A Brief History of Walmart
英语小组
HistoryThe birth of discount retailingMost people think discount retailing began in 1962 – the year that Kmart, Target, and Walmart first opened. But actually, the chain of variety stores Sam Walton owned during the 1950s faced stiffcompetition from many regional discount stores.1962 – Walmart beginsBefore opening Walmart, Sam traveled the country studying everything he could about discount retailing. He became convinced American consumers wanted a new type of store. Trusting his vision, Sam and his wife Helen put up 95 percent of the money for the first Walmart store in Rogers, Ark.1972 – Walmart goes publicDiscounters such as Kmart quickly expanded in the 1960s, while Sam only had enough money to build15 Walmart stores. In 1972, Walmart stock was offered for the first time on the New York Stock Exchange. With this infusion of capital, our company grew to 276 stores in 11 states by the end of thedecade.The 1980s – Walmart comes of ageIn 1983, the first Sam’s Club members-warehouse store opened. The first Supercenter opened in 1988, featuring a complete grocery, and 36 departments of general merchandise. By 1989, there were 1,402 Walmart stores and 123 Sam’s Club locations. Employment had increased tenfold. Sales had grown from$1 billion in 1980, to $26 billion.The 21st century – one of the most successful retailers in the world Today, 10,130 stores and club locations in 27 countries employ 2.2 million associates, serving more than 176 million customers a year. Our history is a perfect example of how to manage growth without losing sight of your values. Our most basic value has always been, and always will be, customer service.Sam’s secret — give your customers what they wantIn his autobiography, Sam said, "… if you think about it from the point o f view of the customer, you want everything: a wide assortment of quality merchandise; the lowest possible prices; guaranteed satisfaction;friendly, knowledgeable service; convenient hours; and a pleasant shopping experience. You love it when a store exceeds your expectations, and you hate it when a store inconveniences you, gives you ahard time, or pretends you're invisible."Corporate OfficeThe Walmart corporate office, located in Bentonville, Arkansas, was the originalWalmart general office warehouse before it was converted in the 1980s. Thecorporate campus has since then expanded to about 15 buildings and more than 11,000 associates (employees). Check out some of the areas below.Learn about our senior management, board of directors and corporate governance in our Investorssection.Corporate AreasGlobal Ethics OfficeThe Global Ethics Office is res ponsible for sustaining Walmart’s culture of integrity. This includes developing and upholding our policies for ethical behavior for all of our stakeholders everywhere weoperate.Ethical SourcingWalmart is taking Ethical Sourcing beyond compliance by collaborating with other retailers, brands, NGOs and government leaders to ensure the products we sell are produced in a socially responsibleway.CultureMr. Sam’s valuesWe’re known around the world as the company that helps our cust omers save money so they can live better. We’re also well known for our unique corporate culture. Sam Walton built our business on values and morals. Those rules and customs have helped us become one of the world’s most admiredcompanies.RespectAt the core of every one of our rules and customs is the basic value of respect – for the customer, associates, and suppliers. It’s our focus for building relationships. It helps us serve the communities in which we live, and build a business committed to excellence.Learn about our cultureOpen DoorOur management believes open communication is critical to understanding and meeting our associates’ and our customers’ needs. Associates can trust and rely on the open door; it's one of the most importantparts of our culture.Sundown RuleObserving the Sundown Rule means we do our best to answer requests by the close of business on the day we receive them. Whether it's a request from a store across the country or a call from down the hall, we do our very best to give each other and our customers same-day service. We do this by combining our efforts and depending upon each other to get things done.Grass Roots ProcessSam’s philosophy lives on today in Walmart’s Grass Roots Process, our formal way of capturingassociates’ ideas, suggestions and concerns.3 Basic Beliefs & ValuesOur unique culture has helped make Walmart one of the world’s most admired companies. Since Sam Walton opened Walmart in 1962, our culture has rested on three basic beliefs. We live out these beliefs each day in our interactions with our customers and each other.10-Foot RuleThe 10-foot Rule is one of our secrets to customer service. During his many store visits, Sam Walton encouraged associates (employees) to take this pledge with him: "I promise that whenever I come within10 feet of a customer, I will look him in the eye, greet him, and ask if I can help him."Servant LeadershipSam Walton believed that effective leaders do not lead from behind their desks. "It's more important than ever that we develop leaders who are servants, who listen to their partners – their associates – in a way that creates wonderful morale to help the whole team accomplish an overall goal,” Sam said.TeamworkSam Walton, our founder, believed in the power of teamwork. As our stores grow and the pace of modern life quickens, that philosophy of teamwork has only become more important over the years.Walmart CheerDon't be surprised if you hear our associates shouting this enthusiastically at yourlocal Walmart store. It's our cheer, and while it might not sound serious, we take itseriously. It's one way we show pride in our company.Associate StoriesRead inspiring stories from associates (employees) that carry out our beliefs and values every day.WalmartWalmart Discount StoresOur founder, Sam Walton, opened his first Walmart discount store in 1962. Today, there are 629 stores offering a pleasant and convenient shopping experience across the United States. The size of an average store is 108,000 square feet. Each store employs about 225 associates.Our stores feature wide, clean, brightly-lit aisles and shelves stocked with a variety of quality,value-priced general merchandise, including:•Family apparel•Healthy and beauty aids•Electronics•Toys•Lawn and garden items•Jewelry•Automotive products•Home furnishings•Hardware•Sporting goods•Pet supplies•HousewaresWalmart SupercentersOur Supercenters were developed in1988 to meet the growing demand forconvenient, one-stop family shoppingfeaturing our famous Every Day Low Prices. We save you time and money by combining a full grocery and our general merchandise under one roof.There are 3,029 Supercenters nationwide, and most are open 24 hours. Supercenters average 185,000 square feet and employ about 350 or more associates.Supercenter groceries feature:•Bakery goods•Meat and dairy products•Fresh produce•Dry goods and staples•Beverages•Deli foods•Frozen foods•Canned and packaged goods•Condiments and spices•Household suppliesMost Supercenters also have many specialty shops such as:•Vision center•Tire & Lube Express•Brand-name restaurants•Portrait studio andone-hour photo center•Pharmacy•Health clinic•Employment Agency•Hair salon•BankWalmart Neighborhood MarketsWalmart Neighborhood Markets offer a quick and convenient shopping experience for customers who need groceries, pharmaceuticals, and general merchandise all at our famous Every Day Low Prices.First opened in 1998, there are now 168 Walmart Neighborhood Markets, each employing about 95associates. A typical store is about 42,000 square feet.Walmart Neighborhood Markets feature a wide variety of products, including:•Fresh produce•Meat and Dairy products•Frozen foods•Dry goods and staples•Health and beauty aids•Stationery and paper goods•Drive-through pharmacy•Deli foods•Bakery items•Canned and packaged goods•Condiments and spices•Pet supplies•Household supplies•One-hour photo centerWalmart Express StoresThe first two Walmart Express test stores opened in June 2011 in Northwest Arkansas.Walmart Express has been created to offer low pricesevery day in a smaller format store that providesconvenient access for fill-in and stock-up shopping trips.The stores give Walmart flexibility in serving customers, especially in rural and urban areas whereshoppers maynot have access to larger stores.The Walmart Express test stores average 15,000-square-feet and offer groceries and general merchandise, including an assortment of fresh produce, dairy and meat, dry goods, consumables, health and beauty aids, over-the-counter medicines and more. Many havepharmacies as well.Founded in 2000, brings the convenience, great merchandise selection, friendly service and Every Day Low Prices of your neighborhood Walmart to the Internet. features more than 1,000,000 products, plus easy-to-use music downloads and digital one-hour photo services. And we’re adding more great products every day.During the holidays, features many special offers available only online. It’s also a convenient place to find out about our exciting in-store holiday specials.With our innovative Site to Store program, you can purchase items at and then have themshipped free to your local store for pickup.Awards & RecognitionOver the past four decades, Walmart has been proud to serve the communities where we operate. We’ve received numerous awards for our work, which would not be possible without the support of our customers, associates and communities around the world. Here is just a sampling of our recentrecognition:2011•Walmart named #2 company in "Top 50 Organizations" for MulticulturalBusiness Opportunities•Walmart's Leadership on the Move Series Named to the list of 2011 International Innovation inDiversity Awards by Profiles in Diversity Journal•Corporate Environmental Excellence for Walmart Canada - The International GLOBEFoundation•Top 50 Companies for Executive Women - National Association for Female Executives (NAFE) •Best Corporate Governance for Walmart de Mexico y Centroamerica - Euromoney •NGA Public-Private Partnership Award - National Governors Association •Top Organizations for Multicultural Business Opportunities - 2010•2010 Corporation of the Year - United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce •No. 1 Corporation in America for Providing Multicultural Business Opportunities - Diversity•Top Companies for Executive Women - National Asssociation for Female Executives (NAFE) •Top 50 Companies for Latinas - Latina Style Magazine•Top 50 Out Front Companies for Diverse Managers to Work - Diversity MBA magazine•Best for Vets: Employers 2010 - Military Times EDGE•Top 20 Companies for Leadership - BusinessWeek•One of five finalists for the "Corporate Stewardship" award presented by U.S. Chamber ofCommerce's Business Civic Leadership Center (BCLC)•Hurun Corporate Social Responsibility TopFifty 2010 (Walmart China) - Hurun Report •Champion of Energy Efficiency - American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE)•40 Best Companies for Diversity –Black Enterprise Magazine.