Walmart is upbeat about using technology and is not afraid of getting it wrong. “There’s a lot of optimism for what technology can do to help [front-line employees] become better associates, get more efficiency faster, have more tools that they can access,” John Furner, president and CEO, told a press pool during Walmart’s Associates Week in Bentonville, Arkansas, last week. Around 1.3 million US Walmart associates now carry devices called “fresh touring agents” that guide them through their day, surfacing the best next action, showing store layouts, and helping them locate products faster. Still, company executives said the US retailer’s philosophy is still “people-led, powered by technology” multiple times throughout the week. In July 2025, Walmart added three new AI agents to work behind the scenes with Walmart employees, supply chain partners (a chatbot called Marty), and developers to consolidate workflows, and drive operational efficiency and faster innovation across the company. “I think it’s important to note that in terms of agentic commerce or agentic operations, any way you look at it, it’s early, and there’s a lot that we have to learn,” Furner said. “We have to figure out what works and what doesn’t, and some things that seem promising will work, and they’ll work as we expect, and there’ll be other things—just like the whole history of our company—that we will try that may not work the way we thought, or may not work at all.” Keep reading here.—VC |