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Wal-Mart Cutting 10,000 Jobs At Sam's Club

MAE ANDERSON   01/24/10 08:11 PM ET   AP

Walmart Sams Club

NEW YORK — Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will cut about 11,200 jobs at Sam's Club warehouses as it turns over the task of in-store product demonstrations to an outside marketing company.

The move is an effort to improve sales at Sam's Club and comes on top of a decision to close 10 underperforming warehouse locations, which cost 1,500 jobs.

The cuts represent about 10 percent of the warehouse club operator's 110,000 staffers across its 600 stores. That includes 10,000 workers, mostly part-timers, who offer food samples and showcase products to customers. The company also eliminated 1,200 workers who recruit new members.

Employees were told the news at mandatory meetings on Sunday morning.

"In the club channel, demo sampling events are a very important part of the experience," said Sam's Club CEO Brian Cornell in a phone interview with The Associated Press. "Shopper Events specializes in this area and they can take our sampling program to the next level."

Shopper Events, based in Rogers, Ark., currently works with Wal-Mart's namesake stores on in-store demonstrations. Sam's Club is looking to the company to improve sampling in areas such as electronics, personal wellness products and food items to entice shoppers to spend more.

Sam's Club has underperformed the Walmart chain in the U.S. and abroad. Cornell has been working to improve results since taking the helm in early 2009, introducing new store formats, price cuts and offering more variety and more brands of items from take-home meals to baked goods.

As consumers eat out less in the shaky economy, Sam's Club has tried to steal customers from grocery chains and rival warehouse stores like Costco Wholesale Corp. by offering more everyday goods like food and health and beauty items and paring its assortment of general merchandise like furniture and clothes.

But during Wal-Mart Stores' most recent quarter, revenue at the Sam's Club division slipped nearly 1 percent to $11.55 billion while U.S. Walmart stores posted a 1.2 percent sales increase to $61.81 billion.

"Sam's has been the relative laggard, and it has lagged relative to its direct competitors, Costco and the smaller BJ's (Wholesale Club)," said Craig Johnson, president of retail consultancy Customer Growth Partners.

The move to outsource its food sampling efforts is a way for the company to tout its fresh food offerings in a cost-effective manner, Johnson said.

"'Fresh' is where the real competitive battles are being fought in the club sector," he said.

Shopper Events will launch a new demo program called "Tastes and Tips" with new carts, signs, uniforms and a trained team, said Cornell. He said the move was not made to save money.

"It's not a cost cutting measure, its really an investment in enhancing our demo program," he said. Cornell added that Shopper Events plans to hire "roughly the same number of people" cut, and said Sam's Club workers are invited to apply for those positions.

Cornell said Sam's Club decided to eliminate its membership recruiting unit because "we have found that we can more effectively drive membership through targeted member acquisition events and by increasing our partner membership programs."

"I feel betrayed," said Sally Grueling, 56, who had worked at Sam's Club for nine years, most recently in Hilliard, Ohio as a new business membership rep.

In a memo to employees, Cornell said eligible workers will receive severance pay and benefits, and that the company will help them find opportunities at other Sam's Clubs and in Walmart stores, in addition to Shopper Events positions.

The cuts come as many Americans had hoped job losses would abate as the economy slowly recovers. However, analysts said Sunday that while this marks Wal-Mart Stores' largest job cut, they expect many employees to be picked up by Shopper Events, so the net effect on the economy probably won't be that bad.

"I would argue that from an economic standpoint it's somewhat nominal," said David Strasser, a retail analyst with Janney Montgomery Scott. "It looks a lot worse than it really is from a layoff standpoint. My read is the majority of employees are going to be picked up by Shopper Events."

Strasser said he did not expect the move to materially affect Wal-Mart Stores' fourth-quarter earnings results. Wal-Mart reports results for the quarter and full year in February.

"It really should be neutral to the economy," Johnson agreed. He said Wal-Mart remains the largest private employer in the world and in the U.S. "None of that changes."

