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Speaker BYou are listening to Omnitalk's retail fast five, ranked in the top 10% of all podcasts globally and currently ranked in the top 100 of all business podcasts on Apple Podcasts.
Speaker BThe retail Fast five is the podcast that we hope makes you feel a little smarter, but most importantly, a little happier each week too.
Speaker BAnd the Fast five is just one of the many great podcasts you can find from the Omnitalk Retail podcast network alongside our retail daily minute, which brings you a curated selection of the most important retail headlines every morning, and our retail technology spotlight series, which goes deep each week on the latest retail technology trends.
Speaker BToday is October 2, 2024.
Speaker BI'm one of your whole San Mazinga.
Chris WaltonAnd I'm Chris Walton and we are.
Speaker BHere once again to discuss all the top headlines from the past week making waves in the world of omnichannel retailing.
Speaker BChris, we got a big couple weeks coming up.
Speaker BThe countdown is on to grocery shop and shop talk fall.
Speaker BSo joining us today is our special guest, Joe Laheslow, head of us content for Shop Talk.
Speaker BAnd Joe will be helping us break down all the week's headlines and share with us a few details of what we can expect at each of these events.
Speaker BJoe, welcome to the show.
Joe LaheslowHey, thank you so much for having me.
Joe LaheslowIt's always a joy to talk to you both.
Joe LaheslowYeah.
Chris WaltonJoel, how busy are you right now?
Chris WaltonI mean, these shows are back to back.
Chris WaltonThey're two weeks in a row.
Chris WaltonLike, are you just.
Chris WaltonHow did you even make time for us today?
Chris WaltonI'm curious.
Joe LaheslowYeah, this is my study break.
Joe LaheslowThis is the moment when, I don't know, I get to get my head out of our agenda and speakers for a little while and just, I actually welcome the moment to take a breath and I think about other things.
Chris WaltonYeah, it's great to have you.
Chris WaltonI mean, to tell people how the sausage is made.
Chris WaltonJoe emailed us on Sunday night.
Chris WaltonHe was like, hey, I need to reschedule.
Chris WaltonI've got a.
Chris WaltonI got to coordinate a keynote, a speaking engagement for the stage here.
Chris WaltonCan we reschedule this too early in the morning?
Chris WaltonAnd we're like, yes, for sure.
Chris WaltonLet's get it done.
Chris WaltonAnd we made it happen, so it's good to have you, Joe.
Joe LaheslowYeah, thanks.
Joe LaheslowI appreciate you being flexible for me, as my calendar has filled unpredictably and quickly over the last five days.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BUm, well, this is a good warm up for, because we're going to be on stage with you at grocery shop and shop talk, doing the wrap up, uh, content, presentations, kind of talking about everything, all the highlights from the show.
Speaker BSo just do a really good job here, Joe, and then it'll be no problem when we do it, uh, later on down the road.
Joe LaheslowExcellent.
Speaker BNo pressure.
Speaker BUm, all right, well, Chris, before we get to the headlines, we have a little bit of hardware to hand out this week, right?
Chris WaltonWe do.
Chris WaltonAnd because it's the first week in October, so therefore, it is time to recognize this month's omnistar, our omnistar award, for those maybe unfamiliar or just tuning into the show for the first time, is the award we give out each month in partnership with Corso to recognize the top omnichannel operators out there.
Chris WaltonNot the pundits, not the so called experts, but the real life retail operators making a difference in their organizations.
Chris WaltonCorso's AI co pilot coaches retailers to optimize store performance at every level, transform retail operations from data overload into data powered.
Chris WaltonThis month's award goes to Lori Joffe, the chief marketing officer at american freight appliances and furniture.
Chris WaltonWe are saluting Lori this month because she is one of the most inquisitive and curious retail minds out there.
Chris WaltonWe ran into her at shop talk in Vegas just this past March.
Speaker BThat's right.
Chris WaltonAnd then ran into her again at another show in New York in June.
Chris WaltonAnd I got to tell you, she knows her stuff.
Chris WaltonShe's always curious, always inquisitive.
Chris WaltonI just love running to her, bumping into her.
Chris WaltonAnd so Lori, this bud, I mean, this omnistar is, does she like Budweiser?
Speaker BIs she a buddy?
Chris WaltonNo.
Chris WaltonI don't know.
Chris WaltonI just like saying this omniscience for you.
Chris WaltonSo I want to make the allusion to the old Budweiser commercial and to show that I'm a, I'm a full on Gen Xer.
Chris WaltonAll right, let's get to today's headlines.
Chris WaltonJoe, are you ready?
Joe LaheslowI am as ready as I'm going to be.
Chris WaltonAll right, let's do it.
Chris WaltonToday we've got news on the warehouse club's winning over Gen Z DoorDash's new suite of digital business tools.
Chris WaltonGiant Eagles attempt to slash wait times for its delivery drivers.
Chris WaltonKlarna bringing buy now, pay later in store via partnership with Addian.
Chris WaltonAnd the A and M, consumer and retail group's Marco Valentini stops by to give us five insightful minutes on how grocers can accelerate their private label brand growth.
Chris WaltonBut we begin today with more big up market news out of Walmart.
Speaker BAnd yes, headline number one, new research from brickmeets, click and Mercatus says that affluent households played a significant role in driving Walmart's online grocery growth during the first half of 2024 as even, sorry.
Speaker BEven as lower income households remain the retailers core e grocery segment.
Speaker BAccording to grocery Dive, the growth stems from Walmart's higher income households spending more online and ordering more frequently than other customer segments.
Speaker BWalmart's growing popularity with higher income households comes, quote, at the expense, end quote.
Speaker BOf supermarkets, hard discounters, and target.
Speaker BWalmart's most affluent customer segment, which makes up more than $200,000 in annual income, now makes up 8% of its average monthly active user base.
Speaker BThat affluent monthly user base has increased five times faster over the past year than its overall average monthly active users have.
Speaker BThe two firms found.
Speaker BLower income households, or households that are making less than $50,000 a year, accounted for 41% of Walmart's average active monthly users, compared to 36% for hard discounters, 30% for supermarkets, and 28% for target, per the report.
Speaker BBut while Walmart sales for this customer segment dipped 6%, supermarkets and target saw a drop of 20%.
Speaker BJoe, this is also our a and M.
Speaker BPut you on the spot question of the week.
Speaker BWe are going to put you in the hot seat here.
Speaker BAnd here is the question that a and M has 1 may have been able to predict this trend, this Walmart affluent customer increase trend per a and M.
