EP317: Walmart's Global Flywheel: What It Means for Amazon Sellers Now
Walmart's global flywheel is a strategic initiative to create a self-reinforcing cycle similar to Amazon's. It involves leveraging low prices to drive traffic, increasing sales volume, and enhancing customer experience, ultimately boosting market share.
Key Takeaways
- Audit your catalog for Walmart readiness now
- List top SKUs on Walmart Marketplace
- Expand beyond Amazon to reduce risk
- Embrace multi-platform strategy for growth
Who Gets Burned When Walmart Builds the Same Flywheel?
Who gets burned when Walmart builds the same flywheel Amazon did, and you only sell on one platform? You do. Every time. It's Wednesday, July 8th. Welcome back folks. On behalf of myself and the whole Voltage team, we are genuinely glad you are here for Episode 317 of The High Voltage Business Builders Podcast. Now listen. Here's the reality. Walmart is not chasing Amazon anymore. They are building their own version, and they are taking it global. That changes the math for every operator sitting on a single-channel brand right now. Today I am breaking down what Walmart's global flywheel actually means, why most Amazon sellers are about to miss the opportunity completely, and what you should be doing about it this week.
Walmart's Global Flywheel: A Structural Shift
Look, Walmart going global with an Amazon-style flywheel is not a headline you read and move on from. This is a structural shift. And most operators I talk to are treating it like background noise. Here is what a flywheel actually means in plain language. Low prices drive traffic. Traffic drives third-party seller volume. Seller volume drives data. Data drives better fulfillment and advertising. Better fulfillment and advertising drives lower prices again. Amazon perfected this loop over twenty years. Walmart is now running the same play, but with physical stores in nearly every major market on earth as the anchor. That is a supply chain and logistics advantage Amazon cannot buy overnight. Now, why does this matter to you if you are primarily an Amazon seller? Two reasons. First, competition for your customer is about to get more expensive. Walmart's global reach means they are pulling buying intent away from Amazon in categories where they have physical presence, grocery, household, consumables, apparel. If your brand lives in any of those categories, you will feel this in your Amazon Ads costs before you feel it in your conversion rate. The signal comes in the ad data first. Second, Walmart Marketplace is still dramatically underpriced as an advertising channel compared to Amazon. I have seen operators spending $30,000 a month on Amazon Ads who are spending zero on Walmart. That is not a strategy. That is a blind spot. The flywheel Walmart is building globally means their marketplace gets more attractive, not less, over the next three to five years. Sellers who get on now, build their catalog, and earn early reviews are the ones who will not be fighting for position when the traffic actually shows up at scale. Most operators wait until the platform is crowded. That is the Amazon story from 2018 to 2022. Do not repeat it.
David's Multi-Channel Success Story
I want to tell you about David. When we started working with him, he was doing around $30,000 a month, all Amazon, one channel, six SKUs. He was good at Amazon. He knew his listings, he understood his Amazon Ads, and his margins were solid. He was not in trouble. But he was also completely exposed. One policy change, one suppression, one competitor with deeper pockets on sponsored placements, and his whole business felt it immediately. We pushed him to expand his catalog and diversify. Not just to Walmart, but Walmart was part of the conversation early. His reaction was what I hear all the time. He said, 'Walmart doesn't convert as well.' And he was right, at the time. But here is what he was missing. He was comparing a mature Amazon presence with years of reviews and ranking history to a brand-new Walmart listing with zero velocity. That is not a fair comparison. That is just impatience. He started building out Walmart listings while continuing to grow Amazon. He treated it like a long game, not an immediate revenue replacement. Today David is running over $850,000 a month, close to a $10,000,000 a year run rate, with over 100 SKUs and roughly 90% of his sales organic. Walmart is not his biggest channel, but it is a real one. And when Amazon had a suppression issue on two of his top ASINs last year, Walmart kept cash flow moving while he fixed it. That is the point. Multi-channel is not about which platform converts better today. It is about not having a single point of failure in a real business. Walmart going global makes that argument even stronger now.
Three Moves to Make Now
Three moves. Let's go. Move one. Audit your catalog for Walmart readiness this week. Not next month. This week. Look at your top ten to fifteen SKUs on Amazon and ask one question: are these listed on Walmart Marketplace? If the answer is no for more than half of them, you have an easy win sitting there. Listings on Walmart cost you time, not money. The opportunity cost of not being there is real. For operators just starting out, even getting your top three products live on Walmart is a step. You do not need a full catalog to begin. Move two. Watch your Amazon Ads costs in categories where Walmart competes heavily. Grocery, household, health, personal care, apparel basics. If Walmart is pulling buyer intent in those categories globally, your cost per click on Amazon in those same categories will drift up. It will not happen overnight, but it will happen. Set a benchmark on your current ad spend efficiency right now so you have a baseline to measure against in six months. If you are spending $5,000 a month on Amazon Ads today, you need to know exactly what you are getting for it so you can see the shift when it starts. Move three. Think about your brand's exit value. This one's boring. It is also where the money is. Aggregators and PE buyers doing due diligence on ecommerce brands are already asking about channel diversification. A brand with strong presence on Amazon and a growing Walmart footprint is a better asset than a single-channel brand at the same revenue level. I know, nobody wants to hear that the exit conversation starts now. But it does. Build like you are going to sell it, even if you never do. Walmart going global is not a threat. It is an invitation. The operators who see it first are the ones who profit from it.
