination and processing with its
suppliers in 1988. In 1983, Wal-Mart reported an obvious reduction in
its lead time between ordering and receipt of merchandise. In 1984
Wal-Mart associates could use Texlon handheld to reorder merchandise and
get information about any item inventory. In 1986 UPC was applied in
inventory management. In 1987 the WSN project was finished. This made
both inside and outside coordination quicker and smoother. Simultaneous
information sharing was enabled across the company and stores.
In 1992, Wal-Mart started to deploy Retail Link. Retail Link has
relied on Wal-Mart data warehousing systems since it was first developed
(Westerman, 2001). Retail Link allows suppliers to access their
products' sales and inventory data at Wal-Mart Stores. Information
sharing through Retail Link significantly reduces negotiating time and
lead time between Wal-Mart and its suppliers (Westerman, 2001; Wal-Mart
Annual Report, 1998).
Data warehousing and data mining systems enable Wal-Mart to better
understand and forecast its customers' demands and increase the
probability of buying the right merchandise for its customers at the
right amount and at the right time.
These systems contribute to reducing the inventory level and
increasing inventory turnover as described by the CIO and other
executives of Wal-Mart in the Wal-Mart Annual Reports of 1997, 1998,
1999 and 2001. As we can see from Figure 1 and 2, there are apparent
increases in inventory turnover and obvious decreases in the ratio of
inventory cost over cost of sale.
[FIGURES 1-2 OMITTED]
Retail Link has cost Wal-Mart about $4 billion up to 2001.
According to Kevin Turner, then-CIO and Vice Executive President of
Wal-Mart:
Retail Link is the business leader for supplier collaboration via
the Internet and has been a source of competitive advantage for
Wal-Mart and SAM'S Club since 1991. Retail Link is an Internet
application that is a free offering to our suppliers so that our
suppliers may collaborate with our buyers to make better decisions
that result in a lower cost of goods for our customers. Retail Link
allows Wal-Mart suppliers and Wal-Mart merchants to view,
manipulate and access 104 weeks of on-line, real-time, item level
data that is kept at the lowest level of detail.
Since there is instant information sharing between Wal-Mart and its
suppliers, the suppliers can use better data of inventory change at
Wal-Mart when they schedule their production. Wal-Mart leads the retail
industry with its version of a "just-in-time" supply system in
which "computers track every product and automatically alert
warehouses when it's time to restock the shelves" (Wal-Mart
Annual Report, 1997). On the one hand, Wal-Mart suppliers are able to
better plan production and reduce their inventory level though Wal-Mart
may just be one of their product outlets. On the other hand, Wal-Mart
itself is able to reduce its inventory level through timely
replenishment of more wanted products at more accurate amounts or by
simply asking its suppliers to take care of their products inventory
management at Wal-Mart stores.
Wal-Mart is also testing new systems. It is implementing and
applying CPFR (collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment)
and CTM (collaborative transportation management) with P&G.
Bob Connolly, Executive Vice President of Merchandising in 1997,
said that there were four keys to the improvement in inventory
management: 1) Systematic reduction of unproductive inventory; 2)
Reduction of orders by 15 percent, enabling stores to manage their own
inventory; 3) Reduced pack size across many categories; 4) Timely
mark-downs. Rather than blindly slashing inventory, Wal-Mart has used
the data gathered by technology to make more inventory available of the
key items that customers want most, while reducing inventories overall
(Annual Report, 1997). The deployment of the electronic product code is
simply to further improve the efficiency of inventory control and supply
chain management. Linda Dillman, current CIO and Executive Vice
President of Wal-Mart, believe that RFID will bring $7 billion benefits
to Wal-Mart and its suppliers in year 2005 (InformationWeek.com, 2004).
PRODUCTIVITY IMPROVEMENT
In 1980 Wal-Mart reported that:
Merchandise productivity is enhanced by the Distribution and
Transportation Divisions. Merchandise flows from the manufacturers
to the Company's distribution centers. Distribution center
facilities efficiently sort the large quantities received into
outbound shipments to each store. Deliveries are made on Wal-Mart
trucks which backhaul other merchandise to the warehouses,
eliminating as many miles traveled with empty trailers as
possible.... Merchandise productivity is improved by the
utilization of the store terminal network systems, which provides a
means for replenishment as well as tracking of item movement and
changing sales trends. Having information immediately available
enables Management to respond quickly to any problems or
opportunities ... Wal-Mart continues to explore all areas for
productivity improvement possibilities (Annual Report, 1980).
"Make technology pay" is frequently cited within Wal-Mart
stores as new equipment, software, and communications are applied to
reduce costs and improve productivity. As the Annual Report for 1992
stated Wal-Mart's "aim is the simplification of what we do,
elimination of waste, and access to more meaningful information."
