Wal-MartThe of this article is . Please help restore neutrality by reporting disputed terms and phrases on Talk:Wal-Mart, so that disputed parts can be settled. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. is the world's largest retailer and the largest company in the world based on revenue. In the fiscal year ending January 31, 2004, Wal-Mart had $256.3 billion in sales and $8.9 billion in income. Forbes magazine points out that if Wal-Mart were its own economy, it would rank 30th in the world, right behind Saudi Arabia. It is also the largest private employer in the United States.
Overview of storesAs of July 2004, in the United States, the company operated a large number of stores
As of December 2003, these stores employed 1,500,000 people. Outside of the U.S., the company operates stores in Mexico (626 stores), the United Kingdom (269, mostly ASDA supermarkets), Canada (236), Brazil (144), Germany (92), and Puerto Rico (54). Wal-mart also has between ten and fifty stores in Argentina, China, and South Korea. Sam Walton, the founder of Wal-Mart, opened the first Wal-Mart store in Rogers, Arkansas in 1962. The company is publicly traded at the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol WMT and has its headquarters in Bentonville, Arkansas. As of March 31, 2004, there were 333,604 shareholders of Wal-Mart's common stock. Wal-Mart operates large discount retail stores selling a broad range of products such as clothing, consumer electronics, drugs, outdoor equipment, guns, toys, hardware, CDs and books. It typically stocks basic rather than premium products. Wal-Mart also operates "Supercenters" which include grocery supermarkets. Sam's Club stores are also owned by Wal-Mart; these are "warehouse clubs" which, like Costco, require membership dues. Wal-Mart's chief competitors as discount retailers include the Kmart Corporation and the Target Corporation. Each Wal-Mart store has an employee at each entrance, known as a "greeter", whose primary responsibility is to welcome people to the store. Wal-Mart refers to its employees as Associates, and encourages management to think of themselves as "servant leaders". The training video You've Picked a Great Place to Work promotes the "essential feeling of family for which Wal-Mart is so well-known." (Ehrenreich pp. 143-4) Employees start the work day with a gathering and the "Wal-Mart cheer". U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton (Democrat, New York) formerly worked as a lawyer for Wal-Mart and also served on its Board of Directors. Reasons for financial successWal-Mart is financially successful by a number of measures. For example, Wal-Mart is now the #1 grocery chain in the United States, with 14 percent of all grocery sales in the country, with nearly twice the sales of Kroger ($95 billion vs. $51 billion). Wal-Mart also does 20 percent of the retail toy business. Different explanations have been offered for this success:
Wal-Mart's focus on cost reduction has led to their involvement in a standards effort [1] (http://www.epcglobalinc.org/about/about_epcglobal.html) to use RFID-based Electronic Product Codes to lower the costs of supply chain management. As of June 2004, they have announced plans [2] (http://www.walmartstores.com/wmstore/wmstores/Mainnews.jsp?pagetype=news&template=NewsArticle.jsp&categoryOID=-8300&contentOID=13926&catID=null&prevPage=NewsShelf.jsp&year=2004) to require the use of the technology among its top 300 suppliers by January 2006. Criticism of Wal-MartMain article: Criticism of Wal-Mart Wal-Mart has been criticised for displacing locally owned stores; it has also been accused of mistreating its employees, selling sweatshop-made products, and enforcing conservative values through product restrictions and censorship. Wal-Mart is the most often sued corporate entity in the United States. Milestones
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