Speaker BCRG's spring customer sentiment survey, where higher income households maintained a 600 basis point higher preference to shop online in general, plus 24% of higher earners, indicated they've switched to less expensive grocers.
Speaker BJoe, do you suppose the Walmart versus broader grocery results are indicative of that wallet tightening for more affluent online shoppers or because of a superior Walmart delivery customer experience?
Speaker BWhat do you make of these new income statistics surrounding Walmart?
Speaker BThat was a lot.
Chris WaltonWelcome to the party, Joe.
Joe LaheslowThere's, there's a lot of stats there to parse out.
Joe LaheslowI kind of wish there were some, some graphs and charts.
Speaker BYou need some infographics.
Speaker BYes, working on it.
Joe LaheslowYou know, my head went first to customer experience as opposed to trading down, or affluent customers suddenly watching their grocery budgets more.
Joe LaheslowIt was, the second thing was the one that I thought of, which is when you decide where you want to buy your groceries online from, if you do it at all, it depends on selection, it depends on price, but most importantly, it depends on how fast you get your order and is your order correct and those kinds of things.
Joe LaheslowAnd it only takes one or two negative experiences for somebody to sour on whoever they use the first time and try somebody else.
Joe LaheslowAnd I kind of think it might be more that experience piece that's driving Walmart's success with affluent customers.
Joe LaheslowIt's probably a little bit of both, but I put my money more on the experience they're able to deliver.
Speaker BYeah, I think that makes a lot of sense, Joe.
Speaker BI mean, you look at number one, and that being convenience, and the majority of the households in the country are, Walmart is the closest option for them.
Speaker BAnd if they can order online and have it delivered, or they can have something available for pickup on their schedule, that is a huge impact, regardless of demographic, I think, but especially in this case, and what they're seeing with this more affluent customer.
Speaker BBut Chris, what are your thoughts here?
Chris WaltonI think the answer to a and M's question is clearly both things are happening.
Chris WaltonYou have the higher income shopper trying to be more discerning, but you also have something special in the water at Walmart.
Chris WaltonAnd so I think at the end of the day, this news is massive news.
Chris WaltonIt really is.
Chris WaltonIt's a huge headline because the fruits of it are really going to be felt as the economy gets better and the lower income strata starts to reemerge, so to speak, at, you know, and who knows when that is, but it'll happen at some point.
Chris WaltonAnd so, you know, I, there's two things I would key in on with this announcement.
Chris WaltonFirst, and, Joe, you kind of mentioned it, but I'll go into it a little bit further, is grocery shopping is a really sticky behavior.
Chris WaltonSo once you have high income shoppers shopping for groceries at Walmart, it will become an integrated part of their weekly grocery routines.
Chris WaltonAnd the second point I make is that the data also, this was really interesting to me.
Chris WaltonThe data also shows that only 17% of Walmart's monthly users bought groceries online from another supermarket format in the first quarter of 2024, which was a 28 basis point drop from the same period in 2023, which means Walmart's getting more shoppers and they're cross shopping less.
Chris WaltonSo that bodes very well for, for Walmart going forward.
Chris WaltonIt only puts more tailwind at their back if they can continue this, which, and then they get the lower income strata in the, into the game as well.
Chris WaltonSo there is growth latent here that's going to come for Walmart at some point in time.
Chris WaltonSo this is big news to me.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BEspecially, Chris, I think that's a great point.
Speaker BBut especially when you start to bring in, like, scoop fashion and apparel product and all of the work that their, Walmart's really, really been digging their heels into in the, the higher end apparel and fashion as they're adding those brands to their marketplace, the Stockx partnership.
Speaker BI mean, I think you're so right.
Speaker BLike, once you get in there and people are going to Walmart for maybe a pair of sneakers that they wouldn't go to before, and now they can, you know, get Thanksgiving dinner, like we talked about last week, for under $10 a person or $7 a person.
Speaker BI think it was like all of those things are going to just kind of give people a reason to keep being fueled in that Walmart experience.
Speaker BAnd I think the last thing that I would just add to kind of close us out here, Chris, too, is I think that the digital penetration is really important, especially with this more affluent consumer, and especially as you're starting to see Walmart steal more share from, like, a target, for example.
Speaker BI think Walmart is dominating in their marketing.
Speaker BThey're dominating in, you know, their innovation investments.
Speaker BThey're doing all the things to make this customer experience really good from a digital perspective, from an online perspective.
Speaker BAnd so I think that, you know, for me at least, I think Walmart's still lacking in the store experience that will be important to keep and maintain this affluent customer.
Speaker BSo I think seeing their investment here in digital and, you know, in the Walmart that they're kind of putting out into the public is great.
Speaker BI think they're going to have to, to maintain that affluent customer base.
Speaker BThey're going to have to still make investments in stores if they want to kind of retain that base and continue.
Chris WaltonTo grow it, which they are doing too, although I push back on that a little bit because I think all this growth is potentially additive.
Chris WaltonWhen you look at the higher income shopper, I think it also plays back the adage we talked about on the show, too, and which what is old is new again.
Chris WaltonYou know, the super center was the key invention in the, in the eighties, basically, and you, and the grocery was the trip driver.
Chris WaltonAnd now we're seeing online at Walmart, that grocery can be the trip driver for the upper income echelon of the digital shopper.
Chris WaltonThat then, to your point, gets them into peril, gets them into other things, and that, and their marketplace is fully functioning as well.
Chris WaltonSo that's all additive growth here at the end of the day.
Speaker BSo you think the store experience is a little bit less important.
Speaker BIt's really more about like just keeping them in the digital and marketplace sphere.
Chris WaltonI think so, especially when you look at the tough times the lower income strategy is having because that will come back via the store.
Chris WaltonBut all this growth is additive in the digital sphere, which is so important here.
Chris WaltonSo.
Chris WaltonAll right, headline number two, Costco and Sam's club appear to be winning over the younger generations.
Chris WaltonAccording to Business Insider, during Costco's recent fourth quarter earnings call, CFO Gary Miller Chip.
Chris WaltonHonestly, Ann in the running and Joe in the running for my favorite CFO name of all of retail, Gary Miller Chip.
Chris WaltonMiller Chip.
Chris WaltonI just like saying Miller chip.
Chris WaltonIt's Miller chip time.
Chris WaltonAnd dropped a bombshell.
Chris WaltonApproximately half of the company's new signups over the past year were under 40 years old.