Wal-Mart in its 1996 Annual Report revealed some information of its IT
strategy:
With an annual technology and communication budget of $500 million
and an information system staff of 1200, Wal-Mart leads the
industry in information technology--and we're not slowing down. We
know our future earnings growth has to come not just from increased
market share, but also from increased productivity. (Annual Report,
1996)
McKinsey Global Institute reported in 2002 that:
In 1987 Wal-Mart had just 9 percent market share but was 40 percent
more productive than its competitors. By the mid-1990s, its share
had grown to 27 percent while its productivity advantage widened to
48 percent. Competitors reacted by adopting many of Wal-Mart's
innovations, including .. economies of scale in warehouse logistics
and purchasing, electronic data interchange and wireless bar code
scanning. From 1995 to 1999, competitors increased their
productivity by 28 percent while Wal-Mart raised the bar by further
increasing its own efficiency another 20 percent. (Technology
Review, March 2002)
ECONOMIES OF SCALE AND SCOPE
Economies of scale and scope are extremely important to any
retailers. Economies of scale mean a decreasing marginal cost for
processing an additional unit. In system application, it means applying
systems to their reasonable maximum scale such that marginal cost for
additional unit of information processing can be minimized or even
ignored. Economies of scope mean a decreasing marginal cost for an
additional unit of a relevant service or product. In system application,
economies of scope mean that systems can be applied to different
business processing with a decreasing additional cost.
Construction and operation of distribution centers reveal how
Wal-Mart has looked for economies of scale and scope. The information
systems can be used to handle information processing and distribution
for Wal-Mart Stores, SuperCenters, Sam's Clubs, and Neighborhood
Markets. They are used to process information for retailing of both
grocery and general merchandise.
A distribution center usually has to handle a large variety of
commodities. Before 1992, Wal-Mart was just a general merchandise
retailer. Now a Wal-Mart discount store has about 36,000 different kinds
of commodities. About 80 percent of merchandise is delivered from a
distribution center. So a distribution center should be able to handle
about 28,800 kinds of commodities. After Wal-Mart Supercenters and
Sam's Clubs are opened, distribution centers have to deal with the
double number of kinds of commodities, including general merchandise and
grocery. A Supercenter usually has about 72,000 items of commodities;
and a Sam's Club has more to cope with. So systems must be designed
with capabilities to handle a large variety of merchandise. The growth
of Wal-Mart International increases the complexity of information
systems. Nevertheless, Wal-Mart Information System Division has been
developing systems that can be used across different countries since
Wal-Mart acquired a Canadian retailer in 1994.
That is why UPC is so important. It is used to integrate
information from different terminals and systems. Information about
merchandise can be traced by using UPC, regardless of the physical shape
or the physical property of that product. Because of UPC, Wal-Mart
merchandising systems can be applied to manage merchandise flow for
different retailing channels. The implementation of the electronic
product codes will lift system efficiency to a higher level.
The economies of scale and scope in system use are tremendous. The
setup cost or fixed cost of building a system is high. But the marginal
cost for processing an additional unit of information is very low--just
some utility fees. Depreciation in the short term can almost be ignored.
So the cost efficiency of large-scale IT systems requires a larger scale
whenever reasonable and possible. Wal- Mart is strongly motivated to
increase its scale to reduce system costs amortized to any additional
dollar sale.
In 1973, the Bentonville Distribution Center distributed goods for
64 Wal-Mart discount stores. In 1975, the Bentonville Distribution
Center was responsible for 104 stores with the sales of $236.2 million.
In 1992, the 22 distribution centers provided service to 1928 Wal-Mart
stores and Sam's Clubs with revenues of $43.9 billion. In 2001, the
33 distribution centers distributed goods to 3719 Wal-Mart discount
stores, Supercenters, Sam's Clubs, and Neighborhood Markets in the
USA, Mexico, and Canada with sales revenues at $191.3 billion. In 1977,
the only Distribution Center at Bentonville handled about 70 percent of
$478.8 million goods. In 2001, each distribution center on average had
to cope with 80 percent of $4.72 billion goods and more kinds of goods.
See Table 2 and 3 and Figure 3 for the detail.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
As IT systems contribute to the economies of scale and scope in
Wal-Mart's merchandising processes, many people have expected that
such a firm would have a declining ratio of administration cost over
revenue. In Figure 4, we can see the operation-and-administration-cost/
revenue curve declined from 1982 to 1993, but has slightly increased
since 1994.
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY STANDARDS AND EXTERNAL ECONOMIES
Worcester (1969) found that external economies might enable a
company to grow into a monopoly. External economies of highway,
telecommunication network and technologies have been widely discussed
and agreed by economists (Worcester, 1969). External economies of
software technologies, termed "network externalities" by Katz
and Shapiro (1985), also have been discussed. External economies of
prevailing use of a software system among the public are well
acknowledged though some authors would prefer to use other terms and
think that network externalities are actually economies of scale in the
use of software (Liebowitz and Margolis, 1994).
Technological development in telecommunication, computing, and
networking have brought down the cost for information and communication
processing. Prevailing use and thus wide availability of these
technologies enable firms to enjoy the external economies such that
marginal cost for information and communication processing has been
decreasing. Wal-Mart has enjoyed external economies from the adoption of
general IT technologies such as POS, UPC, telecommunication network,
EDI, and Internet.
From 1983 to 1987, Wal-Mart changed its product barcode to the UPC
system, resulting in many improvements in coordination consistency and
convenience and big cost savings (Annual Reports 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986
and 1987). In 1988, Wal-Mart adopted EDI systems to further its effort
for paperless document processing, making distribution centers online.
By the early 1990s, Wal-Mart had set up arrangements with about 1810 of
its approximately 5000 suppliers, making it the nation's largest
user of the technology. The EDI system combined with the improved
ordering system provides a more rapid replenishment of merchandise at a
reduced cost (Vance and Scott, 1994).
In the mid 1990s, Wal-Mart upgraded EDI and Retail Link and made
them available through the Internet. Efforts are being made to upgrade
Retail Link to be XML-based, which enables compatibility between
different transmission systems. Wal-Mart IT division carefully controls
the software cost as the hardware cost dramatically decreases.
But Wal-Mart has hesitated in some areas about whether it should
adopt any standards created by standard bodies or follow any technology
vendors. In an April 2002 interview with CIO.com Editor-in-Chief Abbie
Lundberg, Kevin Turner, CIO and Executive Vice President of Wal-Mart,
said that Wal-Mart rarely buys any packaged software to avoid being tied
by any software vendors. As he emphasized, Wal-Mart doesn't
"have to run at the pace the software company wants to."
Wal-Mart IT department does everything internally to, "take the
best parts of software programs, get rid of the worst and customize to
fit Wal-Mart's goals, and benchmark its progress against
outsourcers and software developers. (3) That has been Wal-Mart's
tradition in the management of IT system development.
Retail Link actually has had some features as a private online
exchange since its start in 1990. There are retailing online exchanges
(B2B) for suppliers and retailers, such as Transora and WorldWide
Exchange (WWRE). But according to a report by Forrester Research,
because Transora and WWRE are each seeking exclusive rights to
retailer-supplier transactions, retailers are hesitant to invest
resources in either one for fear of backing the loser in the contest. As
a result, members have limited their participation to low-level
activities like auctions, preventing any growth in exchange adoption. So
Wal-Mart has decided to build its own B2B exchange based on Retail Link.
Wal-Mart has invited Atlas Commerce to join its efforts to build a Web
exchange. Retail Link actually set standards for supply chains when many
system vendors developed their systems to be compatible with Retail Link
and now connects Wal-Mart with its more than 10,000 suppliers. Vendors
cannot ignore its existence when they try to develop a supply chain
system.
Though UCC and ARTS, two technical organizations under VICS (4),
are also developing some standards, whether retailers and suppliers
would adopt the standards is uncertain. Ken Harris, SVP/CIO at GAP Inc.,
has doubted the viability of industry-wide standards for supply chains.
As he argues, standards bodies cannot accomplish their objectives
because leading companies will join in consortiums to create rival camps
that will set standards for their own efforts. Actually, Wal-Mart Retail
Link has a tendency to be the standard of supply chain coordination in
the retailing industry.
A HIGHLY CENTRALIZED AND INTEGRATED STRUCTURE
Wal-Mart has been centralized and integrated in many areas from the
start, and has kept a tight control over IT development all along. As
Kevin Turner says, Wal-Mart's IT department follows three rules in
system development: 1) Maintain a centralized information system
infrastructure, 2) Standardize systems and platforms, 3) Be merchants
first and technologists second. Wal-Mart has been widely recognized as
one of the best places for IT people to work because of its productive
and efficient management of system development. Wal-Mart's
organizational structure does not conflict in any way with its IT
policy, as Wal-Mart itself has been very centralized and integrated.
There have been few changes in Wal-Mart's centralized
organizational structure since the adoption of IT systems.
IT systems are tightly integrated to assure economies from system
security, compatibility, and integrity. The system security,
compatibility, and integrity provide the technological foundation for
economies of scale and scope.
Tightly integrated IT systems do not necessarily pre-require an
integrated business structure or ownership control or centralized
administrative structure. With the support of IT systems, a centralized
structure can also be very flexible and responsive to internal or
external changes. The major problem facing Wal-Mart is the increased
cost of sales and the slight but steady increase in the cost of
operation and administration.
