Wal-Mart Corporation Financial Analysis
Wal-Mart Corporation is considered the world's largest retailer, renown for it's low prices and high volume sales. Wal-Mart's emerging accounting practices include complete automation of accounting functions. Wal-Mart is considered a pioneer of sorts, enabling EDI or electronic transmission of inventory information and Just In Time ordering. As such, they have virtually eliminated the need of middlemen calculating future inventory needs, and assessed potential bottlenecks before they become a problem.
Part of Wal-Mart's success lies in its ability to negotiate TOC practices, JIT and EDI. Wal-Mart has successfully moved toward improving performance by identifying potential bottlenecks or constraints, and also implementing innovative inventory practices and electronic dissemination of information (JIT and EDI). How does Wal-Mart do it? Wal-Mart focuses of EDI enabled JIT purchasing mechanisms. Wal-Mart shifts the "burden" of inventory to the supplier. Inventories move very swiftly with Wal-Mart, due in part to the substantial customer base the company commands.
According to Eli Goldratt's theory of constraints, or TOC, described in his book, "The Goal," the "core constraint of virtually every organization it has assisted is management as a collection of parts instead of a single unit" (hoodstrong, 2002). Most managers and high-level executives in a corporation fail because they focus on the collection of parts rather than the relatedness of various functions within an organization. The TOC approach enables organizations such as Wal-Mart to identify "constraints" that prevent them from achieving a goal. In the case of Wal-Mart, this would be selling bulk products at a discounted rate to the mass market. TOC can only be successful if everyone understands the goals.
In order for a...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now