Chris WaltonTo put that into perspective, we're talking about, this is crazy.
Chris WaltonWe're talking about two and a half million millennial and Gen Z households willingly paying for the privilege to shop in bulk.
Chris WaltonAnd not to be.
Chris WaltonAll done, Walmart owned Sam's club is reportedly is reporting, excuse me, equally impressive numbers saying Gen Z membership has skyrocketed by 68% in just the past two years.
Chris WaltonAnd let's go to you first on this one.
Chris WaltonDo you think Costco and Sam's are just enjoying the benefits of shifting demographics?
Chris WaltonOr is there something also in the water here that is making these two the Pepsi choice of a new generation?
Joe LaheslowZachary.
Speaker BChris, I feel like you're asking me to explain dad Core and why this has gone beyond, like, new balance sneakers and Kirkland brand clothing.
Speaker BLike, but somehow this is.
Speaker BThis started a trend and a wave.
Speaker BAnd yes, Gen Z wants to save more money.
Speaker BI mean, I pulled up a couple of stats about Gen Z just to kind of give our audience a little bit of a table set, I guess, for, you know, where Gen Z is, that they spend more on housing and insurance than millennials and other generations.
Speaker BThey have more debt than other generations.
Speaker BThey spend more on travel and experiences, and they are more value driven than loyalty driven, which all adds up to, like, yes, of course.
Speaker BWhy wouldn't they be going to Costco and be going to Sam's club?
Speaker BSo I think when you look at that generation and you know how they're spending money, where they're spending time, they want quality products, too.
Speaker BAnd Costco and Sam's club are able to pay this off at a rate that many other retailers cannot do.
Speaker BThey can't have this assortment in this, this product that's really giving them the value for their money.
Speaker BSo I think that this is not a surprise at all.
Speaker BI think it's going to continue, especially as we see, you know, more Gen Z and millennials spending a greater percentage of their income on, you know, housing, food, apparel, and personal care, all of which Costco and Sam's club are able to provide them.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I'm in.
Speaker BJoe.
Chris WaltonSo you think this is kind of just a confluence of factors.
Chris WaltonMacroeconomically, what Costco and Sam's club do?
Chris WaltonWell, it's just kind of like, yep, you kind of expect this going in.
Chris WaltonJoe, do you agree with that?
Joe LaheslowAnd Gen Z and millennials are growing up and starting families and kind of moving out of their small starter apartments to larger apartments or to the suburbs as well.
Joe LaheslowI think partly this is just that cohort is now kind of reaching the stage of their lives where they can buy in bulk, they have space to store 50 rolls of toilet paper, and the desire to be frugal and save money is certainly a contributing factor as well.
Joe LaheslowBut in some ways, this isn't that new.
Joe LaheslowI was looking around a little bit yesterday.
Joe LaheslowI found a 2017 Forbes piece that said exactly the same thing, that Costco is winning over millennial and Gen Z shoppers.
Joe LaheslowBut then it was probably mostly millennials, not so much Gen Z.
Joe LaheslowNow, seven years later, it's the Gen Zers who are kind of doing that, that house and family thing.
Chris WaltonRight.
Chris WaltonWhat about the Sam's club angle?
Chris WaltonLike, are you surprised that both are picking up share here, or do you think that is just a natural outgrowth of everything that you just both talked about?
Chris WaltonWhat do each of you think about that?
Chris WaltonAnne?
Speaker BI think it's going to be really interesting to watch how this progresses because I think that, well, Costco kind of is like the target in this case, and Sam's club, to me, is kind of like the Walmart.
Speaker BLike, they're both neck and neck.
Speaker BBut I think that it's going to be interesting to see a big part of this is merchandising and accessibilities to the stores and Costco.
Speaker BUnless they start to change things, I think Sam's is likely to kind of continue to beat them because of the things that you were talking about last week, Chris, about the supply chain.
Speaker BLike, convert the supply chains converging at Walmart and Sam's club.
Speaker BLike, if you have more flexibility, more convenience for consumers than what Costco's offering, like, this could be, Sam's club could be, like, coming in hot here.
Speaker BAnd I think really starting to steal some share from Costco the same way that we're seeing, like, Walmart from the last three kind of come in and steal share from Target.
Speaker BBut what, what do you think, Joe?
Chris WaltonWell, let's go to Joe first.
Chris WaltonJoe's got Joe's chopping at the bid.
Joe LaheslowHere I am.
Joe LaheslowSo I think I.
Joe LaheslowThere's a couple of factors in terms of Sam's versus Costco, right?
Joe LaheslowI think partly it's what your parents did, right.
Joe LaheslowIf you're a Gen Z er and you're kind of setting up your own household, do you grew up going to Costco with your parents?
Joe LaheslowThat's probably where you'll go first.
Joe LaheslowBut it's also what's closer to wherever you're setting up your household, whatever's more convenient to you.
Joe LaheslowBut I do think there's an interesting opportunity here.
Joe LaheslowAnd my always unscientific way of thinking about who's really trying to appeal to Gen.
Joe LaheslowZers is to look at TikTok.
Joe LaheslowSo Costco has an official TikTok.
Joe LaheslowIt's got 101,000 followers.
Joe LaheslowThey haven't posted anything, though.
Joe LaheslowIt's like empty.
Joe LaheslowSam's club has 183,000 followers on TikTok and 1.4 million likes on videos that it's posted.
Joe LaheslowAnd the control group, Target.
Joe LaheslowTarget has 3 million followers on TikToks and 20.4 million likes so I think either of them could boost their appeal with the youngest demographic that's kind of in that, in that nesting phase, but they both have a ways to go.
Speaker BRobert?
Chris WaltonYeah, it's interesting.
Chris WaltonI'm glad I got the question because I actually did some research yesterday, too.
Chris WaltonI just did a quick Google search.
Chris WaltonI thought there were less Sam's club stores throughout the US than there were Costco stores, but roughly they're even.
Chris WaltonBut to both your points, and Joe, I love the TikTok statistics as well.
Chris WaltonAnd I love the points you brought up, too, is if I was to bet on who's going to grow more or return more money to their shareholders here in the next ten or 15 years, and do not take this as financial advice, anyone.
Chris WaltonI'm just like, just pontificating here.
Chris WaltonI would bet on Sam's club for a couple of reasons.
Chris WaltonLike, one, we talked about it last week, but with the supply chain merger, you have the potentially untapped combination of making a Walmart shopper, a digital shopper at Sam's club and vice versa, which is the crux of the, of the decision last week, I think in the long run, and that's a really powerful statement when you think about that, that you can make a digital shopper at Walmart, a shopper at Sam's club.
