By

Catherine Holahan and Bob Trebilcock /

MoneyWatch/ May 17, 2011, 3:00 AM

What to Buy at Walmart

This article was updated on May 17, 2011.



This article is part of a package on consumers and Walmart. Read the other article, on what not to buy at Walmart.

Low prices are back at Walmart. For years, getting stuff for less was the only reason for going to Walmart, even if some of us donned a baseball cap and dark glasses so our friends wouldn’t see us slipping through the doors to save a few bucks on tube socks for the kids.



In recent years, however, Walmart tinkered with that formula to appeal to a more upscale audience — bringing in nicer fashions and organic foods, trimming its selection of bargain price items, and touting its environmental record. The change was about as popular as merlot at a monster truck rally. High-end shoppers were unimpressed, while Walmart’s traditional customers cozied up to the dollar stores, resulting in declining sales.


What’s a retailer to do? If you’re Walmart, you go back to basics. The company announced recently that it was focusing again on its trademark “everyday low prices” approach, and broadening the assortment of items it carries this year by 8,500 items, starting with dry groceries, snacks, and beverages. Walmart will also soon be adding products in its fresh foods cases and health and wellness aisles, followed by expanded offerings in entertainment, sporting goods, and plus-size apparel as the holidays approach. And in April, the mega-retailer launched its most aggressive “ad match” policy yet, promising to match the lowest prices advertised by any competitor.


In December 2009, we highlighted some of the best (and worst) products to buy at Walmart as the retailer went upscale. With its new strategy in place, we’ve added some new items to our list, in addition to updating the information on some of our earlier picks. Here are our revised choices.


1. Name-Brand Groceries and Snacks


Walmart’s prices on soups, cereals, chips, and cookies from companies such as Quaker, Kellogg’s, and General Mills remain some of the best in the business, and its expanded selection means it’s more likely you’ll find the products you want, says Jonni McCoy, a frugal shopping expert and founder of Miserly Moms. McCoy’s favorite Yoplait yogurt is about 8 percent cheaper at Walmart than at her local grocery store chain, for example. Word of caution: While McCoy loves to save a nickel, she avoids Walmart’s store brands for food, such as Great Value. “You don’t save that much and there’s a big difference in quality,” she says.


2. Regional Favorites


As part of its push to bring shoppers back into the stores, Walmart is restocking the shelves in some locations with products with distinctly local followings. So in Denver, Walmart is working to bring Colorado Proud locally grown produce back to its stores, as well as the popular Blue Bell brand of ice cream. In Phoenix, where hiking is prevalent, customers can look for deals on energy bars from Kashi and Camelbak water carriers. And in Dearborn, Mich., Arab-American customers can find a selection of Middle Eastern food products from Tut International.


3. Moderately Priced Consumer Electronics


Despite Walmart’s back to basics campaign, its selection of mid-range televisions and digital cameras continues to be quite good, and its prices very competitive. The retailer stocks high-def TVs from top makers such as Samsung, Sony, Philips, and Sharp, as well as digital cameras made by the likes of Nikon and Canon. And it recently expanded its offerings to include iPads and iPods from Apple, and the Nook electronic reader from Barnes and Noble. (While iProducts class up the joint, even Walmart can’t discount Apple merchandise much so the most you’ll save is a few bucks on an iPod Touch; iPads still start at $499 a pop).


What Walmart doesn’t have is an army of educated sales people ready to explain all the settings on the back of that SLR or the differences between a high-def TV with a resolution of 1080i versus one with 1080p. But such service may be less important now if you, like 90 percent of consumers, turn to the Internet for detailed product reviews, notes James Russo, Nielsen’s vice president of global consumer insights.


“Consumers will do their research outside the store,” says Russo. “So if Walmart has the right selection and price point, consumers will go there.


4. Smartphones



Walmart sells many high-end phones at good prices, including the Blackberry Curve 3G and the LG VL600 LTE for just under a dollar (97 cents, to be exact) when you sign up for a two-year contract from Verizon or Sprint. This is good news if you’ve reached the end of your phone contract and are looking to compare new phones and carriers all in one place, since Walmart sells phones and service plans from each of the largest U.S. carriers: Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile. So if you want to see how Verizon’sDroid, which uses Google’s Android operating system, matches up against the iPhone, Walmart is the place for you. You can’t do that at an AT&T store, or even at one of Apple’s fancy boutiques.


5. Coffee



While Walmart has been criticized in the past for being more concerned with price than environmental or labor issues when sourcing its goods, one area where it’s improving its record is with coffee. In 2009, the company partnered with TransFair USA, an independent certifying agency, to offer fair trade-certified coffee in its Walmart and Sam’s Club stores. The coffee is sustainably grown by farmers who receive a living wage, and the beans are roasted in a specially designed carbon-neutral roaster. Initially this fair trade coffee carried a premium, but now the price differential has vanished. A 12-ounce bag of fair-trade coffee from Walmart costs $5.48, compared to $5.58 for supermarket brand Eight O’Clock coffee. And by selling fair-trade coffee, Walmart vastly expands the market for such goods.