Episode Summary
In this episode of the High Voltage Business Builders Podcast, Neil Twa explores Walmart's new global flywheel and its implications for Amazon sellers. As Walmart adopts a strategy similar to Amazon's, ecommerce operators must adapt to remain competitive. Neil shares the story of David, an Amazon seller generating $30,000 a month, who successfully expanded to Walmart, highlighting the importance of diversification. The episode provides actionable strategies for sellers to prepare their catalogs for Walmart, emphasizing immediate steps to take. With a focus on operators at every level, Neil underscores the necessity of a multi-platform approach in today's ecommerce landscape. This episode is essential for those looking to safeguard their businesses against market shifts and capitalize on new opportunities.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Walmart's global flywheel?
Walmart's global flywheel is a strategic initiative to create a self-reinforcing cycle similar to Amazon's. It involves leveraging low prices to drive traffic, increasing sales volume, and enhancing customer experience, ultimately boosting market share.
How does Walmart's strategy affect Amazon sellers?
Walmart's strategy pressures Amazon sellers to diversify. Relying solely on Amazon exposes sellers to risks. Expanding to Walmart can mitigate these risks by tapping into new customer bases and increasing sales channels.
Why should ecommerce operators consider selling on Walmart?
Selling on Walmart provides access to a vast customer base and reduces dependency on Amazon. It offers an opportunity to diversify revenue streams, enhance brand visibility, and leverage Walmart's growing ecommerce infrastructure for long-term growth.
Full Transcript
Who Gets Burned When Walmart Builds the Same Flywheel?
Who gets burned when Walmart builds the same flywheel Amazon did, and you only sell on one platform? You do. Every time. It's Wednesday, July 8th. Welcome back folks. On behalf of myself and the whole Voltage team, we are genuinely glad you are here for Episode 317 of The High Voltage Business Builders Podcast. Now listen. Here's the reality. Walmart is not chasing Amazon anymore. They are building their own version, and they are taking it global. That changes the math for every operator sitting on a single-channel brand right now. Today I am breaking down what Walmart's global flywheel actually means, why most Amazon sellers are about to miss the opportunity completely, and what you should be doing about it this week.
Walmart's Global Flywheel: A Structural Shift
Look, Walmart going global with an Amazon-style flywheel is not a headline you read and move on from. This is a structural shift. And most operators I talk to are treating it like background noise. Here is what a flywheel actually means in plain language. Low prices drive traffic. Traffic drives third-party seller volume. Seller volume drives data. Data drives better fulfillment and advertising. Better fulfillment and advertising drives lower prices again. Amazon perfected this loop over twenty years. Walmart is now running the same play, but with physical stores in nearly every major market on earth as the anchor. That is a supply chain and logistics advantage Amazon cannot buy overnight. Now, why does this matter to you if you are primarily an Amazon seller? Two reasons. First, competition for your customer is about to get more expensive. Walmart's global reach means they are pulling buying intent away from Amazon in categories where they have physical presence, grocery, household, consumables, apparel. If your brand lives in any of those categories, you will feel this in your Amazon Ads costs before you feel it in your conversion rate. The signal comes in the ad data first. Second, Walmart Marketplace is still dramatically underpriced as an advertising channel compared to Amazon. I have seen operators spending $30,000 a month on Amazon Ads who are spending zero on Walmart. That is not a strategy. That is a blind spot. The flywheel Walmart is building globally means their marketplace gets more attractive, not less, over the next three to five years. Sellers who get on now, build their catalog, and earn early reviews are the ones who will not be fighting for position when the traffic actually shows up at scale. Most operators wait until the platform is crowded. That is the Amazon story from 2018 to 2022. Do not repeat it.
