Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Kash Patel’s Response To Lindsey Graham’s Death Prompts Ridicule

    July 14, 2026

    Can You Pass This Kitchen Safety Quiz?

    July 14, 2026

    As TV-tracking app TV Time shuts down, its founder builds Bingers, a new home for fans

    July 14, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Kash Patel’s Response To Lindsey Graham’s Death Prompts Ridicule
    • Can You Pass This Kitchen Safety Quiz?
    • As TV-tracking app TV Time shuts down, its founder builds Bingers, a new home for fans
    • The Club In Mallorca You Won’t Want To Miss
    • Trump Suggests A Standing Order To Attack Iran If It Assassinates Him — But Vance Would Make The Call
    • How To Find A Podiatrist Who Fits Your Care Needs And Coverage
    • 5 Different Types of Pain You Should Never Ignore
    • How to optimize for AI overviews (AIOs): A complete 2026 playbook
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    SBM Global News
    Demo
    • Home
    • Top Stories
      • Politics
    • Business
      • Small Business
      • Marketing
    • Finance
      • Investment
    • Technology

      As TV-tracking app TV Time shuts down, its founder builds Bingers, a new home for fans

      July 14, 2026
      Read More

      Reed Jobs would rather talk about curing cancer than his last name

      July 12, 2026
      Read More

      Oratomic raises $300M to build a viable quantum computer that needs only 20K qubits

      July 11, 2026
      Read More

      GRC3 – Company Profile – AllBusiness.com

      July 10, 2026
      Read More

      Truecaller clashes with India’s telecom regulator over anti-spam rules

      July 9, 2026
      Read More
    • Lifestyle
      • Travel
    • Feel Good
    • Get In Touch
    SBM Global News
    Demo
    Home»Business»Walmart Wants to Teach Store Managers Compassion
    Business

    Walmart Wants to Teach Store Managers Compassion

    By Staff WriterMarch 12, 20248 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email
    #image_title
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    On a stormy afternoon in Bentonville, Ark., a Walmart regional manager recounted a story about a moment when his humanity came up short.

    He was 24-year-old store manager anxiously trying to get his workers to set up Halloween merchandise displays. Instead, the workers were gathered around the televisions in the electronics department. It was the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.

    “Why are we over here not setting up Halloween? Why is it not done yet?” he recalled saying. He didn’t fully understand what was happening until a worker tearfully laid into him, explaining that she had relatives in New York City.

    “I didn’t take a minute to survey the room to understand the ramifications of my words and my actions,” the former store manager, David Seymore, now a regional vice president at Walmart, told his listeners. “I grew up really fast that day.”

    His remarks were meant as an object lesson. Mr. Seymore, who now manages 110 stores in the South and the Midwest doing $11 million in annual business, was speaking to a group of Walmart and Sam’s Club store managers who had come to Walmart headquarters for a leadership-training program that has taken place nearly every week at the retailer since July 2022.

    Walmart and Sam’s Club store managers run multimillion-dollar enterprises and manage hundreds of workers. Their ability to drive sales has a direct effect on the company’s revenue, which totaled $648.1 billion last year worldwide.

    But the company says their management style matters, too. Most weeks, Walmart flies a group of 50 from across the country — about 1,800 last year in all, with 2,200 expected this year — to what it calls its Manager Academy.

    Throughout the sessions, trainers reinforce the message that Walmart’s success is possible only if the store managers take care of their workers and the customers and community where they operate.

    “The intent of the academy is to walk away knowing what are our values, what are our expectations of leaders, how do we operate effectively with the view of putting our people first?” said Donna Morris, Walmart Inc.’s chief people officer.

    Over the years, Walmart — the largest private employer in the United States with 1.6 million workers — has been accused of being more focused on the bottom line than the people in its stores. In lawsuits and through unsuccessful union campaigns, Walmart workers have said the company’s business practices have been detrimental to their physical, mental and emotional health.

    In a 2022 instance, a worker with a health condition died during her shift when a store was short-staffed and her store manager is said to have told her to “pull herself together” when she asked to go home, according to report in The New Republic.

    Ms. Morris declined to comment on that case, but said that “we always have a focus on making sure that our people are the first line of what a manager should think about.”

    Walmart isn’t the only company focused on getting its managers to think that way. The focus on compassionate leadership became a notable topic of conversation for companies about two years ago, said Jessica Kriegel, a workplace training consultant who has researched the topic.

    “The big insight here is that employees feeling cared for is directly tied to communication,” Ms. Kriegel said. “And the folks who communicate the most with the front line are their supervisors. That’s why frontline supervisors are so critical, because if they’re communicating effectively then the work force feels cared for.”

    Demo

    Most executives at Walmart took part in the predecessor to the Manager Academy, the Walton Institute, which was started in the 1980s. And the training has a wider impact: Many Walmart leaders eventually fan out to other companies in the retail industry.

    “That Walton Institute was such an amazing way to immerse in the culture of Walmart being away from home,” said Horacio Barbeito, who spent 26 years with the company. “And then you would come back to your market really filled with a lot of company culture that then you become an ambassador and a catalyst.” He left Walmart in 2022 to run Old Navy, a retailer he views as having a similar objective and corporate values.

    John Furner, the chief executive of Walmart U.S. and an Arkansas native whose father also worked at Walmart, began his career as an hourly employee at the retailer in the 1993. As he rose through the ranks, he had training at the Walton Institute. It also focused on corporate culture, but back then, the company was still relatively small and it was feasible to know top leadership.

    “You weren’t a number,” Mr. Furner said. “You weren’t just somebody that was supposed to deliver results.”