• C.K. Prahalad Award for Global Sustainability Leadership (Walmart Brazil) - Corporate EcoForum (CEF)•Most Valuable Employers (MVE) for Military - •Gold Medal for International Corporate Achievement in Sustainable Development - WorldEnvironment Center•20 Best Companies for Multicultural Women - Working •Ranked #1 for Retail and #9 Overall "Most Innovative Companies 2010" - Fast Company•Donor of the Year - Feeding America•(Argentina) Manpower Argentina Partner in Inclusion Activities Award - Manpower Argentina,for our diversity programs and hiring practices•(Brazil) C.K. Prahalad Award for Global Sustainability Leadership - Corporate Eco Forum (CEF) •(Brazil) Elected as one of the 20 model companies in sustainability for third consecutive year -Sustainability Guide Exame magazine•Premio Ciclo de Melhor Case de 2010 - focused on Logistics, the prize has recognized the case of Sustainability of Walmart Brazil as the best one in 2010.•(Brazil) Premio de Responsabilidade Social e Sustentabilidade no Varejo - Fundacao GetulioVargas•(Brazil) 4 Premio Brasil de Meio Ambiente - Jornal do Brasil, for Walmart's SustainabilityProgram in Brazil•(Brazil) Premio Aberje - Brazilian Association for Business Communication, for Building theSupply Chain of the Future•(Brazil) Daniela de Fiori, vice president of Walmart Brazil nominated for Premio Claudia -Claudia magazine•(Canada) Retail Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Award for Environment - Retail Council of Canada, for its environmental demonstration store in Burlington, Ontario •(Canada) Large Chain In-Store Retail Merchandising Award - Retail Council of Canada, for its Project Patio program, an innovative and multi-channel merchandising and marketing initiative to help customers create outdoor living solutions at unbeatable prices •(Canada) Excellence in Retailing: Retail Corporate Social Responsibility Award - Retail Councilof Canada•(Canada) Employer of the Year - Windsor Women•(Canada) Mobious Environmental Award, for outstanding environmental achievements andbeing a role model in the province of Nova Scotia•(Canada) Hermes Creative Award, for the communications strategy and execution of theWalmart Green Business Summit•(Canada) Passport to Prosperity Employer Champion Award - Provincial Partnership Council •(Canada) Canada's Ideal Employer - Universum•(Canada) Named to Mississauga's Top 100 Employers list - Mississauga Business Times •(Canada) Lieutenant Governor's Persons with Disabilities Employer Partnership Award •(Canada) 10 Most Admired Corporate Cultures, platinum winner - Waterstone Human CapitalInc.•(Central America) Most Admired Multinational Company in Central America - Estrategia &Negocios2009•2009 Waste Reduction Awards Program Winner - California Integrated Waste ManagementBoard•President’s Trophy – American Trucking Association (ATA) •Ranked #3 out of 35 other retailers - Q3 2009 Covalence ethical reputation index •Ranked #1 Consumer Staples Company (scored 89 out of a possible 100) - Carbon DisclosureProject (CDP) 2008 report•Green Power Leadership Award (California and Texas facilities) - Environment ProtectionAgency (EPA)•Corporate Energy Conservation, Energy and Environment Award - Aspen Institue •2009 Waste Reduction and Recycling Award - City of San Diego Environmental ServicesDepartment•2009 Green Choice Award –Natural Health Magazine•Commercial/Industrial Recycling Award – The Delaware, Knox, Marion Morrow (DKMM) SolidWaste District of Ohio•2009 Sustainability Excellence Award - Voluntary Interindustry Commerce Solutions (VICS)2008•Top 50 Companies for People with Disabilities –CAREERS and the disabled magazine •Spirit of Excellence Award – American Bar Association•Corporate Diversity Honor Roll –Latin Business Magazine •Outstanding Business Recycler Award–Alaskans for Litter Prevention and Recycling •Best 15 Companies for Diversity Marketing –Black Enterprise Magazine•Top Companies for Multicultural Women –Working Mother Magazine•Top 50 Companies for Latinas –LatinaStyle Magazine•Top Companies for Female Executives – National Association of Female Executives•Top Companies for Asian Americans –Asian Enterprise Magazine•Top 50 Employers of Women Engineers –Woman Engineer Magazine•Top 50 for Supplier Diversity –HispanicTrends Magazine•Top Organizations for Multicultural Business – •Corporate Partner of the Year – National Association of Women Business Owners•Best Green Companies –Working Mother Media•Top 100 Employers for the Class of 2008 –The Black Collegian•50 Best Companies for Latinas– Latina Style•National Association of Container Distributors Achievement Award •Coal Combustion Products Partnership Award“2008 Special Recognition for Innovation”•Corporate Governance and Climate Change (Ranked #1 among big box retailers and #7 overall)- Ceres•Ranked #8 among retailer/consumer companies (scored 87 out of a possible 100) in the CarbonDisclosure Project (CDP) 2008 report•Sustainable Energy Initiative of the Year - Platts Global Energy Award2007•Top 50 Companies for Diversity –DiversityInc., 2007•50 Best Companies for Latinas –Latina Style•Top 10 U. S. Companies for Asian-Americans –Asian Enterprise, 2007, 2006, 2005 and 2004 •Best Company for Multicultural Women –Working Mother, 2007•Diversity Elite 60 –Hispanic Business, 2007•Spirit of Excellence Corporate Award – American Bar Association, 2007•Top Companies for Female Executives – National Association of Female Executives, 2007 •Evangeline Booth Award for excellence in corporate philanthropy – The Salvation Army, 2007 •Top 50 Companies for African Americans –Black MBA Magazine, 2007 and 2006•Seafood Champion Award - Seafood Choice Alliance•10th best company for carbon reporting of all the S&P500 - ranked by Carbon DisclosureProject (CDP)•No Dirty Gold award - •Ranked #1 in the most sustainability conscious corporation category - Women's Wear Daily •"Superior Environmental Performer Award" Cleantech Leadership Award - EPA Smartway •EPA Smartway “Superior Environmental Performer Award”Cleantech Leadership Award.2006•40 Best Companies for Diversity –Black Enterprise, 2006•Top 50 Companies for Latina –Latina Style Magazine, 2006•Corporate of the Year Award – Native American Chamber of Commerce, 2006 •Top 10 Companies for African Americans –DiversityInc., 2006•Multicultural Prism Award –Minority in Business Magazine, 2006 •Chairman’s Award for Walmart’s exemplary commitment to energy ef ficiency - Alliance to SaveEnergy.•International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC): Outstanding Retailer of the Year for itsrecycling effortsSlag Cement Association Project of the Year•Coal Combustion Products Partnership Environmental Achievement Award.•Cleantech Leadership Award.•EPA Smartway Excellence Award.2005•Top 50 Vendor Programs for Latinos –Hispanic Magazine, 2005 •Top 10 Companies for Hispanic Communities – Hispanic Association on CorporateResponsibility Corporate Index, 2005•Top 50 Companies for Diversity –DiversityInc., 2005•Top 100 Companies for providing the most opportunities for Hispanics –Hispanic Magazine,2005 and 2004•Award of Excellence–National Arbor Day Societies BUILDING WITH TREES, 2003 & 2005.2004•Number One Most Admired Company in America –FORTUNE magazine, 2004 and 2003 •Corporate Patriotism Award – Employer for Guard and Reserve organization, 2004•Top Corporation for Multicultural Business Opportunities – , 2004 •Top Family Friendly Companies for Hispanics –Vista magazine, 2004•Latin America’s 25 Most-Respected Employers –Latin Trade Reader, 2004•Top 100 Diversity Employer –Black Collegian, 2004•Top U.S. Companies for People with Disabilities – poll sponsored by CAREERS & the disAbled,2004•Best Place to Work in the United Kingdom (ASDA)–FORTUNE magazine, 2004 •Best Retailer to Work for in Canada (Walmart Canada) –Report on Business magazine, 2004and 20032003•Award of Excellence – National Arbor Day Societies BUILDING WITH TREES, 2003 & 20052002•Ron Brown Award for Corporate Leadership and outstanding achievement in employeerelations and community initiatives – The Conference Board, 2002LogisticsAn inside look of a Walmart distribution centerFrom there — to hereLogistics —it’s how we get our products from the manufacturer to our store shelves. It’s the heart of the Walmart operation. We move millions of products to customers each day of the year. And we’re using the latest environmentally-sustainable practices in the process.Distribution CentersWe have one of the largest private distribution operations in the world. We have more than 40 Regional Distribution Centers. Each one is over 1 million square feet in size. They operate 24/7 to keep our fleet of tractors and trailers rolling. Inside each DC, more than five miles of conveyor belts move over 9,000 different lines of merchandise. Each DC supports between 75 and 100 stores within a 250-mile radius.And more distribution centersThere are also distribution centers for specific product categories such as grocery, jewelry, pharmacy, apparel/shoes, and for Sam’s Club. The DotCom Distribution Centers, which support the online operation and the Site to Store program, is the fastest growing segment of our distribution network.Learn more about our logistics teamWalmart HeartWalmart Heart is a volunteer program that a Walmart truck driver started to help people with chronic medical conditions. Drivers make individuals “honorary Walmart drivers,” visit their homes and give themthe ride of a lifetime in a Walmart truck.Celebrating Our Truck DriversWe have the best truck drivers in the country and they play a big part in our company’s success.。
A-Brief-History-of-English
A-Brief-History-of-EnglishA Brief History of EnglishN o understanding of the English language can be very satisfactory without a notion of the history of the language. But we shall have to make do with just a notion. The history of English is long and complicated, and we can only hit the higl1 spots.不了解英语的历史很难真正掌握这门语言,然而对此我们只能做到略有所知。
因为英语的历史既漫长又复杂,我们只能抓住其发展过程中的几个关键时期。
At the time of the Ro1nan Empire, the speakers of what was to become English were scattered along the northern coast of Europe. They spoke a dialect of Low German. More exactly, they spoke several different dialects, since they were several different tribes. The names given to the tribes who got to England are Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, who are referred to collectively as Anglo-Saxons4.在罗马帝国时期,散居在欧洲北部沿海的居民说一种西部德语的方言,这就是英语的前身。
更确切地说,由于隶属于不同的部落,他们说的是几种不同的方言。
沃尔玛企业介绍(英文)
1. History 2. The founder 3. The Wal-Mart Culture
A part of history of Wal-Mart
In 1962:Sam Walton set up the first Wal-Mart fair-price shop.
In 1972:The share of Wal-Mart was listed in New York and its value turned over 4900 times during the 25 years.
In 1994:Wal-Mart purchased 122 woolco stores in Canada.
A part of history of Wal-Mart
In 1996:Wal-Mart opened the first Chinese store in Shenzhen. Now in China ,there are 215 WalMart stores. In 1997: Wal-Mart saleroom first breakthough more than thousand billion dollars.
• The Founder of Wal-Mart: Sam Walton • If judged by appearance Sam Walton was a very ordinary man. He was raised in the Depression years, and served in the army during World War II. It was he, who from humble beginnings built the world's most admired retail organization. • Sam had a passion to compete and an appetite for adventure. He realized that Wal-Mart needed to do more than offer low prices to be successful - it also had to exceed customers' expectations for quality service. Sam devoted his life to expanding and improving upon this concept. He was also a good motivator of people, because he practiced what he preached. He remained guided by the old-fashioned principles of hard work, honesty, neighborliness and thrift. Even after his death in 1992, those principles continue to guide the company as it expands into other countries and cultures.