David's Multi-Channel Success Story
I want to tell you about David. When we started working with him, he was doing around $30,000 a month, all Amazon, one channel, six SKUs. He was good at Amazon. He knew his listings, he understood his Amazon Ads, and his margins were solid. He was not in trouble. But he was also completely exposed. One policy change, one suppression, one competitor with deeper pockets on sponsored placements, and his whole business felt it immediately. We pushed him to expand his catalog and diversify. Not just to Walmart, but Walmart was part of the conversation early. His reaction was what I hear all the time. He said, 'Walmart doesn't convert as well.' And he was right, at the time. But here is what he was missing. He was comparing a mature Amazon presence with years of reviews and ranking history to a brand-new Walmart listing with zero velocity. That is not a fair comparison. That is just impatience. He started building out Walmart listings while continuing to grow Amazon. He treated it like a long game, not an immediate revenue replacement. Today David is running over $850,000 a month, close to a $10,000,000 a year run rate, with over 100 SKUs and roughly 90% of his sales organic. Walmart is not his biggest channel, but it is a real one. And when Amazon had a suppression issue on two of his top ASINs last year, Walmart kept cash flow moving while he fixed it. That is the point. Multi-channel is not about which platform converts better today. It is about not having a single point of failure in a real business. Walmart going global makes that argument even stronger now.
Three Moves to Make Now
Three moves. Let's go. Move one. Audit your catalog for Walmart readiness this week. Not next month. This week. Look at your top ten to fifteen SKUs on Amazon and ask one question: are these listed on Walmart Marketplace? If the answer is no for more than half of them, you have an easy win sitting there. Listings on Walmart cost you time, not money. The opportunity cost of not being there is real. For operators just starting out, even getting your top three products live on Walmart is a step. You do not need a full catalog to begin. Move two. Watch your Amazon Ads costs in categories where Walmart competes heavily. Grocery, household, health, personal care, apparel basics. If Walmart is pulling buyer intent in those categories globally, your cost per click on Amazon in those same categories will drift up. It will not happen overnight, but it will happen. Set a benchmark on your current ad spend efficiency right now so you have a baseline to measure against in six months. If you are spending $5,000 a month on Amazon Ads today, you need to know exactly what you are getting for it so you can see the shift when it starts. Move three. Think about your brand's exit value. This one's boring. It is also where the money is. Aggregators and PE buyers doing due diligence on ecommerce brands are already asking about channel diversification. A brand with strong presence on Amazon and a growing Walmart footprint is a better asset than a single-channel brand at the same revenue level. I know, nobody wants to hear that the exit conversation starts now. But it does. Build like you are going to sell it, even if you never do. Walmart going global is not a threat. It is an invitation. The operators who see it first are the ones who profit from it.
Stay in Control with Caiman Data
If any of this hit close to home, here is the thing about adding a new channel like Walmart. More platforms mean more decisions, more listings to watch, more ad accounts to check, and the same twenty-four hours to do all of it. Most sellers are already drowning in tabs. Amazon Ads, inventory levels, listing health, pricing alerts, reviews. AI looks like the easy fix for all of that. But bad data in means bad calls out. You do not save time. You make expensive mistakes faster. That is not freedom. That is chaos with nobody steering. Here is what actually works. Caiman Data pulls your live Amazon numbers into one clear picture. Ads, listings, sales, inventory. You see what is working and what is costing you money, without another spreadsheet that eats your whole Tuesday. You stay in charge. You see the reason behind every number before you make a move. Nothing runs without your approval. You are still the operator. Caiman Data just makes sure you are making decisions based on what is actually happening in your account, not what you think is happening. That level of review used to eat hours every week. Caiman Data cuts that down with one live connection to your account. You get clarity fast, and you get your time back. That is how Voltage helps operators save time, protect margin, and grow without losing control. Thirteen years of doing this, and the operators who stay in the game longest are the ones who know their numbers cold. Go to voltagedm.com to learn more about Caiman Data and what Voltage can do for your brand. This has been Episode 317 of The High Voltage Business Builders Podcast. We will see you back here tomorrow. Until then, stay high voltage.
Your Amazon tools can read the data. They cannot act on it.
In a recent 143-seller AI challenge, 47% of sellers said the same thing: take Amazon Ads off my plate first. Almost every tool answers with another read-only report you still have to act on by hand. Caiman Data is different. 85 Read + Act tools on Amazon's own APIs run the analysis, put the recommendation and the trade-offs in front of you, and write the change back to Amazon on your go. You stay in the CEO chair.
Amazon Ads comes off your plate first
47% of sellers want AI to take over Amazon Ads before anything else. Full campaign audits, bids, placements, negatives, and bulk changes run under your supervision instead of eating your week.
Escape the read-only trap
Downloading reports is not automation. Read + Act tools publish listing fixes, bid changes, and reorder calls straight back to Amazon, previewed before anything ships.
Time back, pointed at the exit
Sellers in that challenge ranked scale and exit as their top two goals. The same stack saves us 17 hours a week and an average of $26,400 a year across our 30 brands, and those hours go into building an asset a buyer wants. Our largest client exit: $72M.
Voltage Business Builders is not software you buy and figure out alone. It is an invite-only room of 320+ elite operators, plus Caiman Data access that connects your live business data to the systems we run on our portfolio brands. You stay in the CEO chair while AI does the analytical horsepower. The room keeps you on the right fundamentals so you 10x results, grow net profit the right way, and build toward empire or retirement with exit in mind.