Chris WaltonThink about that for a sec.
Chris WaltonAnd then the second thing is there's so much, you guys hit it.
Chris WaltonThere's so much more technologically advanced than Costco, for example, like their scan and go application.
Chris WaltonWhat, and what is it?
Chris Walton50% of shoppers use their scanning go application and they're putting retail media through it.
Chris WaltonAnd we had, we had discussions about how Coke can now incent you and path you through the store, through retail media, on your handheld device, you know, in theory.
Chris WaltonSo that's, that's hugely powerful and, and valuable to this shopper who wants to shop this way.
Chris WaltonSo I'm, I'm betting on Sam's, like, in the long run, I really am.
Speaker BI mean, Chris, I think the other thing that you bring up, too, and Joe mentioned this, it does come down to it's kind of like Ikea in this way, where like, this Costco trip is like a trip.
Speaker BYou, if you are an urban dweller, which a lot of these, this young generation is like, you have to figure out how you get a car, how you haul all this stuff back, too.
Speaker BAnd I think that's another key to the success, potentially, of Walmart, is that if you are able to go on Walmart, you're starting your grocery trip there and you see like, okay, my kids love these applesauce pouches and I can get a 50 pack of them and have those delivered.
Speaker BAnd I don't have to make the trip to Sam's club, but I still get access to that Sam's club, you know, price point, that is huge and that saves a trip and especially for those young families, like Joe said, like, that's a huge savings for them.
Speaker BAnd I think to your point, like, just kind of catapult Sam's trajectory as kind of sealing favor for from that demographic.
Chris WaltonYeah.
Chris WaltonAnd then you get me thinking, too.
Chris WaltonAnd does the Sam's club membership merge with Walmart plus in the long run, like, there's so many options here and so much option value in this discussion.
Chris WaltonJoe, you're in New York.
Chris WaltonHow often do you go to Costco?
Joe LaheslowOnce a year when I'm visiting my family out in the more normal parts of the United States.
Chris WaltonSo there you go.
Chris WaltonThere you go.
Chris WaltonYou could become.
Chris WaltonYep.
Chris WaltonYou could become a Sam's club shopper digitally via Walmart.
Speaker BJoe's just got to wait for them to bring jet black back, jet.com black service back and have somebody run talk.
Joe LaheslowTo my concierge about bulk ordering my apple.
Chris WaltonYeah, right.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BExactly, Joe.
Speaker BAll right, let's move on to headline number three.
Speaker BDoorDash has launched a new suite of digital business tools.
Speaker BAccording to chain storage, the new products and features include the DoorDash commerce platform, which consists of these five core solutions.
Speaker BFirst, a drive on demand solution that offers the ability to offer delivery through a business's own app or website.
Speaker BSecond, online ordering, which is a way to provide commission free digital sales and branding on a retailer's website or own branded app.
Speaker BThird, phone ordering, which is an AI based call and ordering system with menu recommendations.
Speaker BFourth, tableside order and pay, which is the option for customers to scan a QR code with their phone for increased order efficiency.
Speaker BAnd fifth, customer support solutions in the form of a dedicated delivery support platform for customer inquiries.
Speaker BChris, we're going to go to you first here as both Instacart and DoorDash look to extend their reach into the technological solutions that power a larger range of grocers and restaurants operations beyond just delivery.
Speaker BWhose approach do you like more?
Chris WaltonOh, wow.
Chris WaltonOkay.
Chris WaltonComing in hot for me, too, and I mean hands down.
Chris WaltonHands down is Doordash.
Chris WaltonOkay, I would go.
Speaker BExplain yourself.
Speaker BExplain yourself.
Chris WaltonBig, big foot on the scale at Doordash because the rest, because for a few reasons, restaurant business is more fragmented and in need of solutions like this that work than, say, the grocery, grocery industry is fragmented, but it's not as fragmented as the restaurant business.
Chris WaltonAnd I was also add that the restaurant business is easier to run than a grocery store.
Chris WaltonAnd for all of you detractors out there debate that, and you're like, what are you talking about?
Chris WaltonYou now know that running a restaurant is easier than running a grocery store, because restaurants are inside of grocery stores.
Chris WaltonSo it means what Instacart is trying to do is very, very difficult.
Chris WaltonYou know, it's hard to come up with the technological pieces that make everything work.
Chris WaltonAnd so if I said that another way, what's an easier thing for me to buy into you?
Chris WaltonThe fact that you can get consumers to scan a QR code on a table, or that you can get them to start using a smart shopping cart.
Chris WaltonI think we know the answer to that one.
Chris WaltonSo restaurants aren't going anywhere yet.
Chris WaltonYou know, like we discussed tangentially in the first two headlines, the grocers, they've got a tough road row to hoe.
Chris WaltonAnd so who knows?
Chris WaltonYou know, I think it's a cart.
Chris WaltonJust got an uphill battle relative to what Doordash is trying to do here.
Chris WaltonThat's my take.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BI like it.
Speaker BI like it.
Speaker BUm, I agree with you, Joe.
Joe LaheslowLike, I'm definitely, definitely not going to pick a favorite.
Joe LaheslowWe love both Doordash and Instacart.
Joe LaheslowThey're both grocery shop next week.
Joe LaheslowSo I don't know that I like one or the other solution better.
Joe LaheslowBut I do think it's really smart on Doordash's part to add to the suite of services that it offers to its retailer and restaurant clients.
Joe LaheslowAnytime you get somebody buying two or three pieces of your modular solution, they're bound to be more sticky, more loyal to you than somebody who's just doing it for the ordering and delivery piece.
Joe LaheslowI think maybe the most interesting single component here, the one that had me scratching my head a little bit, is the phone ordering.
Joe LaheslowLike, pick up and call and talk to a fake person about your order.
Joe LaheslowBecause so much of what we talk about when we talk about technology is clearly geared at, like, younger customers as the early adopters.
Joe LaheslowAnd that's gotta be the opposite.
Joe LaheslowLike, this is one of these rare technology things that if anybody uses it, it would be older shoppers who don't wanna go on an app and like, tap and shop that way.
Joe LaheslowSo interesting to see what kind of traction it gets.
Joe LaheslowProbably more restaurants than grocery, but either way, it's nice to see a tech solution that isn't entirely visual and app based and, and geared for those younger shoppers.
