BENTONVILLE, ARK. — As tariffs drive prices higher, Walmart
unveiled its latest efforts to woo new and younger shoppers — including a fresh advertising campaign, a clothing brand designed for tweens and drone deliveries in more cities.
The moves, which the retail giant’s leaders announced this week, illustrate how the discounter sees opportunities to grow even while consumers tighten their wallets and the economic outlook appears murky.
Walmart, the largest private employer and retailer in the U.S., hosted thousands of hourly employees, store managers, investors and reporters this week at its Associates Week event in its hometown of Bentonville, Arkansas and nearby Fayetteville. The event, part-pep rally and employee recognition ceremony, coincides with its annual shareholders meeting and caps off with surprise celebrity and musical performances. This year, Jimmy Fallon emceed and Post Malone, Camila Cabello, Noah Kahan and The Killers performed.
Despite the festive atmosphere, it was hard to overshadow the events outside of Arkansas. The celebration came at a time when tariffs have roiled the retail industry, forced price increases across chains and raised questions about economic growth. Even so, Walmart has insisted it has an opportunity to keep gaining market from value-conscious shoppers across incomes, including wealthier households, by offering better items and more convenience — an effort it hopes its new plans will boost.








