Corporate Culture in Inventory Management: Walmart vs ALDI
The article “The Trouble Lurking on
Walmart’s Shelves” speaks to the issues around Walmart’s culture and work
environment and how these areas are influencing what Walmart is known for,
supply-chain management. As an organization so powerful it can mandate its
suppliers to move to Northwestern Arkansas or else lose a contract, the
superstore continues to be in the news for its poor wages, as well as its
job-cutting practices that lead to further bad news for the company.
As discussed in “Why Aldi is Giving
Walmart a Run for its Money,” while Walmart cuts jobs and focuses on lowering
overhead cost, another low-price retailer is making significant gains in the
industry. ALDI, a German-based discount food-retailer, is offering starting
salaries at $75,000 for District Managers with incredible additional perks,
including leadership development for recent graduates. These District Managers
are expected to learn fast and endure a year-long training practice, where they
learn all the jobs within the store including operational details and inventory
management. While learning these skills, District Managers also internalize and
learn how to turn the broad expansion strategy that ALDI is focusing on into a
daily operation.
ALDI understands that with strong
leaders, comes strong growth patterns. People who will work harder and smarter
when they are compensated for it. District Managers, after 4 years, can earn a
salary of up to $100,000. That’s an incredible incentive to offer for recent
graduates who are looking to build a career and learn skills along the way.
Though Walmart’s delivery system is still considered one of the most advanced
supply-chain systems internationally, if the product cannot make it onto the
shelf, does that matter? Walmart’s culture of cheap prices and beating the
competition, coupled with their exceptionally efficient supply-chain system,
has made short work of competitors in the past. But is Walmart becoming inefficient
in its market to beat out the competition at all costs? If the ALDI culture
values its workers more, does that also mean that in the long-run, they could
value their customers more highly as well?
Forbes Online - "Why is ALDI giving Walmart a run for its money" http://www.forbes.com/sites/derosetichy/2013/08/13/why-aldi-is-giving-walmart-a-run-for-its-money/
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