Wal-Mart’s Asda hires ex-Amazon executive

epa02451127   Customers at an ASDA supermarket in London, 15 August 2007. Asda is recalling some 115,000 Chinese-made children's bottles because the caps may break off. The yellow, pink and orange coloured reusable bottles are aimed at children aged three upwards. Asda said its technical team had decided on a recall after a customer complaint brought the problem to light.  EPA/ANDY RAIN

Bloomberg

Wal-Mart Stores Inc.’s Asda unit has appointed a former Amazon.com Inc. finance director to help it turn around its struggling UK business, according to people familiar with
the matter.
Rob McWilliam will rejoin Asda as a part-time strategic adviser to
new Chief Executive Officer Roger Burnley, said the people, who asked not to be named as the information is private. