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Walmart cements genAI first-mover advantage

The insight: Walmart is going all in on AI as it prepares for a future in which more people rely on the technology to work and shop.

  • The retailer is bringing on Instacart executive Daniel Danker as its head of global AI acceleration, product, and design—a new role that will report directly to CEO Doug McMillon.
  • Walmart is also looking for an AI platforms leader to design and implement AI across its organization.

Walmart is also distilling its existing agentic capabilities into four “super agents,” which it says will improve the experience for shoppers, employees, sellers, and suppliers.

Walmart’s agent overhaul: Walmart needed to simplify its AI agent strategy after enthusiastic experimentation left it with dozens of highly useful but ultimately confusing tools for users, the retailer’s chief technology officer, Suresh Kumar, told The Wall Street Journal. Advances in technology have also made it possible to connect agents with one another, enabling a much more intuitive interface.

  • The retailer has already rolled out the first super agent, Sparky, a consumer-facing genAI assistant that can offer product recommendations and answer questions about topics like the weather and sports schedules. Eventually, Sparky will be able to reorder products, book services, and understand multimodal inputs.
  • In a few months, Walmart will launch Marty, an agent capable of helping suppliers with tasks such as checking analytics and starting ad campaigns.
  • Super agents for employees and engineers are expected to go live next year.

Walmart is counting on its agents to help it stay competitive in a fast-changing retail landscape. US CEO John Furner expects them to deliver both topline growth—thanks to their ability to offer more personalized and relevant shopping experiences—as well as considerable savings due to more efficient supply chain and inventory management, among other benefits.

First mover advantage: Walmart’s status as an early adopter of genAI and AI agents gives it a significant advantage over much of the retail industry, which—despite high-profile moves from large retailers—has been slow to fully embrace the technology.

  • Fewer than 1 in 5 retail organizations (18%) have implemented AI agents or multi-agent systems, according to a survey by Capgemini.
  • The high tech, consumer products, energy and utilities, and pharma and healthcare industries all have higher rates of adoption than the retail sector—all the more surprising given that 75% of retailers polled by Salesforce believe that AI agents will be essential to maintaining a competitive edge by 2026.
  • Retailers are also lagging when it comes to investment, Capgemini’s report found. A little over half (56%) will increase genAI spending this year, below average—again threatening the industry’s ability to keep up as AI transforms the customer journey.

Our take: Agentic tools are both a threat and an opportunity for retailers. Companies need to prepare for a future where tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity make purchases on behalf of shoppers—which will require them either to make their websites more accessible to these assistants, or to build their own AI agents to make those transactions seamless.

AI agents are also a useful investment in the current era of uncertainty, given their ability to unlock cost savings at a time when every dollar counts. Two in 5 senior executives reported a decrease in operational costs after implementing AI agents or multi-agent systems, while 45% saw operational efficiency increases, per Capgemini.

The longer retailers wait to test out agentic AI, the more they risk losing ground to Walmart and Amazon—and the harder it will be to keep up as AI agents transform the customer journey.

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