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Columbia College Jessica Kauten, Siveicea Love-Guarganious, William Montague, Scott Randall, Marchelle Robinson, and Judith Rosado Strategic Management 479 Alexander Furla WAL-MART STORES STRATEGIC AUDIT TEAM PRESENTATION
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Current Situation Current Performance Divided in 3 Business Segments: Wal-Mart Stores, Sam's Club, and the International Division. Largest Company with $245 billion in sales. $11.2 billion net income, up 9.4% to $2.68 per share. Stock price of $46.11. Over 6,100 stores worldwide.
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Board of Directors 13 members, 4 affiliated, 9 independent, 3 women, 2 African Americans, 2 Hispanic Americans. S. Robson Walton, Chairman of the Board. Strategic Management
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Natural Environment Raw materials availability. (O) Land availability. (O) Electricity usage. (T) Oil and Gas usage. (T) Water scarcity.(T) Hazardous waste storage, transportation and disposal. (T) External Environment SWOT Analysis
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External Environment Societal Economy Economic Interest rate increases (T). Economic deterioration (T) Increasing commodity costs. (T) Increasing transportation costs. (T) Currency fluctuations. (T) Slow national economy. (T) Technology Usage of RFID (O) Internet presence (O) IT increasingly important. (O)
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External Environment Political-Legal Regional trade pacts making free trade available (O) Differing laws may evoke compliance issues. (T) Potential unionization of workforce. (T) Many legal proceedings. (T) Defendant in numerous cases containing class action allegations (T)
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External Environment Socio-cultural Aging U.S. demographics. (O) Slowing U.S. population growth. (T) Wal-Mart seen as a reason for closing of mom and pop stores. (T) International cultural differences. (T) Green environmental movement. (O) Task Environment United States market saturation. (T) Expansion into Europe, China, South America, Canada, and Mexico. (O) Rivalry High. Target, Sears, K-Mart (T) Chance of new entrants low. (O) Purchasing power high. (O) Substitute power high. (T) Government regulations power medium. (T)
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Internal Environment Corporate Culture In-depth employee involvement in company affairs. (S) Trained employees to be merchants. (S) Reflection of the founder’s values. (S) Conservative values create some problems through expansion. (W) Non-Union stance is viewed unfavorably is some areas. (W) Corporate Resources Marketing Advertising costs are expensed as incurred. (S) Advertising costs consist primarily of print and television advertisements. (S) Offers quality brand names at lower-than-competitive prices. (S) Introduced a “Value Plan” benefits plan to its employees. (S) Green marketing products better for environment. (S)
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Finance $312.6 billion in annual sales. (S) $11.2 billion net income. (S) $2.68 earnings per share. (S) 8.9% return on assets. (S) 11.4% increase in sales and operating income for the international business. (S) Internal Environment
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R&D More involved with the development side. (W) Focused on expansion and development. (W) Operations Wal-Mart USA - intent on driving comparative store (S) Sam’s Club - remain committed to serving the needs of our members (S) Wal-Mart International - approach to ensuring continued profitable growth. (S) Internal Environment
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Human Resources Employees are called associates. (S) Employee stock ownership and profit-sharing program. (S) Decentralized approach to retail management development. (S) Utilizes the Total Quality Management approach. (S) Discourages unionization. (W) Information Systems Leader in RFID technology. (S) Good internet presence. (S) Utilizes satellite communications, data centers, and handheld devices. (S)
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Analysis of Strategic Factors Situational Analysis Strengths International brand name. Financial position. Market leadership. Weaknesses Market saturation. Public opinion. Adjustment to cultural differences after entering a foreign market. Supplier alienation. Past employee discrimination. Employee health benefits. International supplier employee violations.
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Analysis of Strategic Factors Opportunities International expansion. Environmental leadership. Worker’s rights leadership. Community involvement. Social initiatives. Threats Strong U.S. competition. Changing demographics. Economic uncertainty. Current litigation. Employee unionization.
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Strategic Alternatives and Recommended Strategy Adopt a friendlier corporate attitude and image Pro. Improved customer service Pro. Business growth Pro. Stronger relationships Con. Negative image Con. Wrong impression from local owned retailers (Parnell, 2008). Ease into foreign and domestic markets instead of barging in Pro. Positive corporate image by not devouring every business in sight. Pro. Creates an image with integrity Pro. Customer loyalty Pro. Increase friendlier competition Con. Creates ill-will among smaller businesses Con. Viewed as a bully corporation
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Strategic Alternatives and Recommended Strategy Expansion Pro. New source of tax revenue for the community Pro. Creates more jobs Pro. Promotes community expansion Pro. Opportunities for employee growth Con. Associates receive unjust wages due lower cost products Con. Purchasing practices require manufacture of goods in third world countries Con. Reduces the value on competing businesses
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Implementation To implementing and developing ways to appease who oppose to new constructions. To implement and get involved with developing a way to ensure employees are getting the right benefits to mirror retail industry’s average worker. To implementing and establish committees that can perform thorough research.
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Evaluation and Control Develop “scout” teams for measure opportunities Implement customer satisfaction surveys Surveys would greatly help establish to determine products Yes
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Works Cited Parnell, John A., and Donald L. Lester. Competitive strategy and the Wal-Mart threat: positioning for survival and success. Bnet. Web. Wheelen, Thomas L., and J. David Hunger. Strategic Management and Business Policy: Achieving Sustainability. Upper Saddle River: Prentice, 2010. Print
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