Speaker BI mean, I think you're bringing up some really important points, both of you, but you just, you look at all of the efficiencies that this is going to provide.
Speaker BI mean, think as a restaurant owner, you now, like, you don't have to do anything.
Speaker BYou just, you have online ordering automatically in your app that's coming through.
Speaker BYou're cutting down on staffing because you don't have to have somebody, you know, on the phone lines answering questions.
Speaker BAnd especially, especially Doordash is so good at this.
Speaker BI don't know if either of you have ever encountered.
Speaker BHave you ever had to come customer support at DoorDash?
Speaker BLike if you had an order go wrong or anything like that?
Chris WaltonNo, no, not really.
Chris WaltonIt always goes pretty well for me, actually.
Speaker BWell, I have to say, like, I know I'm talking to a robot.
Speaker BThey have handled my, like, order issues so quickly and so efficiently, and it doesn't, like, I, in most cases, I would question the stuff that Joe's talking about.
Speaker BLike, is the person really going to have a fruitful conversation ordering their dinner with a, with AI generated order taker?
Speaker BBut Doordash has done such a phenomenal job on the customer service side of this that I think that they'll definitely be using those tactics to make sure that that process is as seamless as possible.
Speaker BThe, the other thing, too, is like, I think you look at the stickiness of the Doordash consumer.
Speaker BYou have Doordash.
Speaker BAs of the end of last year, they have 37 million active users, compared to Instacart's 14 million active users at the end of last year.
Speaker BAnd so I think that for all these, these restaurants or grocers who are looking for, you know, the go to, to be part of the kind of go to app when it comes to food ordering and grocery ordering.
Speaker BLike, they've got DoorDash already there.
Speaker BThey've set up this clientele who's used to the functionality of that application.
Speaker BBut, Chris, close us off here point.
Chris WaltonBecause when you go back to it, because the restaurant delivery, like we've talked about in the show, that's the niche, that's the strategic differentiation point here.
Chris WaltonBecause a lot of what Instacart's doing, too, like when you look at standing up the website browser for the small local grocers and whatnot, Doordash can potentially do that as well.
Chris WaltonThat's the easy stuff to do.
Chris WaltonAnd then that just erase the bottom in terms of who can provide it at the lowest cost.
Chris WaltonAnd there's tons of other providers out there besides these two.
Chris WaltonBut when you get into the operations of a restaurant versus a grocery store, too, that's where I think there's just more growth from this strategy than I think it is, than there is in terms of Instacart, because it's gonna be harder for Instacart to get in there and do all this, but.
Speaker BAnd you can order from your table, from the QR code, which I'm just a huge fan of.
Chris WaltonI can't wait for that to come.
Chris WaltonOh, my God.
Chris WaltonThat is still my biggest frustration with restaurant shopping.
Chris WaltonWaiting for the check.
Chris WaltonIt just makes sense.
Speaker BOh, my gosh.
Speaker BI know.
Speaker BI know.
Chris WaltonAll right, well, let's say hello to Marco from the A and M consumer and retail group.
Chris WaltonJoining us now for five insightful minutes is the managing director at the A and M consumer and retail group, Marco Valentini.
Chris WaltonMarco will be discussing with us the results of his company's most recent report on how retailers can successfully build and foster a strong own brand strategy.
Chris WaltonMarco, first question for you today.
Chris WaltonWhy is it important for retailers to invest in private brands?
Marco ValentiniYes, we're seeing a strong growth of private brands in the market.
Marco ValentiniPrivate brands continue to outgrow national brands and they continue to be a differentiator for many retailers and their offer.
Marco ValentiniThe private brands today represent roughly 20% of food in the US.
Marco ValentiniAnd this trend is continued.
Marco ValentiniThis penetration has continued to grow over the last ten years and is expected to achieve 24% by 2030.
Marco ValentiniWe are also seeing private brands continuing to outgrow national brands at roughly the rate of 400 basis points.
Marco ValentiniThat means that think about every year, roughly $1.5 billion are shifting from national brand to private brands.
Marco ValentiniSo there's a clear opportunity in terms of market share there to capture growth that ultimately is not accessible for many retailers.
Speaker BMarco, I know why I love private brands, part of that reason being the value component of that.
Speaker BBut why do you feel like customers really love those private brand options?
Marco ValentiniYeah.
Marco ValentiniCustomers are often loving national brands, private brands even more than their national brands equivalent.
Marco ValentiniThey, in many cases, the customers cannot distinguish whether a brand is owned by a retailer or national brand.
Marco ValentiniAnd you have many examples of brand that have highest level of advocacy and love from customers.
Marco ValentiniThink about the trader Joe's assortment or Kirkland from Costco.
Marco ValentiniThese brands are highly recognized and they not just provide value, but they also provide the highest level of differentiation and innovation for the customers.
Marco ValentiniI would say that very often the minimum condition is to provide a 30% to 40% price positioning below the national brand equivalent with the same level of quality.
Marco ValentiniThis is kind of the traditional positioning of national brands, but the most successful players have been able to innovate and also add the highest level of differentiation, innovation through, for example, unique product ranges, unique flavors, unique packaging, or capturing specific pocket of demands that are not normally served by national brands.
Marco ValentiniThink about retailers, for example, that developed organic ranges, for example, 365 from Whole Foods.
Marco ValentiniOr think about retailers that have been able to develop premium ranges.
Marco ValentiniThink about private selection of Kroger.
Joe LaheslowGot it.
Chris WaltonAll right, Marco, let's get you out of here on this.
Chris WaltonSo, for the average C suite executive listening to this podcast, what should they do to accelerate their private label brand growth?
Marco ValentiniYeah, that's a very good question, Chris.
Marco ValentiniIt requires quite a lot of focus and discipline.
Marco ValentiniRight.
Marco ValentiniI think the most important aspect of this is to build the commitment throughout the leadership team within the organization.
Marco ValentiniYou know, firstly, at the chief merchant level, chief merchants have to treat private brands with the same level of attention to detail or even higher that they use.
Marco ValentiniFor national brands, this is not just about setting up targets, but it's also being consistent and having a year round commitment around, for example, product innovation planograms, promotions and so on and so forth.
Marco ValentiniYou need to have strong support from all the other functions.
Marco ValentiniThink about supply chain to ensure availability of the product, procurement to kind of have the right vendor partnerships, and ultimately the execution in the stores.
Marco ValentiniMarketing has to be highly engaged to provide focus and investment to the development of the brands.