From Figure 4, we can see that the cost of sale has been at a
higher level since 1992. The ratio of interest cost over revenues has
been kept at a pretty low level because of Wal-Mart's successful
inventory management and category management to provide continuous cash
flow. Wal-Mart's major costs include cost of sales and cost of
operation and administration. Cost of sales includes actual product
cost, change in inventory, buying allowance from suppliers, the cost of
transportation to the company's warehouse from suppliers, the cost
of transportation from the company's warehouses to the stores and
clubs, and the cost of warehousing for the Sam's Club segment. When
asked why the ratio of cost of sale over revenue was at a higher level,
Wal-Mart's Corporate Office responded, "Because Wal-Mart is
not willing to increase its prices." Wal-Mart could reduce the
ratio by marking up prices. But then customers would visit
Wal-Mart's competitors more frequently. On the other hand, there
are limits to reducing suppliers' charges. In this case, what can
Wal-Mart do to reduce its increasing cost of sales?
Another issue is whether Wal-Mart has applied IT systems to their
potential limits, or how much further can Wal-Mart use IT systems to
reduce its costs. This issue is raised because of the steady increase in
the cost of operation and administration. The ratio of cost of operation
and administration over revenues decreased from 1983 to the early 1990s.
Since 1992, this ratio has been slightly but steadily increasing. It is
worth asking whether or not Wal-Mart has applied IT systems to their
potential limits. Are IT systems at Wal-Mart facing a diminishing return
problem with Wal-Mart's current size of business? These are
questions waiting for further answers.
CONCLUSION
The economies of IT systems at Wal-Mart are prominent from all the
perspectives. IT systems at Wal-Mart reduce costs of transaction at the
distribution centers and support Wal-Mart's long-term strategy of
owning the distribution centers. While many studies have indicated that
IT systems reduce transaction costs and lead to smaller companies,
Wal-Mart obviously is a clear case that shows the opposite.
The literature on information asymmetry and IT systems suggests
that IT such as Internet can reduce information asymmetry. The POS
systems and data warehousing and mining systems definitely work in a
different way. While POS systems collect data for Wal-Mart and increase
Wal-Mart's visibility about customers and markets, Wal-Mart's
suppliers have to rely on whether Wal-Mart is willing to share
information with them. There is asymmetry in understanding customers and
markets between Wal-Mart and its suppliers.
Improvement in productivity due to IT systems is dramatic at
Wal-Mart. Information sharing through the Retail Link between Wal-Mart
and suppliers improve inventory control of Wal-Mart and suppliers. But
probably we will never be able to get a complete picture of how Wal-Mart
is managing and doing those things.
By using standard technologies, Wal-Mart has positive
externalities. Standard technologies also provide technical foundations
to realize the economies of scale. But with the size it has, Wal-Mart
keeps its own standards in some areas such as supply chain management
using the Retail Link system.
The economies of IT systems at Wal-Mart are evident and unique. Yet
we have to investigate further whether Wal-Mart IT systems are facing a
diminishing return problem. This will need further research in the
future.
ENDNOTES
(1) For benefits of RFID, please refer to Fugerson (2002), Jilovec
(2004), and Sheffi (2004). UCCnet is a subsidiary of the Uniform Code
Council, Inc. For details about UCCnet, please visit
http://www.uccnet.org/.
(2) WoolCo was a Canadian discount retailer. It was acquired by
Wal-Mart in 1994.
(3) See http://www2.cio.com/conferences/april2002/coverage57_content.html
(4) VICS, Voluntary Interindustry Commerce Standard Association.
Please visit http://www.vics.org/home for details. UCC, Uniform Code
Council, INC. Details about UCC can be found at http://www.uccouncil.
org/ean_ucc_system/stnds_and_tech/vics_edi.html. ARTS, the Association
for Retail Technology Standards. Please visit http://www.nrf-arts.org/
for details.
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Table 1
Sales Supported by Bentonville Distribution Center
1973 1975
Bentonville Distribution 64 stores 104 stores
Center (236, 800 sq ft)
Sales supported by the 55% of $124.9 65% of $236.2
distribution center ($ million) ($ million)
Sales supported by per sq ft $290.1 $648.3
at a distribution center
Table 2
Sales Supported by an Average distribution center
1992 2001
Number of Distribution 22 33
Centers with average
size of about one
million square feet
Revenues $43.9 billion $155.8 billion *
Average sales 80% of $1.99=1.592 80% of $4.72=3.77
supported by the ($ billion) ($ billion) **
distribution center
Sales supported by $1,592 $3,776
per sq ft of a
distribution center
* Wal-Mart in 2001 revenue was $191.3 billion. Sales outside North
America were $35.5 billion. Data are derived from Wal-Mart
annual reports.
** In 1973, only 55 percent of its merchandise was distributed
through its distribution center. The ratio rose to 65 percent in
1978. Since late of 1980s, the ratio has been kept around 80 percent.