    But especially since the start of the pandemic, store managers have taken on new challenges, navigating shifts between in-store and online purchases, higher worker turnover and sometimes unruly shoppers. And as the company has ballooned, it has become harder to make them feel connected to the corporate mission. Mr. Furner suggested to Walmart’s global chief executive, Doug McMillon, that it was time for the company to bring back an in-person training program for store managers.

    During the training, former and current executives speak, including Mr. Furner. (Participants even meet the company’s founder, Sam Walton — kind of. At the company’s heritage museum there is a hologram of Mr. Walton explaining how he used watermelons and donkey rides to initially draw people into stores.) The attendees receive an hourlong tour around headquarters where passing executives stop and chat — and are sometimes peppered with questions about the business.

    Things also get specific. Managers take part in breakout sessions about how to make all of their workers, from the mechanics in the car repair department to the overnight shift workers mopping the floors and those restocking apples in the grocery department, feel as if they’re contributing to the bigger corporate mission. They brainstorm how to deal with issues both general (understanding other people’s values) and particular (scheduling snafus).

    The program gets store managers thinking not only about what comes next for them, but also about how to keep the people reporting to them engaged and finding other opportunities in the company for them. And at the end of the day, Walmart is in the business of selling, and it measures the effectiveness of this program on that basis.

    With “really strong store managers who are purpose-driven and values-driven,” said Lorraine Stomski, who runs Walmart’s learning and leadership programs, “we can drive stronger business results.”

    Walmart has also been sweetening the incentives to keep managers motivated and from leaving for other opportunities. This year it has increased pay for its store managers, raising base pay to $128,000, and announced stock grants of as much as $20,000. High-performing Walmart managers now have the ability to earn more than $400,000 a year.

    In interviews arranged by Walmart, store managers who took part in the program said they enjoyed the emphasis on corporate culture during the training. Laurice Miller, a 39-year-old store manager at a Sam’s Club in Keller, Texas, who started 20 years ago as an hourly employee and now manages 165 people, said that before she attended in January, she had gotten some feedback from people working for her: They were looking to build a relationship with her.

    Since taking part in the program, she said she’s made time for informal chats. (“How was your weekend? What can I do to help?”) “I think those are instrumental when you’re around each other for eight hours, 40 hours a week,” she said.

    Daniel Harrelson, a 30-year-old store manager in Fayetteville, Ark., took part in the training in October. He started at Walmart as an hourly employee and was promoted to store manager during the pandemic and oversees 450 workers.

    He learned of resources that the company sets aside for workers in need, such as free counseling classes and funds for those dealing with housing crises that could arise from fires or domestic violence. For some of his workers, “Walmart’s usually one of their only steady things that they have,” he said.

    There were also lighter elements to the training that help to reinforce the culture to him. Take the meetings that managers hold in the store with their workers. All of those start with a rapturous cheer — a tradition Sam Walton started in the 1970s.

    During the pandemic, large meetings were dropped to follow social distancing guidelines. The cheer fell by the wayside, too. But the training, he said, helped him realize how important it was to restore the custom.

    “It’s not anything spectacular, but it’s something kind of fun,” he said. “It lightens the mood, and it’s something that Sam Walton did.”

    View original article here

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Reddit
    Previous ArticleBiden’s $7.3 Trillion Budget Proposal Highlights Divide With Trump and GOP
    Next Article FAA Audit of Boeing’s 737 Max Production Found Dozens of Issues

    Related Posts

    UK May Intervene In $110 Billion Paramount-Warner Bros Discovery Deal

    July 2, 2026
    Read More

    Comcast Plans To Split Into 2 Public Companies By Spinning Off NBCUniversal And Sky

    July 1, 2026
    Read More

    Director Who Defrauded Netflix Gets 30-Month Prison Term

    June 30, 2026
    Read More
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    Former FBI, CIA Head Has ‘Serious Concerns’ With Trump Cabinet Picks

    December 28, 2024435

    Emirates to operate next-gen A350 on the third daily service to Cape Town

    January 14, 2026256

    AAVE Price Prediction: Target $215-225 by Mid-January 2025 as Technical Indicators Signal Bullish Momentum

    December 15, 2025240

    Ventive Hospitality Joins Green Fins: Strong ESG Lift

    February 17, 2026211
    Don't Miss
    Politics

    Kash Patel’s Response To Lindsey Graham’s Death Prompts Ridicule

    By Staff WriterJuly 14, 20262 Mins Read

    FBI Director Kash Patel was accused Sunday of “reckless” conspiracy-mongering in his tribute to the…

    Read More

    Can You Pass This Kitchen Safety Quiz?

    July 14, 2026

    As TV-tracking app TV Time shuts down, its founder builds Bingers, a new home for fans

    July 14, 2026

    The Club In Mallorca You Won’t Want To Miss

    July 14, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Demo
    About Us

    Small Business Minder brings together business and related news from around the world in one place. Follow us for all the business news you'll need.

    Facebook X (Twitter)
    Our Picks

    Kash Patel’s Response To Lindsey Graham’s Death Prompts Ridicule

    July 14, 2026

    Can You Pass This Kitchen Safety Quiz?

    July 14, 2026
    Most Popular

    Former FBI, CIA Head Has ‘Serious Concerns’ With Trump Cabinet Picks

    December 28, 2024435

    Emirates to operate next-gen A350 on the third daily service to Cape Town

    January 14, 2026256
    © 2026 Small Business Minder
    • Home
    • Get In Touch

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. To get the most from our site, please disable your Ad Blocker.