seamusz wrote:
50,000 bucks is pennys to Walmart. They use silly little charity program to put on a friendly front, while they gut a community from the inside out.
Yes, it is pennies to WalMart, but they gave SOMETHING! A lot of companies don't even do that much, and the $50,000 doesn't count funds raised from the Golf Scramble, Relay for Life, the funding drive for the Senior Citizen center, etc, etc. That 50 grand was just out of the store's profit sharing pool..
seamusz wrote:
probably due to tatoos up and down their arms and a face full of metal.
Unless you work third shift, WalMart won't hire you with any piercings other than ears, and forget about most visible tattoos. The dress code forbids facial piercings, most visible tattoos, and a lot of other fun stuff..
seamusz wrote:
As far as the price matching goes, heres the way I see it. Price matching is a gimmick for large companies to get as many shoppers in their store as possible. Many of them will offer common, inexpensive products at a price below their cost, cause they know that if they can lure people in with cheap prices, they will pick up the rest of their stuff there too.
That is VERY true.. You are, like, 1300% correct there. The same can be said for pretty much ever SALE that has ever existed, though (save "Clearance" sales)..
seamusz wrote:
they aren't in buisness to get rid of their competition (unlike Walyworld), they are in buisness to make a living.
One REALLY good way to make a living is to out do your competition. If you outdo them enough, they lose, you win.. It's just a good business idea. Maximize your profit. Keep your shareholders (or employees or family members, or whatever rich)
seamusz wrote:
Some do well, others survive, others fail. But this is usually due to inability, rather than impossibility.
That's just life.. And it is not impossible to compete and survive.. You just have to be good at what you do.. Offer something WalMart doesn't, and you're set. It's not as hard as anti-WalMart people would have you believe.
I am glad that your friend has made it and profited from a Walmart... he can count himself in the vast minority.
seamusz wrote:
I personaly do not think that Walmart thrives on capitalism, my opinion is that they thrive on a pressured monopoly. I wonder what would happen if people stopped shopping where they could save a buck, and started shopping where they got good quality, and personal service... I bet it would make a bigger difference than you would guess.
Yeah, it would make a big difference, but who's gonna spend more of their hard earned money than they have to? I mean, if I can save 15-20% of my grocery budget buying the same things at WalMart that I would buy at the corner market, I'm going to. My money wasn't easy to come by...
As for Monopoly, I think that it is the inevitable result of capitalism.. The cream rises to the top and swallows up everything in its way. What happens afterwards is the scary part. After WalMart eliminates EVERYTHING not WalMart, are they gonna charge incredibly high prices because they can? I hope not..
Like I've said. I'm not a big fan of WalMart or other "Big Box" stores, but from a rationally thinking economic (well, thinking about MY economics, meaning my checking account) standpoint, I continue to shop there. I gotta squeeze every penny I can (I don't worry about having enough money to pay bills or anything, but perhaps I'm living beyond my means a bit..).
seamusz wrote:
btw, the Walmart in China joke was very funny, Ill have to remember
Glad you liked it. My supervisor in Store Planning said that to me.. He was one of those starched shirts from Arkansas.. He wasn't really wanting to expand too far internationally, but I guess that goes without saying.