Marco ValentiniUltimately, the commitment to private brands have to start at the CEO and CFO levels because they have to be able to align to the entire leadership team of the organization around the shared goal and also a clear set of KPI's and targets.
Marco ValentiniThe investments have to be measured to the ambition and the private brand teams have to be right sized and at the same time empowered to drive change.
Marco ValentiniYou need the dedicated investments in branding, in marketing, but also in, for example, developing production capabilities with some of your suppliers.
Marco ValentiniI mean, in essence, private brand development today is more an imperative than an option for many grocers, and you really need strong commitment from your entire organization.
Marco ValentiniBut the good news are that the players that are able to achieve that positioning very often are delivering stronger market results and at the same time, strong shareholder results.
Speaker BThanks, Marco.
Chris WaltonGreat.
Chris WaltonThank you, Marco.
Chris WaltonAnd remember, if you're interested in reading the A and M consumer and retail group's full report on how you can accelerate your private label brand journey, just check out our podcast description where you'll find the link.
Chris WaltonOr you can also head to omnitalk.
Joe LaheslowDot blog.
Chris WaltonHeadline number four giant Eagle wants to slash delivery times delivery wait times, to be specific, according to Grocery Dive, Giant Eagle announced Tuesday.
Chris WaltonIn exchange expanded partnership with omnichannel location platform Flyby to bolster its last mile delivery service and cut avoidable delivery driver wait times by at least half.
Chris WaltonThe partnership extends the technology company's location based service, which orchestrates product picking in line with the driver's distance from the store to the groceries delivery program.
Chris WaltonFlyby's AI powered location technology can pinpoint which driver is arriving for specific orders and send alerts to its main dashboard and picking app.
Chris WaltonThe technology has reduced wait times to less than two and a half minutes on average.
Chris WaltonJoe that's clock.
Chris WaltonThat's a clock time.
Chris WaltonJoe what do you think of giant Eagles investment?
Chris WaltonWhat do you think giant Eagles investment in Flabey says, if anything, about where grocers are willing to invest their money.
Joe LaheslowI have a couple of thoughts on the Flyby investment.
Joe LaheslowI think first of all, it underscores that for a lot of grocery retailers, in store fulfillment is still super, super important.
Joe LaheslowI mean, I think it's always going to be a spectrum.
Joe LaheslowSome in store fulfillment will be the most economical route, some micro fulfillment centers, some big, big hubs.
Joe LaheslowI think all three can work depending on the situation, but I think it does underscore that in store pickers and delivery from local stores is a really important piece here.
Joe LaheslowI also think we're in an era where kind of small incremental improvements can really help with the economics of grocery delivery.
Joe LaheslowIn this case, a small savings of time is definitely, definitely translates into money.
Joe LaheslowAnd as we were talking about in the Walmart segment at the top, small improvements in customer experience also probably have a measurable outcome in terms of really cementing that grocery e commerce shoppers loyalty and keeping them coming back.
Joe LaheslowSo I think there's a whole bunch of different benefits that giant eagle potentially stands to gain if the time savings that it's reporting scale and continue.
Chris WaltonAnd what would you add?
Speaker BYeah, I mean, Joe knows we've been on these calls at shop talk fall.
Speaker BI'm going to be doing a panel where we're really talking about how retailers can better unify commerce experiences for their customers, make it more seamless.
Speaker BAnd while it seems like the focus then of these technological investments would be on the consumer side of things, maybe on its surface it's actually showed us like giant Eagle and Flyby here, that it's more investments in operational technology.
Speaker BIt's figuring out ways to get things running as efficiently as possible.
Speaker BAnd this is for, in this case for delivery drivers.
Speaker BI mean, you have better store operation visibility then too, if you know where these drivers are and what their load is that they're taking already.
Speaker BAnd then in addition to faster delivery speeds, I think it should be able to also provide them with more transparency for the customers too, of like actually here, you know, yes, we're doing a two hour delivery, but this guy is going to be there faster than 2 hours or this might be a little bit longer than 2 hours, but just gives that visibility to the customer so that they know what to expect, which I think that is how you're really paying off a better, more unified commerce experience for customers.
Speaker BAgain, investing in the technology like Giant Eagle is with flyby to make sure that your operations are running smoothly and that's what provides that key customer experience.
Chris WaltonYeah, I agree with both of you and I don't have a ton to add here, but I think this headline is just further proof, especially when we look at the headlines over the last week, how Walmart and Amazon dominated the headlines.
Chris WaltonAnd then this is one that cracks the code here.
Chris WaltonTo me, when I step back in preparing for grocery shop for my interviews too that I'm doing on stage next week, it just goes back to the adage and show me the money, right?
Chris WaltonThat seems like grocers are investing in either back end operations or retail media.
Chris WaltonAnything else just isn't going to get past the budget committees and smartly so.
Chris WaltonAnd that's why I think the grocery industry has been relatively more innovative.
Chris WaltonThe more innovative sector of has been the relatively more innovative sector of retail than say other verticals.
Chris WaltonAnd because, you know, sometimes we get so distracted by the shiny penny on the ground that we want to pick it up of all the consumer experiences, bit tech and everything.
Chris WaltonBut at the end of the day, the smart money is still going to the backend operations and particularly for grocery retail media as well.
Speaker BAll right, let's go on to headline number five.
Speaker BKlarna is partnering with Adian to bring buy now, pay later into physical stores.
Speaker BAccording to CNBC, Klarna said Thursday that it had entered into an agreement with Adyen to add its buy now, pay later products to physical payment terminals.
Speaker BKlarna will be included as an option across more than 450,000 adyen payment terminals in brick and mortar locations.
Speaker BAs a result of the deal, the partnership will initially launch in Europe, North America and Australia with a wider rollout planned later down the line.
Speaker BJoe, let's go to you first.
Speaker BWhat are your thoughts here on buy now, pay later coming in store?
Speaker BAnd what does that mean for the future of retail?
Joe LaheslowYeah, it's been a slow roll with by now, pay later, making the transition from the e comm checkout experience to the physical store POS experience.
Joe LaheslowBut I saw a stat recently that said something like, I don't know, 15% to 20% of retailers already do some sort of BNPL in stores.
Joe LaheslowSo again, that's definitely a small percentage overall.
Joe LaheslowI think what I'm looking for here is it's going to be really interesting to see which retailers take Klarna and Adion up on this offer and just how it gets communicated in stores.
Chris WaltonRight.