Carmen K. Iezzi, executive director of the Fair Trade Federation, a North American association for such products, says Walmart’s move into fair trade was promising, although she cautioned that it’s too early to tell how much impact retailer’s efforts will have, and Walmart has yet to commit to fair trade in the way that Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods have. Still, coffee is a good start. “When any major corporation begins to move in the direction of more sustainable practices, that is a positive sign,” says Iezzi.


6. Laundry Detergent



When it comes to the environment, Walmart’s suppliers have often fallen far short of best practices. Now the chain is trying to clean up its act by offering more eco-friendly products. One area where it’s done the most is laundry detergent. In 2008, the company switched to selling only concentrated laundry detergent in its U.S. stores — these products use up to 50 percent less packaging and require less fuel to transport than the earlier versions. Once again, scale matters: Walmart has a serious carbon footprint, so cutting laundry detergent containers by half can have a big impact.


Walmart has taken steps to combat phosphates, which pollute the water and lead to an explosion of the algae population that destroys fish habitats and plants. The company already says there are no phosphates in detergent it sells in the U.S., and it has set a goal of cutting the amount of phosphates in the detergent it sells in all of North and South America by 70 percent. In addition, Walmart is working with suppliers to increase the concentration of its laundry detergent by two to three times by the end of 2012, further reducing packaging and fuel consumption.


And Walmart has unveiled broader initiatives to improve its eco-image. In 2009, the company began developing a sustainability index in cooperation with several other large retailers and many manufacturers and universities that will eventually rank all of its suppliers and products based on their environmental impact. Although the full rankings are not out yet, Fast Company has called the initiative “one of the most impressive things we’ve seen a big box retailer spearhead — ever.” Says Honor Schauland, a campaign assistant at the Organic Consumers Association, a Minnesota-based consumer advocacy group: “Walmart is taking some important steps, although they’ve still got a long way to go.”



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9 Comments Add a Comment
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zebra62 says:
These authors using the "sustainability" advice takes us to United Nations Agenda 21 which has the objective to make all countries alike in practice and culture. I frankly don't worry about pay rates in South America or China or the sustainability of wildlife in Siberia when I buy electronics or wood furniture. Before you ride with these advice on what to buy or not buy from environmental groups, Google "Agenda 21" and educate yourself.
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JRLawrenc says:
Interestingly, I find the Great Value brands every bit as good as the name brands. I always buy Great Value decaf coffee and cereals with the Great Value name on the box. I find the difference in price substantial and the quality the same. A fifty-cent saving per box adds up over time. I enjoy their deli items also. For the rest, I look at the packaging and try to buy only items manufactured in the USA. I also find their reams of office copier paper for $2.97 a great buy also. I own my own business and often buy my supplies there. I think I have also saved thousands of dollars per year with WalMart. Plus, their stores are generally clean and brightly lit. Every WalMart I have ever been in has had the American flag at the front of the store and it boosts my spirit to see it. The only negative is that the crop of employees in the past 5 years have not been helpful. Also, ordering online for pickup at a store has not served me very well. It takes too long, and the employees have an attitude that they don't care whether or not you get service.
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papadoc-1000 says:
I have no problem with Walmart on a business basis, but I do believe much of their quality is slipping.

Perhaps it's a Made in China issue, but I get a feeling from nearly every department that includes store brands and/or items produce by Walmart, that they are nickel and diming at the cost of quality.

I recently went there to purchase a garden hose only to find that no hose in the store has a washer in it, but you could buy 10 of them separately for 2 bucks. Really? Who buys a hose but doesn't need a washer? And who needs 10 of them?

Walmart produced foods are also getting a bit shakey. The quality and flavors have diminished. I won't touch Walmart meats anymore unless there's just not a Costco around while we are out of town. It's over processed, has little flavor, and just tastes mass produced. Maybe it's the GMO thing or being chemically grown. I don't know, but I'll not spend my money on it.

On the other hand, clothing deals can't be beat. I purchase all my jeans here paying about half the price. I get what I want, and they serve me just fine.
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ammo17 says:
walmart cannot beat the prices you can find at shop-rite stores.check it out.
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erdinc18209 says:
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luvidoll says:
I am not a fan of Walmart only because they started their business on a good note ( Only items MADE IN AMERICA ) were sold there but too quickly changed their policy. Now its hard to find even employees that were made in America in their stores.Therefore, I will support local supermarkets and the savings loss only amounts to a few cents. Unless and untill Walmart returns to Made In America I for 1 will not shop there
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Chippy5556 says:
Hmm, sounds to me like CBS hates Walmart, duh who'd a thunk it? You just had to mention "carbon footprint" and something about phosphates in laundry detergent, boo hoo. I can smell a Liberal from 60' 6" away and what I came away with from your article is that it's another hit piece on Walmart. I save thousands of dollars each year shopping there.
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