Wal-mart
Products
Wal-mart supermarket are slightly larger than the average supermarket area, each an average of about covers an area of 45000 square feet, operating product variety complete, whenever a family needed items can buy here, also known as "home shopping" at a time. From clothing, medicine, toys, all kinds of things for daily use, household electrical appliances, jewelry, cosmetics, to auto parts, small boats, and so on.
Thank you!
In 1997, Wal-mart's annual sales for the first time billions of dollars to 105 billion dollars. In 1999, has 1.14 million employees, became the world's largest private employer.
Catalogue
1.History 2.Products
3.Market
4.New Plan
History
In 1950,Sam Walton opened its first sale store. In 1962, Walton opened the first wal-mart grocery stores in Arkansas raj . In 1972, The company shares listed in New York, its value in the next 25 years (in 1999) to turn over 4900 times.
沃尔玛英语企业的介绍
The rank of Wal-Mart from top 500
2000: 2001: 2002: 2003: 2004: 2005: 2006: 2007: 2008: 2009:
2010: 2011:
Rank No.1: 8 times
Achievement in china
Wal-Mart entered China in 1996, opened the first Wal-Mart in Shenzhen Shopping Mall and Sam's Club stores since, after eight years of development, has opened 47 stores in 22 cities
In 1990: Wal-Mart became the biggest trades company in America.
In 1991: Wal-Mart opened the first overseas store in Mexico.
A part of history of Wal-Mart
The Wal-Mart Culture
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. was founded on principles developed by Sam Walton. These principles carried out every day by hardworking and friendly associates have created a unique corporate culture that is key to WalMart's competitive edge. The basic beliefs guiding Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
.关于沃尔玛超市的英文短文
.关于沃尔玛超市的英文短文How did a peddler of cheap shirts and fishing rods become the mightiest corporation in America?The short version of Wal-Mart’s rise to glory goes something like this:In 1979 it racked up a billion dollars in sales.By 1993 it did that much business in a we ek;by 2001 it could do it in a day.It’s a stunning tale -- one that propelled Wal-Mart from rural Arkansas,where it was founded in 1962,to the top of the Fortune 500 this year.Sam Walton,Wal-Mart’s founder,pushed sales growth relentlessly while squeezing costs with sophisticated information technology.He exhorted employees to sell better with the“ten-foot rule”(greet customers if they are that close).He was,in other words,an early evangelist for the first commandment of today’s economy:Service rules.Wal-Mart,in fact,is the first service company to rise to the top of the Fortune 500.When Fortune first published its list of the largest companiesin America in 1995,Wal-Mart didn’t even exist.That year General Motors was America’s biggest company,and in every year that followed,either GM or another mightyindustrial,Exxon,was NO.1.Wal-Mart’s achievement caps a bigger economic shift -- from producing goods to providing services.Manufacturing’s share of U.S.employment peaked in 1953,at 35%.It has been declining steadily since.In the decade that will end in 2010,the Bureau of Labor Statistics figures that goods-producing industries will create 1.3 million new jobs,compared to 20 million for service industries.To look at it another way,today there are about four times as many people working in service jobs as in other kinds ofjobs.And even within manufacturing,services are an increasingly large share of operations.As America got richer consumption got more complicated.With more income to throw around,peoplestarted spending more on services -- movies and travel,mortgages to buy houses,insurance to protect those houses,the occasional decadent weekend at a luxury hotel.Economists call this a shift in the demandpattern;Fortune calls it the main reason that 64 of this year’s top 100 are service companies.Over the next few years,only three of the ten fastest-growingoccupations(software engineers,nurses,and computer support)pay middle-class salaries.The rest could becalled,well,Wal-Mart kinds of jobs -- cashiers,retail assistants,food service,and so on.In short,the service economy is delivering more good jobs than ever before.。
2021-2022学年(初升高)暑假衔接高一英语能力测试卷(有答案)
初升高分班英语能力测试卷满分120分时间90分钟无论中考结果是好是坏,这个暑假你一定放肆的玩过,尽情的嗨过!没有学习压力的日子就像飞一样,轻松愉快让人无限留恋的假期就要结束了,面对全新的高中学习环境,你内心肯定会忐忑;尤其是开学的分班考试,你能依然所向披靡,永争第一吗?让我们提前准备方能续写辉煌!第一部分阅读(共两节,满分40分)第一节(共15小题;每小题2分,满分30分)A1.How much should you pay for the cookbook if you buy it next Monday?A.$11.B.$ 18.98.C.$ 22.D.$45.2.Which website should you visit to buy the best gift for a game lover?...3. What can you do with Custom Wizard Photo?A. Print your favorite photos.B. Learn skills of taking photos.C. Make a special family photo.D. Repair old photos.BTwo weeks ago, I took a trip to my friend's house in Serawai in Indonesia. My trip was full of unforgettable moments--great people, delicious food, new cultures. However, what left a deep impression onme was meeting up with my friend's dad, Fx. Ngawan. He is now working as an education supervisor (教育主管)in Sintang Regency.At our first meeting, he looked like an ordinary man with dark skin. As he mentioned that he used to be an English teacher, we discovered we were a match! I am an English teacher myself. More importantly, he is a language lover. During the talk, he often changed from one language to another such as Indonesian, English and Javanese. He is now fluent in at least 15 languages and most of them are local languages.He has to go all the way from Serawai sub-district (分区)to Sintang Regency by motorcycle, riding about 170 km to work. The trip can take six hours if the day is bright and sunny. However, it is not uncommon for him to spend three to seven days for the journey if the rainy season comes.Therefore, he has to stop at some villages if he can't continue the trip and meet up with people speaking so many different languages along the way.So, whenever he stops in a particular(特别的,独有的) village, he learns a different language. For him, learning languages helps him to connect with people.In our talk, he said learning languages is important. He hopes that the younger generation in Indonesia starts realizing that language can open the door to so many opportunities. Local languages are on the edge of Disappearance(消失,不见) because more people are leaving them behind. When people stop speaking the language, the knowledge and culture from that language will also disappear.4. What was the author's trip to his friend's house like?A. Hopeful.B. Moving.C. Creative.D. Wonderful.5. What does the author have in common with Ngawan?A. Being interested in different cultures.B. Being fluent in several languages.C. Being a language lover.D. Being an English teacher.6. What is the biggest benefit Ngawan gets from his long trip?A. He learns different cultures.B. He learns some languages.C. He makes many friends.D. He does much exercise.7. What does the last paragraph show?A. The importance of languages.B. The different local languages.C. The cultures language carries.D. The young's attitude to languages.CEach country may impress others with its own set of customs. Perhaps one of the most famous cases is Britain's love of tea.According to the BBC, the British drink over 60 billion cups of tea each year. The most popular tea type in the UK is black tea. It has a simple recipe(烹饪法)-find a cup, add a teabag, pour boiling water, add milk and sugar according to your taste, finish by stirring. Some people like to add milk before the boiling water but others prefer to add it after the boiling water. There was even a debate about it. Recently, American TikTok user, Sophie, put out her recipe of “British tea” in a video-microwave(用微波炉加热) cold water, add milk sugar and an instant (速溶的)teabag. The British said the method was “dead wrong".A Twitter u ser even wrote, “I would rather see tea poured into the Boston harbor than have this abomination.”As you can tell, tea is an important part of British life, whether they're having afternoon tea at a fancy hotel or drinking it in a takeaway cup. Since it first came to Britain in the mid-1600s from China, it has formed a unique(独特的) culture in the country.Kate Fox, a social scientist, notes in her book that teas get weaker as one's social rank goes up. On the contrary, one will take “builder's tea”,which is standard black tea that is made stronger and includes more milk and sugar.Although there are the discussions on what makes a perfect cup of black tea, the British can at least agree on the saying, “No matter what is happening in your life, you always of fer tea.”8. What is the argument about the recipe for black tea in Britain?A. What makes a perfect cup of black tea.B. Which kind of black tea is classic.C. How to boil the water.D. When to add milk.9. Which of the following can replace the underlined word “abomination” in Paragraph 3?A. sweet drinkB. strong drinkC. terrible drinkD. refreshing drink10.What is Kate Fox's opinion?A. Builder's tea is more popular with the upper class.B. Tea recipe can tell about one's social rank.C. Black tea is more popular with builders.D. Weaker tea is much healthier.11.What is the best title of the text?A. The benefits of black teaB. A brief history of British teaC. Stir tea into lifeD. Explore history from a tea recipeDGlobal honey bee populations are on the decrease, which puts the world's food supply under pressure (压力). But now technology could help beekeepers overcome the problem. You might think of beekeepers as completely honey producers, but they are part of a growing trade where they rent their hives (蜂巢)to the farmers who need bees to pollinate (对···授粉)their cropsThe bee industry provides pollination services worth tens of billions of dollars, and is key to the production of a huge range of crops and fruits However, climate change, mass agriculture and the use of chemicals in farming are damaging the world's bees. Beekeepers in one country lost 44% of their managed places in 2019, according to a study from a famous university.Luckily, technology start-ups are developing to reduce bee losses and improve bee health. Among them is Ireland's ApisProtect, which has set up a sensor (传感器)that warns beekeepers if there is a problem in their hives.The small Internet-connected sensor is placed near the beehive and measures temperature, sound and movement. Information from the sensor is sent through the cloud to ApisProtect's HQ in Cork, Ireland, where the information is studied and then sent back to the beekeeper."Using our sensor, beekeepers are going to be able to keep many, many more hives for the same number of workers, and the same amount of spend on things like feed," says the company's founder and CEO, Fiona Edwards Murphy. “They're going to be able to obviously increase the amount o f pollination and honey output.”Since receiving $1.8 million from international communities in 2018, the company has been working with 20 beekeepers across the United States, Ireland, the United Kingdom and South Africa to observe the activities of up to 20 million honey bees. The information collected from the 400 smart sensor units is creating a statistic base of global bee health, powering more useful methods and better results.12. What will happen if the number of bees decreases?A. The climate will get warmer.B. Crop production will be reduced.C. The quality of honey will be influenced.D More chemicals will be used in agriculture.13.What can we learn from Paragraph 2?A. The cause of bee losses.B. The effect of the use of chemicals.C. Information about modern farming.D. The roles beekeepers play in agriculture.14.How does ApisProtect work?A. By giving warmings to beekeepers.B. By improving the quality of beehives.C. By changing the beehive temperatures.D. By keeping track of beekeepers' movements.15.What is the author's purpose in writing the text?A. To call on people to keep more bees.B. To show how to keep bees of high quality.C. To help beekeepers to produce more honey.D. To introduce new technology to reduce bee losses.第二节(共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。
上海外语教育出版社大学英语综合教程Unit 2 values
1.Respect for the individual Every associate's opinion is respected. 2.Service to the customer The customer is the boss. 3. Strive for excellence Wal-Mart associates share an exceptional
6.muddy: full of mud mud:soft and wet earth
v. muddy: make sth muddy
7. sigh: take a long deep breath that
can be heard,expressing sadness,tiredness,etc. e.g. She .
