Is Walmart's same-day delivery service a threat to Amazon?

The country's largest brick-and-mortar retailer is trying to beat Amazon at its own game

Amazon
(Image credit: CC BY: brendan-c)

This week, Walmart rolled out Walmart To Go, a same-day delivery service for online orders that will be offered throughout the holiday season. The service, which will tack on $10 per order regardless of size, is already available in Philadelphia and northern Virginia, and will soon spread to Minneapolis, San Jose, and San Francisco. Capitalizing on customers' increased preference for ordering merchandise online, the move is meant to send shivers down the spine of Amazon, which has been almost frighteningly successful in pushing traditional brick-and-mortar retailers toward the brink of failure. Amazon's own same-day delivery service, introduced in 2009, currently operates in 10 U.S. markets. So should Amazon be worried?

Walmart has one significant advantage: Walmart's program "highlights the key advantage enjoyed by the world's biggest retailer in the race to get customers what they want, when they want it: Location, location, location," says Marcus Wholsen at Wired. Instead of relying on a handful of distribution centers, as Amazon does, Walmart has nearly 4,000 stores across the country that can deliver goods. "Proximity of goods to customers is essential to shortening delivery waits," says Wholsen. "Turns out one of the most promising ways to succeed at e-commerce might be to have a real store after all."

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