The number of jobs created via Shopper Events may not be one-to-one, he said, "but should be fairly close. Net net I don't think it makes a huge difference on the economy."

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NEW YORK — Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will cut about 11,200 jobs at Sam's Club warehouses as it turns over the task of in-store product demonstrations to an outside marketing company. The move is an ...
NEW YORK — Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will cut about 11,200 jobs at Sam's Club warehouses as it turns over the task of in-store product demonstrations to an outside marketing company. The move is an ...
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07:28 PM on 01/28/2010
After 21 years of service with the company, I was one of the people let go last Sunday morning. I was the new business membership representative. Although the management will tell the public we were offered reasonable positions in the company, I can assure you we were not. I don't think it reasonable to be expected to drive 50 miles for a full-time position in another location which will be given to someone in that facility anyway. As for lagging sales, possibly if Sam's Club would stop shoving the inferior Plus membership down every single member's throat upon entering the club and start actually listening to their business needs instead, maybe they would get ahead of their game. For those business members who I called on regularly, I will truly miss them. As for Sam's Club, I cannot say the same
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inorbit
10:30 AM on 01/26/2010
Now that I know about these free samples I think I'll make it a point to visit a Sam's Club, consume as many free samples as I like, and leave without buying a thing.

I have no intention of supporting Walmart's business practices.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:32 PM on 01/25/2010
So Costco which pays its employees fair wages, has excellent benefits, and is a decent place to work is outperforming Walmart which exploits its employees ruthlessly? Maybe this is a case study for those republicans who always seem to want profitability off the employee's backs.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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06:55 PM on 01/25/2010
73+ Labor Law Class Actions against Wal-Mart for violations:
Hiring Undocumented Workers
Off-the-Clock Work
Family and Medical Leave Act
Skipping Work Breaks
Using Child Labor

Multiple Class Action Lawsuits against Wal-mart for:

Sex Discrimination (including largest gender-bias suit in US history, involving 1.6 million current and former female Wal-Mart employees)
Race Discrimination
Disability Discrimination

Illegal Anti-Union activities:

Firing and intimidating union/pro-union employees
Shutting down stores to kill unionization

Wal-Mart's Global Labor Violations:
Sweatshop wages
Child labor
Excessive overtime
Physical abuse
Anti-Unionization (except in China)

[url]http://walmartwatch.com/issues/labor_relations/[/url]
[url]http://walmartwatch.com/issues/discrimination/[/url]
[url]http://walmartwatch.com/img/blog/global_labor_violations.pdf[/url]
[url]http://walmartwatch.com/img/documents/walmart_unions.pdf[/url]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hulagirrrl
01:42 PM on 01/25/2010
Every time when I shop at Costco, I meet the same friendly people working there. I enjoy shopping there because I know the staff is getting fair wages and benefits, and the produce is fresh.
06:04 PM on 01/25/2010
i can't stand wal mart produce. the bagged lettuce goes bad right off the bat from improper storage and gnats everywhere when they have tomatoes fresh. the last bag of lettuce i got thee made me deathly ill. i don't care if they have exotic stuff. my grocer buys from local farmers.
11:20 AM on 01/25/2010
They're farming out the sample stand lady jobs to a sub. 9 times out of 10...the sub will hire the sample ladies. It might be a blesing in disguise for them not having to work for WalMart any more.

http://yieldpig.blogspot.com/
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Alberto Guerrini
05:31 PM on 01/25/2010
Shoppers Events may rehire the same people, but I'm sure at a lower salary.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SidT645
10:43 AM on 01/25/2010
Ericsson is also cutting jobs (again) :
http://giantleaks.blogspot.com/2010/01/ericsson-cutting-1500-jobs.html
10:11 AM on 01/25/2010
we must end the bank bailout cycle.