Joe LaheslowI mean, I'm used to, we're all maybe used to the department, department store experience with the little thing about save 20% if you sign up for our store credit card at pos.
Joe LaheslowBut will it be giant signs saying pay in for throughout the stores that adopt this?
Joe LaheslowOr will it be more subtle and kind of if, you know, you know, just a little Karna branding for those shoppers who already are kind of working with the brand?
Joe LaheslowBut I mean, I think payment flexibility for shoppers is a good thing.
Joe LaheslowI think, you know, it kind of adds to the set of choices that somebody has while they're waiting to pay.
Joe LaheslowAnd for some shoppers, that'll probably be a good thing.
Joe LaheslowAnd for a lot of shoppers, they'll just keep breaking out their credit card or debit card or maybe even cash as they always did.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, Joe, I think that you bring up an important point, and I actually found some research.
Speaker BSo Marnie Shapiro, she's the vice president of global advertising and affiliate partnerships at Afterpay, they did a study, and they found that Gen Z is actually more likely to use buy now, pay later than they are credit cards.
Speaker BSo I think you're right in.
Speaker BYou know, how are they going to message this at checkout?
Speaker BAnd how are they going to bring in that next generation of shopper?
Speaker BBecause they're offering something like this, especially as Gen Z is also going to be the highest paid spending power.
Speaker BThey will have the highest paid spending power in human history.
Speaker BAnd by 2030.
Speaker BSo just five, a little over five years from now, once that Gen Z generation has really come into the workforce, they will account for almost half of total spending.
Speaker BSo I think when you look at what Adian and Klarna are doing here and how they're setting themselves up for success in the future, you got to follow the money, as Chris would say.
Speaker BAnd I think this move is setting retailers up to do just that.
Speaker BBut, Chris, I'll let you.
Speaker BOh, go ahead, Joe.
Speaker BYeah, jump in.
Joe LaheslowI think another way of looking at it is that sort of next generation of omnichannel or unified commerce story that everybody is talking about these days, about just making the customer experience when you're in a store as consistent with online as possible.
Speaker BGreat point.
Joe LaheslowRetailers being excited about this or interested in this, because it is another way to make those two experiences consistent and to be able to say to somebody who shops your brand online, oh, you can now use the same payment method that you like when you come visit us in stores.
Joe LaheslowSo I think it kind of helps with that unification of the two sides.
Speaker BThat's such a great point, Joe.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, I had not even thought about that until you just said that.
Speaker BBut, yeah, it's totally, you're totally, like, leaving consumers, consumers right now in, in kind of the lurch potentially when they're in store, when you want them to have the most seamless shopping experience possible, and, you know, then you're making them go online to order something so that they can get installment financing like that.
Speaker BThat's a very disjointed experience if that's, if that's where these retailers are at.
Speaker BBut, Chris, I'll give you the last word here.
Chris WaltonYeah, I mean, I got a couple thoughts here.
Chris WaltonLike, actually, this, one of the reasons I loved one of this is this, this topic is one of the reasons I love doing this show because Joe particularly made me think of something that I never thought about.
Chris WaltonLike why haven't we seen a retailer, you know, brand its own BNPL service in partnership with one of these companies?
Chris WaltonLike, right.
Chris WaltonWhy isn't that included in the e commerce checkout?
Chris WaltonAnd why aren't they bringing that in store?
Chris WaltonAnd you have to think that's probably going to happen at some time, at some point, if you look at the history of retail for the past 30 or 40 years, because that's already happened via credit Cardinal.
Chris WaltonSo that's an interesting topic that I've never, ever given headspace before.
Chris WaltonSo thank you for that, Joe.
Chris WaltonWell done, my friend.
Chris WaltonBut the other point I'd make is I actually think this headline is in the running for retail headline of the year.
Chris WaltonWhen you think about it in terms of the overall long term impact that this is going to have on changing consumer behavior and how we shop a retail store.
Chris WaltonAnd the number I would, the statistic, I would point out from the article that I think keys into that is 5%.
Chris Walton5% is the number I want people to remember, because that is the percentage of all e commerce transactions that the CNBC article reports comes via Klarna's BNPL service.
Chris Walton5%.
Chris WaltonOkay.
Chris Walton5% of all e commerce transactions are coming from Klarna's BMPL service.
Chris WaltonThat's a pretty big number on its own.
Chris WaltonAnd remember, e commerce, what, 20% of all retail sales?
Chris WaltonSo 5% of 20% is already pretty big.
Chris WaltonBut what's bigger is x percent of the 80% that's still out there in physical retail.
Chris WaltonAnd it's going to come at some point, because BNPL expands people's wallets and gives them the ability to pay on interest free installments.
Chris WaltonThere's no reason not to use it relative to a credit card, if you can.
Chris WaltonSo therefore, it's a huge, huge move from both Karna and Adian that we're going to see play dividends over time.
Speaker BOh, yeah, Chris, like, you got me thinking.
Speaker BRemember when we talked to Alvier about this kind of concept, too?
Speaker BAbout, like, there is so much opportunity here.
Speaker BYeah, you're right.
Speaker BThe retailers having their own buy now, pay later program with the.
Speaker BWith a provider like Klarna or somebody else like that.
Speaker BThat in itself is another huge area of opportunity when we're going to see so much growth in this.
Chris WaltonYeah, and I don't understand the payment space that.
Chris WaltonWell, that's never a segment of retail that I got that exposed to.
Chris WaltonBut you have to wonder what.
Chris WaltonWhat's holding that up?
Chris WaltonIs it just the traditional, like, retailers are scared to try things new?
Chris WaltonTry new things?
Chris WaltonExcuse me.
Chris WaltonOr, you know, or is there some other, you know, mechanical thing that holds it up with how payments are conducted?
Chris WaltonBut anyone out there that knows, please, let us chime in and let us know your thoughts.
Speaker BAll right, let's move on to the lightning round, you two.
Speaker BJoe, you get all the questions today.
Speaker BSince you're our special guest, we're going to hit you with question number one first.
Speaker BMeta's Mark Zuckerberg just announced new AR glasses in partnership with Ray ban that will retail at $299.
Speaker BWhat are your thoughts on the success of this product, Joe?
Speaker BWill they make you Runway ready, or should people run away?
Joe LaheslowThat really does put me on the spot if I have to pick one or the other.
Joe LaheslowBut I guess it feels weird to say this about an AR product, but Runway ready would be my take on it.
Speaker BCool.
Joe LaheslowTwo problems with augmented reality.
Joe LaheslowVirtual reality things.