9.folk: people in general (esp. AmE) 10.get away with: do sth wrong or risky
without being caught or punished e.g. Although he made such a serious mistake, he was lucky enough to get away with it. 11.shell:bullet
Wal-Mart Quote
“All associates work for the customers
who buy our merchandise. In fact, the customers can fire everybody in our company. And they can do it by simply spending their money somewhere else. The greatest measure of our success is how well we please the customer, 'Our Boss'. Let's all support Aggressive Hospitality and have our customers leave 100% satisfied every day.”
【管理资料】沃尔玛英语企业介绍汇编
The rank of Wal-Mart from top 500
2000: 2001: 2002: 2003: 2004: 2005: 2006: 2007: 2008: 2009:
2010: 2011:
Rank No.1: 8 times
Achievement in china
Wal-Mart entered China in 1996, opened the first Wal-Mart in Shenzhen Shopping Mall and Sam's Club stores since, after eight years of development, has opened 47 stores in 22 cities
沃尔玛英语企业介绍
A part of history of Wal-Mart
In 1962:Sam Walton set up the first Wal-Mart fair-price shop.
In 1972:The share of Wal-Mart was listed in New York and its value turned over 4900 times during the 25 years.
In 1999:Wal-Mart became the largest private employer.
The Wal-Mart Culture
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. was founded on principles developed by Sam Walton. These principles carried out every day by hardworking and friendly associates have created a unique corporate culture that is key to WalMart's competitive edge. The basic beliefs guiding Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
沃尔玛英文简介
Wal-Mart firmly believes in local procurement. We recognize that by purchasing quality products, we can generate more job opportunities, support local manufacturing and boost economic development. Over 95% of the merchandise in our stores in China is sourced locally. We have established partnerships with nearly 20,000 suppliers in China. At Wal-Mart, we always work with our suppliers to grow together. In the August 2006 Supplier Satisfaction Survey published by Business Information of Shanghai, Wal-Mart ranked first across several supplier satisfaction indexes.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. was founded by American retail legend Sam Walton in Arkansas in 1962. Forty four years later, Wal-Mart serves more than 176 million customers per week. It is the world’s largest private employer and retailer with over 1.9 million associates worldwide and more than 6,800 stores in 14 countries.
沃尔玛百货公司英文简介PPT
THANKS
Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc
Sam Walton ,1962, Arkansas.
Wal-Mart
Walmart Discount Stores
Our founder, Sam Walton, opened his first Walmart discount store in 1962. Today, there are 750 stores offering a pleasant and convenient shopping experience across the United States.
Development of the store
After forty years of development, Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc has become the largest private employer and the world's largest retailer.
Adhere to the principles of corporate (企业坚持的原则)
Wal-Mart operations in China always aprovide more employment opportunities, support local manufacturing industry, promote local economic development. Currently, WalMart sales of products in China, more than 95% of local products. Wal-Mart now has nearly 20,000 suppliers to establish a cooperative relationship.
沃尔玛供应链管理
The goods were packed here according to the orders received from different stores and then directly sent to the respective customers.
20
Logistics Management…
Wal-Mart believed that it needed drivers who were committed and dedicated to customer service.
The company hired only experienced drivers who had driven more than 300,000 accident-free miles, with no major traffic violation.
But it continued its growth in the 1990s, focusing on overseas stores.
– 1992, Mexico (joint venture with Cifra) – 1994, Canada (acquired 122 Woolco stores
Walton gave up the job and decided to set up his own retail store.
He purchased a store franchise in Arkansas.
Offering significant discounts on prices, he became successful and acquired a second store in 3 years.
the_brief_history_of_the_UK
The consequences of the War
Norman Cavalier
Duke William
The Norman Conquest
In 1067, William started building the Tower of London, the great fortress which demonstrated his power and dominated the city of London.
Great Charter (Magna Carta)《大宪章》1215 In 1154 Henry II ascended the throne Henry II reformed the courts and the laws: introduced the jury system (陪审团制度) institutionalized common law John ascended the throne in 1199. He demanded feudal taxes and army service. King John was forced to sign the Magna Carta (大宪章) in 1215 under the press of the barons.
The shaping of the nation: The Norman Conquest
1.The early Settlers and the Celts
剑10阅读“ABriefHistoryofTea”逐题解析
剑10阅读“A Brief History of Tea”逐题解析本篇文章的1-8题是段落标题配对题什么是段落标题配对题?详解如下:1 将选择列表中的标题(i,ii,iii等)与文章段落(A,B,C等)进行正确匹配。
2 不会用到所有标题,即提供的选项多于所需。
3 任何一个标题都不能重复使用。
通过以上的简单介绍,咱们通过具体题目来进行具体分析Q1:Paragraph A主题句:The story of tea began in ancient China over 5,000 years ago.答案:viii A chance discovery解题:A段主要讲的神农一个偶然机会发现茶的一个传说,因此与chance discovery吻合。
Q2: Paragraph B关键句:tea in Japan has always been linked with Zen Buddihism答案:iv A connection between tea and religion解题:B段中心的意思就是茶和禅宗之间的联系,be linked with和connection同义表达。
Q3:Paragraph C主题句:Tea was elevated to an art form in the Japanese tea ceremony, in which supreme importance is given to making tea in ... manner possible.答案:x Tea-making as a ritual解题:ceremony和ritual是同义表达。
Q4:Paragraph D主题句:information concerning the then unknown beverage began to filter back to Europe答案:vi News of tea reached another continent解题:information和news是同义表达。
2020年SAT英语写作素材—山姆·沃顿
2020年SAT英语写作素材—山姆·沃顿Sam Walton(1918-)Contrary to popular belief, Sam Walton (the founder of Wal-Mart) was not from Arkansas. He was actually born in Kingfish, Oklahoma on March 29, 1918. He was raised in Missouri where he worked in his father's store while attending school. This was his first retailing experience and he really enjoyed it. After graduating from the University of Missouri in 1940, he began his own career as a retail merchant when he opened the first of several franchises of the Ben Franklin five-and-dime franchises in Arkansas.This would lead to bigger and better things and he soon opened his first Wal-Mart store in 1962 in Rogers, Arkansas. Wal-Mart specialized in name-brands at low prices and Sam Walton was surprised at the success. Soon a chain of Wal-Mart stores sprang up across rural America. Walton's management style was popular with employees and he founded some of the basic concepts of management that are still in use today. After taking the company public in 1970, Walton introduced his "profit sharing plan". The profit sharing plan was a plan for Wal-Mart employees to improve their income dependent on the profitability of the store. Sam Walton believed that "individuals don't win, teams do". Employees at Wal-Mart stores were offered stock options and store discounts. These benefits are commonplace today, but Walton was among the first to implement them. Walton believed that a happy employee meant happy customers and more sales.Walton believed that by giving employees a part of the company and making their success dependent on the company'ssuccess, they would care about the company.By the 1980s, Wal-Mart had sales of over one billion dollars and over three hundred stores across North America. Wal-Mart's unique decentralized distribution system, also Walton's idea, created the edge needed to further spur growth in the 1980s amidst growing complaints that the "superstore" was squelching smaller, traditional Mom and Pop stores. By 1991, Wal-Mart was the largest U.S. retailer with 1,700 stores. Walton remained active in managing the company, as president and CEO until 1988 and chairman until his death. He was awarded the Medal of Freedom shortly before his death.Walton died in 1992, being the world's second richest man, behind Bill Gates. He passed his company down to his three sons, daughter and wife. Wal-Mart Stores Incorporated (located in Bentonville, Arkansas) is also in charge of "Sams Club". Wal-Mart stores now operate in Mexico, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, South Korea, China and Puerto Rico. Sam Walton's visions were indeed successful.。
英文阅读:A__brief__history__of__the__fashion__show
英文阅读:A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE FASHION SHOW Fashion scholars have penned histories of the high heel, the corset, and the little black dress, but no one has yet written a definitive history of the fashion show. The omission is curious: The fashion show is not only the promotional linchpin of a multibillion-dollar industry, it was also central to the development of the American department store—and thus to the rise of American consumer culture. The problem may be that the fashion show, like any performative enterprise, is by nature ephemeral. Or perhaps it's that the fashion crowd, always in pursuit of the next thing, lacks the archival impulse: Why hash over yesterday's clothes? Whatever the reason, as Valerie Steele, chief curator and director of the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, told me: "The topic of fashion shows remains to find its historian."It is, however, possible to stitch together the tale of New York's semiannual Fashion Week, which commenced once again last Friday in the tents at Manhattan's Bryant Park. Fashion Week in its earliest incarnation was, in some sense, a bid to overthrow the sartorial tyranny of the French. According to Steele, the event got its start in 1943, when a well-known fashion publicist named Eleanor Lambert organized something called "Press Week." Lambert was a canny PR maven who recognized that it was a propitious moment for American fashion. Before World War II, American designers were thought to be reliant on French couture for inspiration. When the Germans occupied France in 1940, one of the ensuing calamities was that buyers, editors, and designers were unable to travel to Paris to see the few remaining shows, and the fashion world fretted—would American fashion founder without the influence of French couture?With Press Week, Lambert hoped to give editors a chance to see—and more important, write about—the work of American designers, who, freed up to create without the anxiety of French influence, were quietly making innovative strides with indigenous materials and techniques, writes Caroline Rennolds Milbank in New York Fashion: The Evolution of American Style. Ruth Finley, publisher of the Fashion Calendar (a pink-and-red schedule that the industry finds indispensable) was present at those early shows. As she tells it, Press Week was held alternately at the Pierre andPlaza Hotels. Journalists and editors stayed on-site, which meant there was none of the modern dashing between tents and taxiing around. (Buyers, a