BENTONVILLE, Ark. — In its latest effort to compete with online giant Amazon, Wal-Mart is testing a delivery service using its own store employees, who will deliver packages ordered online while driving home from their regular work shifts.
The “associate delivery” program would use Wal-Mart’s 4,700 U.S. stores and roughly 1.2 million employees to speed delivery and cut costs. The world’s largest retailer said workers can choose to participate and would be paid. The service is being tested at two stores in New Jersey and one in Arkansas.
Wal-Mart has stores within 10 miles of 90 percent of the U.S. population, the company said.
“Now imagine all the routes our associates drive to and from work and the houses they pass along the way,” Marc Lore, CEO of Wal-Mart’s U.S. online operations, wrote on the company website.
Ravi Jariwala, a Wal-Mart spokesman, said all those employees driving home represent a “very dense web” of potential delivery locations for the company.
Employees who want to participate will be able to use an app to specify how many packages they are willing to deliver, Jariwala said, as well as the weight and size limits on the packages. Jariwala would not provide details about how workers would be paid, but said the company would comply with all federal and state minimum wage and overtime laws.
“This is completely an opt-in program,” he said Thursday. “This is not something they are required to do.”
So far, employees “love having the option to earn more cash while doing something that’s already part of their daily routine,” Lore wrote.
The move could result in significant cost savings, though the company didn’t provide estimates of how much. Still, the final delivery step to a customer’s home — what the industry refers to as the “last mile” — “makes up the lion’s share of fulfillment costs,” Jariwala said.
The move is the latest step in Wal-Mart’s campaign to counter Amazon’s online dominance. Shoppers on Wal-Mart.com can already choose to pick up items at a nearby store for a lower price. Wal-Mart has also revamped its shipping program and offers free, two-day shipping for online orders of its most popular items with a minimum purchase of $35.
In its tests so far, Wal-Mart said “many” packages are arriving at customers’ homes just a day after an order has been placed.
Participating employees will have to undergo background checks and will need clean driving records, Jariwala said.
Faster shipping has become a key area of competition as online retail continues to grow at a double-digit pace, while traditional brick-and-mortar stores struggle with falling sales.
Members of Amazon’s $99-a-year Prime service in thousands of areas can receive orders the same day or the next, depending on the item and location. And in about 30 cities, Prime Now members can get some items in an hour or two.
Wal-Mart has previously tested delivery services using Uber drivers. Jariwala said that test is still going on.