Joe LaheslowThat one, they make you look like a doofus.
Joe LaheslowAnd two, there's not really anything to do with them.
Joe LaheslowAnd I really think this may be the first product I've seen that solved that first problem.
Joe LaheslowYou don't look like a doofus when you're wearing them.
Joe LaheslowSo the bigger question is, like, once people have them, will there be cool things that they can do or useful things that they can, they can do with them?
Joe LaheslowThe answer on that is maybe, but at least you won't look like a doofus when you wear them.
Speaker BThanks for bringing doofus back into our vocabulary, Joe.
Chris WaltonGood word for the lexicon, or at least for me.
Chris WaltonThey'll make me look more like a doofus.
Chris WaltonJoe is what I would say, probably.
Chris WaltonAll right, target released a new sneaker that, that will reportedly grow with you.
Chris WaltonGrow, sorry.
Chris WaltonYes, grow with you.
Chris WaltonAnd.
Chris WaltonThat's right, grow with you as your feet get larger.
Chris WaltonAside from footwear.
Chris WaltonFootwear.
Chris WaltonHaving trouble today?
Chris WaltonAside from footwear, Joe, what other clothing item would you most want to grow with you?
Joe LaheslowI don't know.
Joe LaheslowI feel like we live in an era of that.
Chris WaltonRight.
Joe LaheslowI mean, they already make men's trousers with enough elastic in the waistband that those grow with you.
Joe LaheslowA little bit of hats have adjustable brims.
Joe LaheslowNot that my head has really changed size.
Chris WaltonGreat point.
Joe LaheslowGreat point in the last couple of years.
Joe LaheslowBut I think it's such an interesting thing.
Joe LaheslowI mean, feet are very delicate objects, and who knows how well these growing shoes will actually work.
Joe LaheslowBut the thing in that news piece that really got me was about people whose feet just happen to be two different sizes, so they have to buy two pairs of shoes when they buy shoes.
Joe LaheslowAnd even that just feels like it's going to make their lives a lot better if these things work as promised.
Chris WaltonSo did you give an answer, Joel?
Chris WaltonI'm not sure you did.
Joe LaheslowI may have just skipped over that, because I'm honestly, nothing on me is really changed size.
Joe LaheslowThankfully, I'm shrinking, actually.
Joe LaheslowSo maybe my answer is shirts and jackets that can get smaller with me as I get older and therefore shrink.
Speaker BOh, my God.
Speaker BThe opposite of, like, the kids.
Speaker BJackets that expand, you know, like, Joe just wants them to retract.
Speaker BWe would like to retract.
Joe LaheslowI was five years ago, and now I'm five eight.
Speaker BAll right, let's go to question number three.
Speaker BJoe.
Speaker BUnited Airlines and Air France are adding Starlink Wi Fi to their fleets.
Speaker BAnd according to the airlines, the speed will be so strong that passengers will be able to stream videos and potentially even take Zoom calls.
Speaker BWhat would you be willing to give up on a flight for reliable high speed Internet beverage service or legroom.
Joe LaheslowBeverage.
Speaker BService you're fine with, I think I would tend to agree with you.
Speaker BI feel like you can bring your.
Chris WaltonOwn drinks, my own water.
Joe LaheslowYou can't pack your own legroom.
Joe LaheslowI mean, I kind of dread that you're, when somebody next to me in coach on a long flight is on a Zoom call.
Joe LaheslowI relish the fact that those are currently, like, not technically feasible and or banned, but, but, but, I mean, there was an era when phones, they were, like, super expensive, you know, $5 phones on, on planes, and nobody really used them.
Joe LaheslowSo, I mean, maybe, maybe this is just back to the future, but, but I guess.
Joe LaheslowI guess we're marching towards that era of Zoom calls on films.
Chris WaltonOh, my God, that's gonna be terrible.
Chris WaltonI'm gonna hate that.
Chris WaltonAll right, last one.
Chris WaltonA Bridgerton ball experience in Detroit is being hailed as a scam reminiscent of what transpired with a Willy Wonka event recently in the UK.
Chris WaltonWhat yet untapped entertainment experience would you most want to be turned into retail tainment, Joe.
Joe LaheslowThis one is super challenging.
Joe LaheslowPeople are already doing Star Trek, right?
Joe LaheslowSo can I say it?
Joe LaheslowI love the science fictiony world of the Federation where everybody's happy and things just work, and we have transporters and replicators.
Joe LaheslowI would love to go to a Star Trek experience.
Joe LaheslowThat'd be probably my first choice.
Chris WaltonSo you're a Trekkie, Joe.
Joe LaheslowThat's what you're telling us of the various stars like Stargate, Star wars, and Star Trek?
Joe LaheslowI'm a Star Trek person.
Joe LaheslowThere's Stargate in there.
Chris WaltonThat's a good, that's the first one you said Stargate, Star Trek, and Star wars.
Chris WaltonVery nice.
Chris WaltonThat, that gives us some keen insight into who you are, Joe, so thank you for that.
Chris WaltonAll right, well, that closes us out.
Chris WaltonHappy birthday today to Lorraine Braco, Avery books of Star, Star Trek fame as well, Joe.
Chris WaltonWow, what a coincidence.
Chris WaltonAnd to the man, deep space nine.
Chris WaltonWhat's that?
Joe LaheslowDeep space nine, right?
Joe LaheslowYeah, right.
Chris WaltonDeep space nine.
Joe LaheslowYeah.
Chris WaltonI don't know.
Chris WaltonYou told me.
Chris WaltonI'm not sure.
Chris WaltonAnd also, to the man who is so one of a kind that he goes by one single word that is both a noun and a verb.
Chris WaltonThe great Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, aka Steve.
Chris WaltonI know youre all waiting for it.
Chris WaltonAnd remember, if you can only read or listen to one retail blog in the business, make it omnitalk.
Chris WaltonThe only retail media outlet run by two former executives from a current top ten Us retailer.
Chris WaltonOur fast five podcast is the quickest, fastest rundown of all the week's top news, and our daily newsletter, the retail daily minute, tells you all you need to know each day to stay on top of your game as a retail executive, and also regularly features special content, content that is exclusive to us and that Ann and I take great pride in doing just for you.
Chris WaltonThanks, as always, for listening in.
Chris WaltonPlease remember to like and leave us a review wherever you happen to listen to your podcast or on YouTube.
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Chris WaltonAnd so, until next week, on behalf of all of us at Omnitalk, be careful out there.