key constituent at today's shows, were in those days forced to visit the designers' showrooms for a look, Finley says.)Lambert's plan worked. As Milbank writes, magazines like Vogue and Harper's Bazaar, whose editors were besotted with French fashion, began to feature more work by American designers and, most crucially, to credit them by name. (Many supposedly "unknown" American designers had been working for years, but their clothing usually bore the label of the retailer for which they created.) American styles were praised as modern, streamlined, and flattering, and American ready-to-wear designers were finally garnering the respect previously reserved for European couturiers. Press Week, which continued through the late '50s, eventually featured work by designers like Bill Blass, Oscar de la Renta, Mollie Parnis, and Pauline Trigere.Long before Lambert entered the picture, however, there were fashion shows in America. William Leach writes in Land of Desire,his excellent study of the rise of capitalism, that in 1903, a New York City specialty store called Ehrich Brothers put on what was likely this country's first fashion show, in an effort to lure middle-class female customers into the store. By 1910, many big department stores, including Wanamaker's in Philadelphia and New York, were holding shows of their own. (American retailers had likely witnessed what were called "fashion parades" in Paris couture salons and decided to import the idea.) The events were an effective way to promote merchandise, and they improved a store's status in the eyes of its clientele: Showing couture gowns bought in Paris, or, more frequently, the store's own copies or adaptations of these garments was evidence of connoisseurship and good taste. The irony, of course, was that the stores emphasized the exclusivity of French couture, even as they made it—or some approximation thereof—available to a mass-market audience.By the 1920s, the fashion show had gone mainstream. Retailers throughout the country staged shows, often in a store's restaurant during lunch or teatime. These earlyshows were often more theatrical than those of today. They were frequently organized around themes—there were Parisian, Persian, Chinese, Russian, and Mexican shows, Leach notes—and often presented with narrative commentary. Wanamaker's 1908 show, Leach writes, was a tableau vivant styled to resemble the court of Napoleon and Josephine, and the models were escorted by a child done up as one of Napoleon's pages.The department-store shows were wildly popular, drawing crowds in the thousands. According to Leach, the throngs were so disruptive to city life that merchants in New York City and elsewhere were eventually required to obtain a license for shows using live models. In New York, police threatened to put an end to the shows altogether. Indeed, the phenomenon became so widespread that in 1950 Fairchild published a book titled How To Give a Fashion Show,which begins with an appeal to the executive assistant: "Have you ever been called into the boss's office at the end of a hectic day to be greeted with, 'Miss Gordon, I've been going over the figures of the ready-to-wear division today, and I've decided that what we need to pep them up is a fashion show. I'd like you to go to work on one immediately'?" And in 1954, Edna Woodman Chase—former editor of Vogue and organizer of the 1914 "Fashion Fete," an event to benefit the war-relief effort that is often (apocryphally) called the first fashion show—complained in her memoir about the ubiquity of the phenomenon: "Now that fashion shows have become a way of life … a lady is hard put to it to lunch, or sip a cocktail, in any smart hotel or store front from New York to Dallas to San Francisco without having lissome young things … swaying down a runway six inches above her nose."When, then, did the shows make their way to Bryant Park? During the '70s and '80s, American designers began to stage their own shows in lofts, clubs, and restaurants. According to Fern Mallis, vice president of IMG, the company that houses 7th on Sixth—the organization that produces New York's Olympus Fashion Week, as well as several other shows—the impetus for the event we are familiar with today was literally an accident. It was 1990 and Mallis, then executive director of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, was attending a Michael Kors show in aloft space in downtown Manhattan. When the bass started thumping, a piece of plaster came loose from the ceiling and fell onto the models as they went down the runway. As Mallis remembers it, the girls strutted on, but plaster also landed in the laps of writers Suzy Menkes and Carrie Donovan, while the rest of the crowd nervously searched for fire escapes. During another show in the early '90s, this one in a Soho loft space that was "packed to the rafters," a generator blew, leaving the crowd of editors and buyers in the dark. The audience waited for 30 minutes, holding cigarette lighters aloft as though swaying through a power ballad, until the generators were restored. It was then, Mallis says, that the fashion set said enough with small, unsafe spaces. "The general sentiment was, 'We love fashion but we don't want to die for it.' "As head of the CFDA, Mallis took up the cause and sought out a venue where all the shows could be held in a single space. Designers, she says, were reluctant to sign on; they worried that showing in a group setting would hamper their creativity. But they also realized it would allow their work greater visibility. After an experimental first run at the Macklow (now the Millennium) Hotel on 44th Street, the concept took off. Mallis then worked out a plan with Bryant Park to put up tents in the East and West Plazas. A year later, the Spring 1994 collections were sent down the runway, and Fashion Week as we know it began. The CFDA also created 7th on Sixth, a separate company with its own board, and this organization formalized a schedule, drew up a press list (which is harder to infiltrate than the Vanity Fair Oscar party), and sold sponsorship to various companies. Finally, Mallis says, the shows were "organized, centralized, and modernized." (Of course, as anyone who has braved the suffocating crush at Bryant Park knows, "hectic, chaotic, and frantic" seem more appropriate designations.)Fashion Week—like Press Week before it—helped American designers reach a more international audience, as it allowed editors, writers, and buyers from abroad to see the country's best work at a single time, in a single place. But even though it can feel these days like it's always Fashion Week, the average American woman is now more removed from the fashion show than ever. Of course, department stores still host shows on occasion, but they no longer draw throngs—most of us can now safelylunch without lissome models undulating past us (if we take lunch at all). Now, the fashion show belongs to Manhattan the way the movies belong to Hollywood; the spectacle exists elsewhere, apart from our everyday lives.。
大学英语6级考试预测试题3
大学英语6级考试预测试题 3Total score: 710 Total time allowed: 125 minutesPart I Writing (30 minutes)Directions:For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic: A Letter to the Head of a Local Supermarket. You should write at least 150 words, and base your composition on the instruction given in Chinese below:假设你是李明,请你给当地超市的经理写一封信,建议超市停止提供免费塑料袋,以防止白色污染。
给出你的理由。
Useful words and expressions:环保的:environmental-friendly白色污染:white pollution可降解的:degradable (adj.)注意:此部分试题请在答题卡1上作答。
Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes) Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer sheet 1. For question 1-7, choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). For questions 8-10, complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.W al-MartWal-Mart is more than just the world’s largest retailer. It is an economic force, a cultural phenomenon and a lightning rod for controversy. It all started with a simple philosophy from the founder Sam Walton: offer shoppers lower prices than they get anywhere else. That basic strategy has shaped Wal-Mart’s culture and driven the company’s growth.Now that Wal-Mart is so huge, it has unprecedented power to shape labor markets globally and change the way entire industries operate.History of W al-MartSam Walton opened his first five-and-dime in 1950.His vision was to keep prices as low as possible. Even if his margins weren’t as fat as competitors, he figured he could make up for that in volume. He was right.In the early 1960s, Walton opened his first Wal-Mart in Rogers, Arkansas. The company continued to grow, going public in 1970 and adding more stores every year. In 1990, Wal-Mart surpassed key rival Kmart in size. Two years later, it surpassed Sears.Walton continued to drive an old pickup truck and share budget-hotel rooms with colleagues on business trips, even after Wal-Mart made him very rich. He demanded that his employees also keep expenses to a bare minimum---a mentality that is still at the heart of Wal-Mart culture more than a decade after Walton’s death. The company has continued to grow rapidly after his death in 1992 and now operates four retail divisions---Wal-Mart Super centers, War-Mart discount stores, Neighborhood Market stores and Wal-Mart Strategy.W al-Mart StrategyLet’s start with technology. Wal-Mart pushed the retail industry to establish theuniversal bar code, which forced manufacturers to adopt common labeling. The bar code allowed retailers to generate all kinds of information---creating a subtle shift of power from manufacturers to retailers. Wal-Mart became especially good at exploiting the information behind the bar code. And thus it is considered a pioneer in developing sophisticated technology to track its stock and cut the fat out of its supply chain.Recently, Wal-Mart became the first major retailer to demand manufacturers use radio frequency identification technology (RFID). The technology uses radio frequencies to transmit data stored on small tags attached to pullets(货盘)or individual products. RFID tags hold significantly more data than bar codes.The frugal culture, established by Walton, also plays into Wal-Mart’s success. The company has been criticized for the relatively poor wages and health care plans that it offers to rank-and-file employees. It has also been accused of demanding that hourly workers put in overtime without pay. Store managers often work more than 70 hours per week.This culture is also present at the company’s headquarters. Wal-Mart is headquartered in Bentonville, Arkansas, instead of an expensive city like New Y ork. The building is unattractive and dull. Y ou won’t catch executives in quality cars and you won’t see them dragging into work at 9:30 a.m. Executives fly coach and often share hotel rooms with colleagues. They work long hours, typically arriving at work