How Walmart delivers what you need—and a friendly face—to your home

This story is part of Fast Company’s Most Creative People in Business 2022. Explore the full list of innovators who broke through this year—and had an impact on the world around us.

When Whitney Pegden set out to convince Walmart customers to trust the company to deliver groceries directly to their fridges, freezers, and pantries, she imagined that technology would be the answer. She and her team at InHome, developed through Walmart’s Store No. 8 incubator, outfitted their delivery staff with wearable cameras in order to provide customers with a live video feed, and installed smart locks at garage entrances and front doors so its workers had access.

Since the earliest days of the internet, many companies have tried to develop a tech-powered grocery-delivery service at scale, but they’ve all missed one thing. Pegden, too, almost made the same mistake. But the secret to success, she realized, is actually old-fashioned: people. InHome started as a pilot in 2019, and when it continued to win praise from customers during the pandemic—even as Pegden’s team was forced to introduce a COVID-19-safe doorstep delivery option—what they were responding to was seeing the same two or three friendly faces at their homes, week in and week out.

Pegden, a veteran of several early-stage startups, shifted InHome’s focus to the humanity underpinning the service. Rather than rely on the more expedient route of hiring contractors, she and her team worked to hire from a pool of tenured Walmart associates, train them, and provide them with uniforms and branded cars. (The average InHome driver has more than six years of Walmart experience.) InHome customers, many of whom work from home, see the same delivery people on a regular basis. “We see really strong relationships develop between our associates and customers,” she says. The InHome relationship shifts from a utilitarian, technological one to “this person is part of the team of people who help me get my tasks done each week.”

Walmart gave the green light to expand the program earlier this year. As of June, InHome was available at 200 Walmart stores, with plans to reach 1,000 stores and 30 million households by 2023, which would make it the largest grocery-delivery service. By the end of 2022, Pegden expects to be managing 4,000 dedicated InHome associates. Now, she just has to keep up with demand from the busy suburban families who comprise her core market. “Honestly, [customers are saying,] what else can you do for me because like I’ve got a lot on my list this week. Like, can you walk my dog?”

https://www.fastcompany.com/90765258/whitney-pegden-vp-and-gm-inhome-walmart-most-creative-people-2022?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Erstellt 3y | 09.08.2022, 10:22:00


Melden Sie sich an, um einen Kommentar hinzuzufügen

Andere Beiträge in dieser Gruppe

Anthropic’s AI copyright ‘win’ is more complicated than it looks

Big tech scored a major victory this week in the battle over using copyrighted materials to train AI models. Anthropic

24.06.2025, 19:40:06 | Fast company - tech
How Roblox handles millions of players on viral games like ‘Grow a Garden’

Just this past weekend, social and gaming platform Roblox saw a peak of 30.6 million concurrently active players, the

24.06.2025, 17:30:02 | Fast company - tech
Meet the 4 a.m. club, TikTok’s mystical election night movement

Did you wake up at 4 a.m. on November 6, 2024? If so, you’re not alone.

The 4 a.m. club is a group of people, mostly on TikTok, who say they were spiritually “activated” when they

24.06.2025, 15:10:08 | Fast company - tech
Nonstop news alerts are driving people to disable their phone notifications

New analysis has found mobile phone users are being pinged with as many as 50 news alerts daily. Unsurprisingly, many are experiencing “alert fatigue.”

The use of news alerts on phones h

24.06.2025, 15:10:06 | Fast company - tech
Warp’s new agentic development environment helps developers work with AI coding agents

The startup Warp is best known for its modern, AI-empowered take on the terminal—the decades-old,

24.06.2025, 15:10:04 | Fast company - tech
This free read-it-later app is the perfect replacement for Pocket

Want to save pages on the web for later? You could always bookmark them in your browser of choice, of course. But that’s a quick way to end up with a messy bookmarks toolbar. And organizing your b

24.06.2025, 12:40:09 | Fast company - tech
The rise of the personal AI advisors

When a viral Reddit post revealed that ChatGPT cured a five-year medical mystery in seconds, even LinkedIn’s Reid Hoffman took notice. Now, OpenAI’s Sam Altman says Gen Z and Millennials are treat

24.06.2025, 12:40:09 | Fast company - tech