Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Wal-Mart Sharpens Amazon Attack With 2-Day Delivery Service

The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2016 11:14 AM
  • Wal-Mart Sharpens Amazon Attack With 2-Day Delivery Service
NEW YORK — Wal-Mart is sharpening its attack on Amazon.com.
 
The world's largest retailer is trimming its free-shipping pilot program to two days from a three, and it's cutting a dollar off the membership price. Membership is now be $49 per year.
 
The Bentonville, Arkansas, company began testing the new service last year in answer to Amazon Prime's two-day shipping, a big part of its domination of the retail sector.
 
Amazon membership costs $99 a year, which comes with a bewildering array of perks, including household product subscriptions, one and two hour Prime Now delivery, streaming music and video, photo storage and more.
 
"Prime has become an all-you-can-eat, physical-digital hybrid," Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos wrote in his annual shareholder letter in April. He wants the service to be such a good deal that you'd be "irresponsible" not to sign up, he wrote.
 
 
And Amazon has thrived because of it. Analysts say that Amazon Prime members buy more frequently and spend more money.
 
Wal-Mart's program, called ShippingPass, allows users to purchase more than one million items, including the most commonly purchased goods at Walmart.com.
 
"We can offer faster and more affordable shipping because we have a unique fulfilment network that includes new large fulfilmentcentres, stores, distribution centres and our transportation network," Wal-Mart said in a company release.
 
ShippingPass is only a pilot program and Wal-Mart will not say when it plans to extend the service to all customers.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

It's Fall, Boxelder Bugs Are Looking For A Winter Home

It's Fall, Boxelder Bugs Are Looking For A Winter Home
Batten down the hatches. It's that time of year when boxelder bugs are snooping around looking for a winter home. Your home and mine, that is.

It's Fall, Boxelder Bugs Are Looking For A Winter Home

Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use

Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use
Can counting the empty liquor bottles in dustbins gauge drinking habits of people? Yes, say researchers, adding that this is an inexpensive, unobtrusive and relatively easy method....

Empty liquor bottles can reveal alcohol use

Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS

Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS
If you are done with the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, pull up your shirts for the HIV Shower Selfie Challenge....

Take shower selfie challenge to fight AIDS

Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter
Genuine explosive materials are traditionally used to train dogs to detect explosives and to test their performance later on....

Fake bombs don't make sniffer dogs smarter

Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting
VICTORIA — A First Nations elder told a National Energy Board hearing that Kinder Morgan's proposed pipeline expansion threatens traditional hunting and food sources and the archeological sites of his people.

Energy Board Hears Expanded BC Pipeline Threatens First Nations Food, Hunting

Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand

Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand
It might seem as though everyone has an iPhone or Galaxy smartphone. But many customers are eschewing the best cameras and screens — and their top-end price tags — and choosing models that can get the job done at less than a third of the cost.

Demand For Low-End Smartphones Is On The Rise As Some Customers Favour Price Over Brand