before 6:30 a.m. and working half-days on Saturdays.The central goal of Wal-Mart is to keep retail prices low---and the company has been very successful at this. Experts estimate that Wal-Mart saves shoppers at least 15 percent on a typical cart of groceries. Everything including the technology and corporate culture feeds into that ultimate goal of delivering the lowest prices possible. Wal-Mart also pushes its suppliers, some say cruelly, to cut prices. In The Wal-Mart Effect, author Charles Fishman discusses how the price of a four-pack of GE light bulbs decreased from $2.19 to 88 cents during a five-year period.The PowerBecause of Wal-Mart’s massive size, it has incredible power. It has driven smaller retailers out of business; forced manufacturers to be more efficient, often leading these suppliers to move manufacturing jobs overseas; and changed the way that even large and established industries do business.There is plenty of anecdotal evidence that a new Wal-Mart in town spells doom for local pharmacies, grocery stores, sporting goods stores, etc. Economist Emek Basker, Ph.D., attempted to quantify the impact. Her study found that in a typical United States county, when a Wal-Mart opens, three other retailers close within two years and four close within five years. While the Wal-Mart might employ 300 people, another 250 people working in retail lose their jobs within five years in that county.Wal-Mart has life or death decisions over (almost) all the consumer goods industries that exist in the United States, because it is the number-one supplier-retailer of most of our consumer goods---not just clothes, shoes, toys, but home appliances, electronic products, sporting goods, bicycles, groceries, food.The stories of how Wal-Mart pushes manufacturers into selling the same product at lower and lower prices are legendary. One example is Lakewood Engineering & Manufacturing Co. in Chicago, a fan manufacturer. In the early 1990s, a 20-inch box fan cost $20. Wal-Mart pushed the manufacturer to lower the price, and Lakewood responded byautomating the production process, which meant layoffs. Lakewood also forced its own suppliers to knock down the prices of parts. Then, in 2000, Lakewood opened a factory in China, where workers earn 25 cents an hour. By 2003, the price on the fan in a Wal-Mart store had dropped to about $10.Wal-Mart's impact extends beyond just small suppliers. It also affects how even major, established companies like Coca-Cola and PepsiCo do business. At Wal-Mart's request, Coke and its largest bottler Coca-Cola Enterprises announced that they are changing the way they deliver PowerAde in the United States, altering a basic distribution method for drinks that has been in place for more than a century. Coke also now allows Wal-Mart in on the research-and-development process. In 2005, Coke planned to launch one new diet cola called Coke Zero. At Wal-Mart's request, it changed the name to Diet Coke with Splenda and launched a separate product called Coke Zero. This kind of retailer involvement was unheard of at Coke a decade ago. Pepsi also came up with a line of diet drinks, called Slice One, to initially be sold exclusively in Wal-Mart.The ControversyWal-Mart is a polarizing force. The controversies have involved a broad range of topics from Wal-Mart selling guns, to the company’s environmental policies, to the kind of health care Wal-Mart offers employees, to outsourcing of jobs. In this section, we will explore two of the biggest areas of controversies---labor practices at the company and Wal-Mart’s impact on the American economy.Wal-Mart has come under fire on a number of labor issues. There may be a dark side to the frugal culture. At the end of 2005, the company faced dozens of lawsuits across the country for allegedly not paying workers overtime. Women have also accused Wal-Mart of discrimination, and employees have said that it squashes efforts to unio nize and doesn’t provide decent healthcare.Not everyone is down on Wal-Mart. Andrew Y oung, a former United Nations ambassador and former mayor of Atlanta, heads up a group backed by Wal-Mart that is supposed to spread a positive message about the company. “You need to look at who’s complaining about Wal-Mart,”Y oung told USA Today in March 2006. “If it’s not 100 million people shopping there every week and it’s not 8,000 people competing for 500 jobs (at a new Atlanta store), who is it? They’re complaining because they’re wrong and they don’t understand that ending poverty means generating wealth and not just fighting to redistribute the existing wealth.”There is heated debate about whether Wal-Mart is good for the American economy, and well-respected economists come down firmly on both sides of this debate. Some experts say it is good for the economy because keeps prices low, both at its stores and at other retailers. Other experts argue that Wal-Mart is bad for the economy because it drives competing retailers out of business and forces manufacturers to move jobs overseas to keep expenses down.注意:此部分试题请在答题卡1上作答。
英文演讲稿沃尔玛
英文演讲稿沃尔玛Ladies and gentlemen, 。
Good morning. It is my great honor to stand here and deliver a speech about Walmart, the world's largest retailer. As we all know, Walmart is an American multinational retail corporation that operates a chain of hypermarkets, discount department stores, and grocery stores. It is a company that has a significant impact on the global economy and has a strong presence in many countries around the world.First and foremost, I would like to talk about the history of Walmart. The company was founded by Sam Walton in 1962 and has since grown to become one of the most successful and influential companies in the world. Walmart's success can be attributed to its commitment to providing low prices and great value to its customers. The company's motto, "Save Money. Live Better," reflects its dedication to offering affordable products to its customers.Furthermore, Walmart has also made significant contributions to the communities in which it operates. The company is known for its philanthropic efforts and has donated billions of dollars to various charitable causes. Walmart has also been a leader in sustainability and has made efforts to reduce its environmental impact through initiatives such as reducing waste and increasing energy efficiency.In addition, Walmart has played a crucial role in shaping the retail industry. The company's innovative business practices and supply chain management have set new standards for the industry. Walmart's use of technology and data analytics has allowed it to optimize its operations and provide a seamless shopping experience for its customers.Moreover, Walmart has been a pioneer in the e-commerce industry. The company has made significant investments in its online platform and has expanded its digital presence to compete with e-commerce giants such as Amazon. Walmart's e-commerce business has experienced rapid growth in recent years, and the company continues to innovate and adapt to the changing retail landscape.In conclusion, Walmart is a company that has had a profound impact on the global retail industry. Its commitment to providing low prices, philanthropy, sustainability, and innovation has made it a leader in the industry. As Walmart continues to grow and evolve, it will undoubtedly continue to shape the future of retail.Thank you for your attention.。
浅析为何沃尔玛进军德国·韩国时惨败
为何沃尔玛在进军韩国、日本的时候惨败?相信大家对一个超市都不陌生,他的名字叫做沃尔玛。
它简直是一个传奇,它曾经是排名世界第一的企业。
然而在进军韩国,日本的时候,却遭遇了惨败。
在德国,沃尔玛2007年第二季度遭受了10亿美元的损失。
是什么导致了沃尔玛的惨败呢?文化的差异是其中最重要的一个因素。
当沃尔玛刚刚进入德国市场时信心百倍, 但事实证明, 沃尔玛其实并不了解德国的消费者。
“顾客是上帝”一直是沃尔玛的信条,如沃尔玛要求员工必须向顾客微笑,帮助顾客把商品装进袋子里,然而德国消费者并不喜欢这些举动,而且德国消费者认为沃尔玛服务人员过多是一种浪费行为, 雇佣这些服务人员会增加沃尔玛的运营成本从而提高消费者的花费。
从经济学的角度讲,如果需求量降低的话,价格和交易数量都会降低,沃尔玛在店里出售小包装的生肉,但其实德国人喜欢从肉店买肉。
没有弄清楚顾客的需求在那里,就注定了它的失败。
德国向来有着十分严谨的劳工和贸易法律, 沃尔玛看到自己的财势, 却没有评估德国法律条例对它的影响有多大, 因此造成了经常性的纠纷事件。
如沃尔玛拒绝与德国服务业工会集体协议、并拒绝加入德国雇主协会, 爆发了一千多名员工参加的罢工, 忽视法律环境导致的劳工矛盾使沃尔玛陷入危机。
对于韩国,它的消费群体大多是“主妇型消费”。
根据韩国的出行与消费习惯应该将超市建在居民区的附近,而沃尔玛采用廉价的选址(通常在市郊),给当地的消费者造成了不便。
缺乏规模经营导致沃尔玛竞争不过当地折扣店。
在首尔这个人口上千万的城市里,沃尔玛只开了一家分店。
这就叫做规模不经济,它很难盈利。
连沃尔玛都犯了这样的错误,更别说别的企业了,所以现在急需一个提供异国文化咨询的机构,这就是我们的cul-economic agency.I believe a supermarket is not new to you, and it's called Wal-Mart. It is a legend; it used to be ranked first in the world of enterprise. However when it moved into Korea and Japan, it suffered a defeat. In Germany, Wal-Mart had $ 1 billion in losses in second quarter of 2007. What makes legends into a loser?Cultural difference is one of the most important elements.Wal-Mart first entered Germany market with great confidence, but in fact, Wal-Mart did not get a good knowledge of Germany consumers. “The customer is the King "has been a doctrine of Wal-Mart, For instance, it requires staff to smile to customers, and to help customers put items into the bag, but Germany consumers don't like this behavior, and Germany think the big amount of stuff to be a waste, employment of these staff will increase the operating costs of Wal-Mart and increase consumer’s spending. For another example, Wal-Mart sell small packages of raw meat, but the Germans like to buy meat from the butcher's shop. From an economic point of view, if demand is reduced, prices and trading volume will be lower, Wal-Mart did not find where the needs of customers lies , it was doomed to fail.Germany has always had a very strict labor and trade law, while Wal-Mart did not pay enough attention to the impact of its legal regulations, resulting in frequent legal disputes. Wal-Mart refused to join in someassociations, finally more than 1000 employees participated in a strike. Ignoring legal environment leads to labor conflicts, which makes Wal-Mart in crisis.For Korea, whose consumer groups are mostly “housewife type consumption”.According to Korea's travel and spending habits, the supermarket should be built near the residential area, while the Wal-Mart chooses the cheaper site (usually on the outskirts), causing inconvenience to local consumers.In Seoul, whose population is up to millions, Wal-Mart only opened one store. That is called Diseconomies of scale, it would not be profitable. Even Wal-Mart makes that mistake, let alone other companies, so we are dying for an agency helping us to deal with other countries, and that’s exactly what we cul-economic do.。
山姆沃尔顿
Do you know the founder of the Wal-mart ?
Approaching
Sam Walton
Founder of the Wal-mart
Sam Walton was a man
who took chances, never said never, and kept on fighting the odds. He was like no other man in this world. All through his life he has fought an up hill battle and in the end he won. Sam Walton was a leader not a follower.
Management concept
• The customer is god, • Our priority is to satisfy customer
Sam Walton's sayings
• If you love your work, you will try your best to pursue perfect every day , every one those around you will be infected by your passion.
