Wal-Mart Stores Inc is teaming up with Google to let shoppers order by voice, the latest example of the world’s largest retailer finding a technology partner to catch e-commerce leader Amazon.com Inc.
By the end of next month, Wal-Mart customers can link their store accounts to Google’s Express shopping service and use voice-activated Google Home speakers to buy hundreds of thousands of items for delivery.
Shopping recommendations would be based on previous purchases.
Beginning next year, the assortment will expand to include fresh groceries and allow for in-store pickup of orders.
The collaboration is Wal-Mart’s latest attempt to match the convenience of Amazon, which quickly delivers a bigger online selection and has a dominant line of voice-activated Echo speakers that play music, turn on air-conditioners and handle shopping orders.
Wal-Mart is teaming up with Google to keep its customers from moving to Amazon through these devices.
For Alphabet Inc’s Google, the partnership is a boost for its Express shopping app and Web site, which have also struggled to compete with Amazon.
Google is dropping its membership fee for the service. It previously charged US$10 a month or US$95 per year. The purchase histories of Wal-Mart shoppers will help Google make personalized recommendations, a key feature needed to make voice-activated shopping convenient.
“We’ve got the purchase history of 140 million Americans going into brick and mortar stores,” said Wal-Mart US e-commerce head Marc Lore, who joined through the retailer’s acquisition of his Jet.com start-up last year.
“We are building this to extend to fresh and frozen food. We will deliver to homes and expand aggressively,” Lore said.
Wal-Mart and Google say the partnership will be particularly compelling for replenishing common household supplies like paper towels, laundry detergent and breakfast cereal.
With a Google Home speaker in a kitchen linked to a Wal-Mart account, shoppers can order peanut butter and olive oil to restock pantries when the need is top of mind and they may not have a smartphone handy.
Having data on Wal-Mart shoppers’ purchase histories will mean Google’s digital assistant will not have to ask for specific brands, weights or sizes, it will just re-order based on past preferences.
Amazon is trying to automate this with its Echo gadgets and a Subscribe and Save service that offers discounts on monthly deliveries of items like diapers and toothpaste.
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