good articles: http://iamned-website.blogspot.com

i'm crossing my fingers that bernanke doesn;t get enough votes for 2nd term.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vere15
Vero nihil verious (nothing truer than truth)
09:40 AM on 01/25/2010
Interesting post - can you see any benefits that an employer entity change might bring - like no severance obligations. On the other hand, if it is true, would it possible that there is a strange relationship between the corporation and subcontractor that is designed to elude the attention of shareholders/others
08:59 AM on 01/25/2010
A recent (nightmarish) experience with buying eyeglasses through Sam's Club was very instructive regarding the company's labor and operating policies (since disgruntled employees sometimes choose to vent to customers who are stuck in their department for an extended wait). One day, the optical clerk was grousing about a memo she had gotten from her manager "reminding" her that as a FULL-TIME employee she was only to work 32 hours per week. The woman had been chastised for working 34 hours the previous week, and even at that, had received compensation from the state unemployment office because she was considered underemployed. Another time, she had to walk across the store to the one printer that management consented to stock with ink. The printer/fax machine in her department (which, ironically, was directly across from the office supplies and shelves fully stocked with ink and toner) had been idle for months. Between the low-quality merchandise and the shoddy treatment of its employees, Wal Mart/Sam's Club is just bad news. Sam Walton's spinning in his grave.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
09:12 AM on 01/25/2010
From experience, when management starts guarding the ink supplies, you had better start looking for a life jacket..... the ship has hit an iceberg.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
08:46 AM on 01/25/2010
YO, its Monday and they have now upped the total number to be canned to 11,200. Have to wonder if they are not in melt down....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vere15
Vero nihil verious (nothing truer than truth)
08:56 AM on 01/25/2010
Daily compond interest?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
09:08 AM on 01/25/2010
Good way to put it! Clearly something is going very wrong with this company. Very strange to up the layoff numbers by 10% in one day.
08:29 AM on 01/25/2010
Just wanted to mention that the original "Sam" in "Sam's Club" had been a big proponent of buying American products to be sold in his stores. That idea at Walmart is deader than he is. But the surviving Waltons are sure making a steady profit on the backs of Chinese and Tawainese.
11:25 AM on 01/25/2010
i remember hearing 5 years ago that Wal-mart accounted for 15% of all US Imports from China and the stat still boggles my mind and I can only imagine that it's gone up since then!?!?!?!
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SirSlappy
My micro-bio is still empty.
08:18 AM on 01/25/2010
...as our passive, detached President goes golfing and wastes a year on a healthcare bill he can't even be bothered to protect.
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SidT645
09:04 AM on 01/25/2010
As if GW Bush never went golfing. By the way how many jobs were created in the last decade ...
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SirSlappy
My micro-bio is still empty.
09:25 AM on 01/25/2010
How many in the last year have been lost while Obama does nothing?

btw, everyone who doesn't like this president isn't conservative. I'm way left of you.
07:31 AM on 01/25/2010
Wal-mart is not losing business. They are firing 10,000 workers so that their sub-contractor can re-hire them for the same positions. Wal mart is outsourcing their tasks and jobs to another company.
It's a business decision to save money and deflect responsibility and liability with these workers.

Wal mart just pays the sub contracting firm a set cost per hour per worker and that's it. They are not responsible for benefits or anything with these workers, and also it's easier to get rid of them. They just tell the contractor which one they don't want and the person is gone.

Corporate America sucks and uses people, yet they still want people to come to their stores and spend money on their products.
Everyone should spend far less on goods. Don't buy things unless absolutely necessary, like food.
Shop at thrift stores, consignment shops and through internet sites like craigslist.
REFUSE
REDUCE
RECYCLE
REUSE
08:04 AM on 01/25/2010
that's called outsourcing
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
progressivegreg
Scotty, beam me up
08:59 AM on 01/25/2010
No, it's called being practical! People in this country have to RENT storage space to store their STUFF! It makes no sense.
07:05 AM on 01/25/2010
Walk in to any Sams Club. And then walk in to any Costco. Anyone can see in a minute why Costco easily outperforms Sams. The Costco is simply a nicer store with a wider assortment of quality products. The Sams is like walking in to a warehouse (which was its original intention anyway).