• When he finished, when the outbreak of the Second World War , Sam decided to join the army,serving in the Army Intelligence Corps
The First Store
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A Brief History of WalmartBy T.A. FrankFirst published in the April, 2006 issue of Washington MonthlyIn the late 1940s, when Sam Walton was franchising a Ben Franklin‟s variety store in Newport, Ark., he had a simple but momentous idea. Like any retailer, Walton was always looking for deals from suppliers. Typically, though, a retailer who managed to get a bargain from a wholesaler would leave his store prices unchanged and pocket the extra money. Walton, by contrast, realized he could do better by passing on the savings to his customers and earning his profits through volume. This insight would form a cornerstone of Walton‟s business strategy when he launched Wal-Mart in 1962.The quest for low prices came naturally to Walton: He was freakishly cheap. Although he was ranked as the richest man in the United States by the 1980s, he continued, it is said, to have his hair cut by the local barber, a $5 expense that he never supplemented with a tip. (Perhaps he wasn‟t satisfied.) Cost-cutting was, as one might also expect, an obsession in the Wal-Mart culture, and Walton was almost as chintzy with his executives as he was with his cashiers. On business trips, everyone, including the boss, flew coach, and hotel rooms were always shared. Even a cup of coffee at the office required a 10-cent contribution to the tin.But coffee taxes only went so far. Walton understood that a major requirement for keeping costs down was controlling the payroll. As he would write in his 1992 autobiography, Made in America, “No matter how you slice it in the retail business, payroll is one of the most important parts of overhead, and overhead is one of the most crucial things you have to fight to maintain your profit ma rgin.” Not only did Walton prefer to hire as few people as possible, but he also dreaded paying them more than he had to. Unions were particularly feared, and Walton did everything he could to fight them, almost always successfully.If such a regimen seems stifling, Walton‟s employees nevertheless accepted it. In part, it was because Walton framed his cheapness as a crusade on behalf of the lowly consumer and as a quest for a better life for all Americans. It was also because he lived an outwardly modest life, driving an old truck with his hunting dogs in the back. Mostly, it was because he had charisma. Even when Wal-Mart grew outsized, Walton made a point of keeping in touch with his employees on the ground or, as he termed them, his “associates.” This wou ld often involve flying from store to store — Walton had a pilot‟s license — for impromptu visits.But Walton‟s ability to keep his staff happy also relied on a sense of when to let penny-pinching take a backseat to other priorities. In 1985, amid anxiety about trade deficits and the loss of American manufacturing jobs, Walton launched a “Made inAmerica” campaign that committed Wal-Mart to buying American-made products if suppliers could get within 5 percent of the price of a foreign competitor. This may have compromised the bottom line in the short term, but Walton understood the long-term benefit of convincing employees and customers that the company had a conscience as well as a calculator. He also made sure to give his staff a stake in the company. In 1971, he introduced a profit-sharing plan that allowed employees to put a certain percentage of their wages towards the purchase of subsidized Wal-Mart stock. For employees who stuck around, this could mean quite a bit of money. According to a truck driver named Bob Clark, quoted in Walton‟s autobiography: “[Walton] said, …If you‟ll just stay with me for twenty years, I guarantee you‟ll have $100,000 in profit sharing‟ … Well, last time I checked, I had $707,000 in profit sharing, and I see no reason why it won‟t go up again.”Equally important was Walton‟s ability to sell employees on the notion that working at Wal-Mart meant limitless opportunity. Here, from Fortune, is a portrait of Walton at a Saturday-morning meeting in 1989:[Walton] proposes that whenever customers approach, the associates should look them in the eye, greet them, and ask to help. Sam understands that some associates are shy, but if they do what he suggests, “It would, I‟m sure, help you become a leader, it would help your personality develop, you would become more outgoing, and in time you might become manager of that store, you might become a department manager, you might become a district manager, or whatever you choose to be in the company…It will do wonders for you.” He guarantees it.And things could get downright cultish:Then, just to make sure, Sam asks the associates to raise their right hands and execute a pledge, keeping in mind that “a promise we make is a promise we keep.” The pledge: “From this day forward, I solemnly promis e and declare that every customer that comes within ten feet of me, I will smile, look them in the eye, and greet them, so help me Sam.”Of course, Wal-Mart‟s success relied on more than just charisma and thrift. Technology, in particular, put the company ahead of its competitors. Already by the 1970s, Wal-Mart was using computers to link its stores and warehouses. Sales data allowed Wal-Mart to keep track of specific items and reduce inventory miscalculations. Only years later would Kmart realize how far it had fallen behind. Throughout Walton‟s career, a focus on innovation of this sort would make Wal-Mart a consistent leader in efficiency.When Walton died in 1992, the adjustment to a post-Sam environment proved difficult. Although Wal-Mart executives had emphasized for years that their company depended on a set of principles and habits more than it did on any one person, Walton‟s death wound up marking a fateful shift in how the company was perceived.The first blow fell only months later when “Dateline NBC” produced an exposé on the company‟s sourcing practices. Although Wal-Mart‟s “Made in America” campaign was still nominally in effect, “Dateline” showed that store-level associates had posted “Made in America” signs over merchandise actually produced in far away sweatshops. This sort of exposure was new to a company that had been a press darling for many years, and Wal-Mart‟s stock immediately declined by 3 percent. While the “Dateline” flap was short-lived, Wall Street soon found other reasons to lose faith in the company. Profit margins were declining, yet David Glass, who was Wal-Mart‟s CEO at the time, chose to make ambitious investments in distribution, technology, and construction. Such risk-taking, while smart, scared off investors at the time, and, by 1996, Fortune was even mocking the company‟s “everyday low stock prices.” It was no longer the feisty little chain out of Bentonville.But it wasn‟t just Wal-Mart‟s image that began to change after Walton‟s death. It was also the way the company did business. Wal-Mart‟s new leaders took to heart one element of the founder‟s business philosophy — the importance of reducing costs —but they didn‟t show his intuition about the importance of making employees feel as though they had a stake in the company. They were already at a disadvantage as it was. Wal-Mart‟s rate of growth was impressive but slower than in its early years —the inevitable result of becoming so big —and this weakened the appeal of such incentives as stock ownership. But character also p layed a role. The company‟s focus on saving money was leading it to make unrealistic demands of local managers, particularly with regard to payroll, and this pressure would eventually lead to serious trouble.For a while, though, it worked. Between 1997 an d 2001, the company‟s stock value increased by over 500 percent, rising by 70 percent in 1997 alone. This undoubtedly helped to mollify employees who‟d been unhappy with the slump earlier in the decade. Between 1996 and 1999, sales increased by 78 percent while inventory rose only 24 percent, a feat Fortune lauded as “mind-bending.” Today, with $288 billion in annual revenues (more than Switzerland‟s GDP) and over $10 billion in profits, Wal-Mart is the world‟s largest corporation, according to 2005 Fortune 500 list. It operates over 5,000 stores worldwide and employs over 1.6 million people —1.3 million in the United States alone.That growth has been accompanied by two distinct kinds of perceptions among the public. On the one hand, Wal-Mart has been celebrated for its business innovations, which have set a new global standard for efficiency. On the other, it has been condemned for its hard-charging business practices. One of the most prominent attacks came last November, when filmmaker Robert Greenwald released Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price, a documentary that excoriated the company for its approach to unions, independent retailers, outsourcing, and wages and benefits. Washington, too, has gotten involved. In 2003, in the run up to the primaries, Democrats began to make an issue of Wal-Mart‟s wages and benefits. In 2004, Rep.George Miller of California released a report called “Everyday Low Wages: The Hidden Price We All Pay for Wal-Mart.” And last year, organized labor put together two Washington-based groups: Wake Up Wal-Mart, backed by the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW), and Wal-Mart Watch, supported by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU). Staffed by prominent veterans from the campaigns of Howard Dean and Wesley Clark, both groups are devoted to keeping the world, and Washington, informed of Wal-Mart‟s alleged misdeeds. For many progressives, the fight to change Wal-Mart represents a central organizing challenge for the 21st century.There‟s evidence that the bad press has taken a toll on the company. A 2004 report prepared for Wal-Mart by McKinsey and Co. found that up to 8 percent of Wal-Mart customers no longer shop there because of “negative press they have heard.” For the last two Christmas shopping seasons, the company has reported lower-than-expected sales. And in January, Maryland gave final approval to a “Wal-Mart bill,” requiring large employers to spend at least 8 percent of their payroll on health benefits. Thirty other states are now considering similar bills. Developments of this sort have led the company to form a war room of political PR experts from both parties — including Ronald Reagan‟s image-meister Michael Deaver, and Leslie Dach, a media consultant to Bill Clinton — to generate more positive media coverage.Wal-Mart‟s defenders argue that the chain saves lower-income workers billions through its low prices. This is undeniably true, but it‟s not a virtue unique to Wal-Mart. The entire sector of discount retailers —from Target to Costco to Best Buy to Home Depot —does much the same thing. Meanwhile, Wal-Mart‟s critics tend to focus on the company‟s low wages and paltry benefits, or its effect on small towns, or its reliance on outsourcing. But these, too, are by and large sins of the entire discount retail sector. So why pick on Wal-Mart?The answer is that Wal-Mart really is different. In terms of annual revenue, Wal-Mart is nearly four times the size of The Home Depot, the country‟s second largest retailer, and almost twice the size of Target, Costco, and Sears (which includes Kmart) combined. That means the company exerts pressure on the entire sector to imitate its methods —including its treatment of workers. That would be less worrisome if Wal-Mart‟s record didn‟t stand out within the sector. But there are strong indications that, when it comes to how it treats its employees, Wal-Mart really is worse than the rest. The company finds itself in trouble because, since the death of Sam Walton 14 years ago, something ugly has happened to the way it does business.Work off the clockIn a comparison of Wal-Mart with its peers, the obvious place to start would be wages and benefits. But neither Wal-Mart, Target, nor Costco make public their median wage, which many economists argue is the most accurate measure of how a company pays its employees. A 2005 study (pdf) by ArindrajitDube and Steve Wertheim of the University of California‟s Berkeley Labor Center, however, sheds some light. Usingfigures for Wal-Mart released through a sex-discrimination lawsuit, and relying for the rest of the large retail sector on numbers from the March 2005 “Current Population Survey,” the study finds that Wal-Mart pays its hourly workers an average hourly wage of $9.68, while other large retailers average $11.08. (The study adjusts for the fact that Wal-Mart stores tend to be in lower-income areas.) As for health benefits, Dube and Wertheim found that Wal-Mart offers its hourly workers benefits worth 73 cents per hour, while other large retailers offer $1.The study suggests that Wal-Mart is significantly less generous than other large retailers. In response, Wal-Mart has noted that the Berkeley Labor Center receives 10 percent of its funds from organized labor. The company instead cites