Walmart
is poised to transform the sustainability and retailing world -- again
-- with a significant expansion of its highly influential supplier
scorecard program. This week in a webinar and its Global Responsibility
Report, Walmart announced that it will broaden its initial 15-question
scorecard to 100 major categories, with category-specific questions, by
the end of this year.
When
Walmart introduced its initial scorecard, tens of thousands of
suppliers increased their investments in sustainability. This expanded
scorecard promises to have an even bigger impact. Not only will it shift
the landscape for Walmart suppliers, but it also could greatly
influence supplier scorecard programs at many other companies.
With
more than 100,000 suppliers and $420 billion in revenue, Walmart is
simply massive. It sales are equivalent to 3 percent of the U.S. gross
domestic product. When Walmart focuses on a certain initiative, its
influence is pervasive.
The merchandising wing of the company is clearly behind this growth of its sustainability program. At its Global Sustainability Milestone Meeting webinar
this week, Walmart involved key merchant executives, including Duncan
MacNaughton, chief merchandising officer for Walmart U.S.; Lisa Hefner,
executive vice president of merchandising for Sam's Club; and Ed
Kolodzieski, executive vice president of global sourcing; among others.
A replay of the webinar is available here.
The role of The Sustainability Consortium
The
key to Walmart's efforts is the use of scientifically derived
assessment criteria developed by The Sustainability Consortium (TSC).
Members of the consortium -- which include many of the world's largest
consumer goods manufacturers and brands, as well as leading
nongovernmental organizations -- are providing much of the rigor used to
develop the criteria. Moreover, Walmart is far from the only retailer in TSC.
If other retailer members, such as Safeway, Marks & Spencer and
Best Buy, develop similar scorecard programs, consumer product
sustainability will be pushed to record heights.
"The
move to build sustainability into the merchandizing side of the
business is a game changer for the consumer products industry," says Tim
Greiner, managing director of Pure Strategies,
whose firm is working with Walmart to build category-specific evaluation
tools. According to Greiner, Walmart's aggressive move into category
scorecards will have a profound effect on other retailers' programs and
on the entire consumer products value chain.
New category-specific scorecards
Instead
of a single 15-question scorecard for all suppliers, Walmart said it
will now use category-specific scorecards. Categories -- such as cereal,
apparel, hardware, toys and electronics -- will each have their own
scorecard questions.
For
each category, suppliers will be ranked according to sustainability
progress and action items. Scorecard items will include many of the
traditional questions for greenhouse gas emissions, energy efficiency,
and waste, but will also include questions relevant to each category,
such as questions about energy used during component manufacturing and
chemical exposure to workers for laptops and cold water wash messaging
and chemical ingredients for laundry detergent.
Walmart
executives stated that it will roll out the 100 category-specific
scorecards in 2012 and add more categories in 2013. The categories
impacted this year will be based on the development and rollout plans of
The Sustainability Consortium.
Suppliers
who score well will be recognized and rewarded by Walmart, while
suppliers who don't perform well will have "family meetings" with
Walmart to develop improvement plans.
In 2013, the new scorecards will be integrated with formal supplier reviews, and every Walmart buyer will have sustainability as part of their performance objectives.
More sustainability tools for Walmart buyers and merchants
More sustainability tools for Walmart buyers and merchants
The
category-specific scorecards will help Walmart buyers and merchants
work with their suppliers to achieve more efficient operations and to
deliver more sustainable products. Buyers and merchants will easily be
able to understand the sustainability of each supplier's operations and
products.
Private brands at Walmart are also included in this program.
Walmart
executives repeatedly mentioned that consumers want more sustainable
products, but are not willing to pay for it. The challenge is to find
changes that are both sustainable and cost effective.
The
toy category is one area that Walmart has already influenced: Toy
manufacturers now use less toxins and packaging in their products.
Walmart aims to replicate this success in many other categories.
Implications for industry and suppliers
Given
Walmart's size, involvement in The Sustainability Consortium and
influence, the broadening of its supplier scorecard program has
implications that will likely ripple through hundreds of industries.
Walmart
is often the top customer for many suppliers and can represent 30
percent -- or even 50 percent -- of a supplier's business. Walmart
suppliers, especially private-label suppliers, obviously need to
participate.
Aggressive suppliers have an opportunity to stand out from their competition by
getting
a higher score. With an increased emphasis on education and incentives
for Walmart buyers and merchants, leading suppliers may get rewards in
2013 for their sustainability investments this year.
"For
the first time, our buyers will have easy to understand tools that
identify the biggest issues and opportunities in their category, and a
simple scorecard that let's them know how their suppliers are doing
against those topics," stated Brittni Furrow, senior manager of
sustainability at Walmart. She continued, "As we build these tools into
our core merchandising processes, we'll accelerate and deepen our impact
on sustainability in consumer goods."
Suppliers
that approach scorecard programs with a "compliance" approach -- in
other words, those that do the least amount of work required - may find
themselves at a competitive disadvantage next year.
Companies
that have emulated part of the Walmart scorecard program should
continue to build on Walmart's leadership, especially around product
packaging and energy efficiency. Other large retailers also will need to
decide if they want to move to a category-specific approach for their
own supplier scorecard programs.
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