Categories: Stories

Walmart Severs Ties With Robot Supplier, Reverting To Human Workers Again

ADVERTISEMENT

Some Walmart stores played host to robots tasked with inventory management. However, the chain recently severed ties with the company that designed and produced these electronics, Bossa Nova Robotics.

In place of machines, Walmart instead reshaped its model so people could perform these tasks with greater efficiency. Though robots won’t be checking the stock of Walmart shelves, expect to see them incorporated in other ways.

ADVERTISEMENT

No more robots checking Walmart shelf counts

Bossa Nova Robotics robots won’t be responsible for scanning shelf inventory in Walmart stores / YouTube screenshot

Bossa Nova Robotics placed some 500 robots throughout 4,700 stores Walmart stores. A recent report from Wall Street Journal indicates Walmart is severing ties with the robotics supplier. The report cites individuals who remain unnamed but allegedly have familiarity with the situation and its recent developments.

ADVERTISEMENT

RELATED: Walmart Looking To Officially Remove All Cashiers, Switch To Self-Checkout

Walmart ended its contract with Bossa Nova Robotics. Demands unique to this year demanded extra attention directed towards inventory stock. However, the report claims, Walmart recently moved away from this technological approach. Originally, robots roamed the aisles and checked that all shelves had adequate stocks. But the chain pursued a way to allow human labor to efficiently tend to this and other related issues. The push comes in part from concerns over customers’ reactions to the robots, says Chief Executive John Furner. Indeed, giants like Walmart face scrutiny over its treatment of employees.

Supply and demand, absence and presence

The pandemic left a lot of retailers out-of-stock on many items / Wikimedia Commons

The coronavirus pandemic saw an unprecedented swell in shopping in large quantities. People rushed to the stores when they could in case of an impending lockdown. When they bought, they purchased very high quantities of items like toilet paper and disinfectants – until purchase limits fell into place. But this also left stores completely out of several items. Enter the robots, recruited to help keep track of inventory.

The robots served their purpose when curbside pickup became ubiquitous and employees had to make sure they presented consumers with what they ordered and expected to have. Though robots won’t do that anymore, Walmart isn’t done with advanced technology like this yet. Four stores will become e-commerce laboratories. Essentially, they’ll act as test runs for different digital tools and strategies to learn the most efficient ways to do tasks in the store.

Show comments
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

test

test

3 years ago

‘The Little Rascals’: The ‘Our Gang Curse’ That May Have Haunted the Cast Throughout the Years

Hollywood “curses” are a strange thing as people tend to look at the collective deaths…

3 years ago

Florida Man Pays Utility Bills For Over 100 Families For Second Christmas In A Row

74-year-old Michael Esmond is putting on the Santa Claus gear this year once again as…

3 years ago

Orlando PD Donates Christmas Gifts To More Than 200 Kids In Need

Police officers from Orlando, FL donated and delivered Christmas gifts to more than 200 kids…

3 years ago

The 1965 Kecksburg Incident: What Fell Over Pennsylvania?

On December 9, 1965, a blue-tinged fireball streaked across the sky over Kecksburg, Pennsylvania. However,…

3 years ago

Why The Pandemic Helped Bring Back Sunday Family Dinners

Over years, less emphasis ended up placed on traditional Sunday family dinners. In those times,…

3 years ago