a study that it commissioned from the consulting group Global Insight, which found that Wal-Mart‟s wages are on par with those of other retailers. But whichever study comes closer to the truth, comparisons between Wal-Mart and the large retail sector as a whole don‟t tell the full story. After all, discount retailers like Wal-Mart will inevitably pay less than many other large retailers, and why shouldn‟t they? Doing so allows them to offer lower prices. Only by focusing exclusively on other discount retailers like Costco and Target can we meaningfully compare Wal-Mart‟s wages and benefits to those of its competitors, but we simply lack the hard data on most other outlets to do this.But there are myriad other ways that employers can cut costs at the expense of workers. And it‟s in these areas that we can gather more satisfactory information to compare Wal-Mart to its competitors. The simplest way to save money is to avoid paying people for all the hours that they‟ve worked — a practice called off-the-clock work. Of course, Wal-Mart can‟t explicitly force employees to work off-the-clock. But it can set payroll targets that are nearly impossible to achieve without doing just that. As one manager explained to The New York Times in 2002, “You got to hit the payroll budget they set for you, but if you‟re over, they discipline you.” Plausible deniability, then, becomes essential. Workers get assigned more work than they can possibly complete on their shifts — while being warned that overtime is out of the question. No intelligent employee would fail to get the message: Finish the job by whatever means necessary. “We worked off the clock pretty much every shift,” one employee told the Times. “The manager said if our jobs were not finished, we had t o clock out and finish our jobs so no overtime would show up.”Wal-Mart insists that these cases are unrepresentative of the company as a whole, and that any enterprise of their size is bound to have a few rogue managers. But the verdicts so far suggest a widespread problem. In 2000, Wal-Mart paid $50 million to settle an off-the-clock suit involving 69,000 Wal-Mart employees in Colorado. Two years later, a federal jury ordered Wal-Mart to pay back wages to 83 workers in Oregon for off-the-clock work. Some 40 similar class actions are pending, and in 2002, The New York Times reported on a “wide-ranging legal battle between Wal-Mart and employees or former employees in 28 states” over off-the-clock work.Last December, a California jury awarded $172 million to thousands of Wal-Mart employees who had been illegally denied lunch breaks.Free-market advocates who defend the company argue that squeezing workers is an unavoidable reality of the discount retail business. But a look at the annual reports of Wal-Mart and its competitors points up a glaring difference between the companies. Target‟s and Costco‟s annual reports for 2004-2005 include no cases of off-the-clock work. Wal-Mart‟s lists 44 in the last 10 years.No girls allowedIn 1986, Walton was sensing some pressure to appoint a woman to Wal-Mart‟s all-male board. So he offered the job to Arkansas‟ first lady, one Hillary Clinton, who accepted. She would later quote Walton‟s pitch: “I think I need a woman; would you like to be her?” Today, Wal-Mart‟s challen ges in the field of gender equality are not so easily addressed. The company keeps its payroll costs down by paying women less than their male counterparts for performing the same work. Evidence also exists that it fails to promote women at the same rate as men.In 2000, a female employee at a California Wal-Mart who found herself denied promotions filed a sex-discrimination suit. That case now involves nearly two million women, and, in 2004, it was certified by Judge Martin J. Jenkins, of the United States District Court in San Francisco as a class action. Discrimination is a difficult thing to prove, but the figures in the case do not look good. According to numbers compiled in 2003 by the plaintiffs, female store managers average slightly under $90,000 in annual income, while their male counterparts average slightly over $100,000. And while women make up 79 percent of the store‟s department heads (an hourly position), only 15.5 percent are store managers. Judge Jenkins offered a strongly-worded assessment of the evidence:“Plaintiffs present largely uncontested descriptive statistics which show that women working at Wal-Mart stores are paid less than men in every region, that pay disparities exist in most job categories, that the salary gap widens over time, that women take longer to enter management positions, and that the higher one looks in the organization the lower the percentage of women.”Wal-Mart has argued that most of the decisions about hiring and promotion are decentralized. The plaintiffs contend, however, that a company in which headquarters chooses to regulate certain regional minutiae, such as individual store temperatures, also has the capacity to keep an eye on gender issues.But is Wal-Mart really any different from its competitors when it comes to treating its female employees fairly? An extensive search of cases against Target doesn‟t turn up any similar accusations, and while Costco does face a gender discrimination class action, it involves hundreds of women, not millions. Brad Seligman, who is lead counsel on the gender discrimination cases against both Wal-Mart and Costco,stresses that, even accounting for differences in size, Wal-Mart is exceptional. “I‟m the first to concede that the Costco case is nowhere in the same league as the Wal-Mart case,” says Seligman. “I‟ve done 50 class actions in my time, and Wal-Mart stands out above all of them, both in terms of the depth and pattern of discrimination and in their reaction to the charges.”We care, but not that muchFew discount retaile rs make it easy for workers to unionize. But it‟s hard to find one that has been more aggressive, brutal, and openly hostile to unions than Wal-Mart. Sam Walton faced his first major union challenge in the 1960s. Two Wal-Marts in Missouri were on the verge of organizing, and Walton called in a lawyer named John Tate to stop them. In 1989, Tate, by then an executive vice president of the company, described the events to Fortune: “I told [Walton], …You can approach this one of two ways: hold people down, and pay me or some other lawyer to make it work. Or devote time and attention to proving to people that you care.'” Walton soon followed up with a management seminar called “We Care,” began to call employees “associates,” and introduced a widely-praised profit-sharing plan. Whether satisfaction or fear was at play, no union ever formed.Since Walton‟s death, however, the “hold people down and pay me or some other lawyer to make it work” method appears to have gained favor. In 2000, when workers in a Jacksonville, Texas, meat-cutting department successfully voted to unionize, Wal-Mart announced two weeks later that it would be closing its meat-cutting departments nationwide and switching to pre-cut meat. Four of the employees who voted in favor of the union were fired. (The company claims that the timing was coincidental and that the dismissals were unrelated, but a National Labor Relations Board judge disagreed. Wal-Mart is appealing the case.)A year ago, employees at a Wal-Mart tire and lube shop thought they had enough votes to unionize, but the company fired one of the likely yes-voters and transferred in six likely no-voters. Again, an administrative judge ruled that Wal-Mart‟s conduct had been illegal, but the goal of blocking the union had been achieved.And in February 2005, the company announced that it would be closing a Wal-Mart in Quebec, one of only two unionized Wal-Marts in North America (the other is also in Quebec). Wal-Mart claimed the store was losing money, but it refused to release numbers.Wal-Mart‟s strong-arm approach is the product of a simple cost-benefit analysis. As Thomas Cochan, a professor at MIT‟s Sloan School of Management, explains, “we have a law that is no longer serving its basic objective of providing people with the ability to organize. The incentives are too weak to keep companies from violating the law if they don‟t want to comply.” The National Labor Relations Board can order an employer to rehire a terminated employee and to pay back wages, but it can‟t impose criminal penalties or punitive damages. This is rather like telling a bank robber thatthe penalty for a failed heist is being required to return the money to the bank. And Wal-Mart takes full advantage of such laxity. Store managers are equipped with 56-page pamphlets titled “The Manager‟s Toolbox to Remaining Union Free,” and representatives from the “People Division” in Bentonville are flown out at a moment‟s notice if there are any signs of union activity. According to a 2004 report in The Nation, stores even administer personality tests to applicants to screen out potential union sympathizers.Although Target and Kmart both take pains to head off workers who might organize a union — Costco, by contrast, has some unionized employees — Wal-Mart still leads the competition. Over the past 10 years, the NLRB or its administrative law judges have determined in at least 11 cases that Wal-Mart or individual Wal-Mart stores were engaging in unfair labor practices to prevent unionization, according to the agency‟s website. In that same period, both Target‟s and Costco‟s records appear to have remained clean. An excerpt from one of the decisions against Wal-Mart gives a sense of the extent of the violations:The Respondent, Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., its officers, agents, successors, and assigns, shall cease and desist from:1.Promising to remedy employee concerns in an effort to undermine support forthe Union.2.Removing supervisors from their position in an effort to undermine supportfor the Union.3.Engaging in surveillance of the union activities of employees.4.Coercively interrogating employees concerning the union sympathies andsupport of other employees.5.Installing new equipment to remedy employee complaints in order toundermine support for the Union.6.Transferring employees into the TLE [Tire Lube and Express division] todilute the support for the Union.7.Transferring employees into the TLE to remedy employee complaints aboutinadequate staffing in order to undermine support for the Union.8.Transferring employees out of the TLE in order to dilute the support for theUnion.The post-Sam era“Sam would have been proud” is the highest tribute that can be paid at the company Walton left behind. Increasingly, though, it‟s also clear that what the writer Barbara Ehrenreich termed the “Cult of Sam” has played a large role in its current woes. Walton, in his day, played a hard game, but he knew when to hold back. Unions were fiercely resisted, but employees were treated respectfully. Wages were low, but people were made to feel they had a stake in the company. Bargaining with suppliers would be tough, but some holds would be barred. Walton‟s instincts, in short, helped to keep the company‟s foibles in check. Absent Walton, the redeeming features ofWal-Mart began to disappear. What remained were the relentlessness, the chauvinism, and, above all, the cheapness. As so often happens, the leader wasn‟t doctrinaire; but the followers are. A Fortune article from 2003 notes how, at Wal-Mart headquarters, “nothing backs up a point better than a quotation from Walton scripture.”It won‟t be easy for Wal-Mart to change its ways. Wake Up Wal-Mart likes to point out that Wal-Mart could raise its average wages by two dollars an hour if it raised prices by only a penny on the dollar. But Wal-Mart is led by people whose lives are devoted to coming up with ways to shave a penny — or a half penny, or a quarter penny — off of a dollar. Wal-Mart‟s chief spokesman summed up the difficulty in an interview with The New York Times. Change might be necessary, he admitted, but, “at the same time, we can‟t change who we are —we can‟t change what makes Wal-Mart Wal-Mart.”But they may have to. Union-busting, gender discrimination, and off-the-clock work aren‟t innovative; they‟re illegal. And there are signs that the compa ny is beginning to recognize the need for change. In a message to company managers posted on Wal-Mart‟s internal website and published by The New York Times in February, CEO Lee Scott wrote: “If you choose to do the wrong thing… if you choose to take a shortcut on payroll, if you choose to take a shortcut on a raise for someone, you hurt this company. And it‟s not unlikely in today‟s environment that your shortcut is going to end up on the front page of the newspaper.” With any luck, Wal-Mart will work thro ugh its identity crisis and produce a company that‟s a model for the industry. With even more luck, Americans will begin a thoughtful debate about balancing our needs as consumers and our needs as producers. Until then, we can focus on getting Wal-Mart employers to abide by the laws we have. In many instances, that alone would be a significant improvement.。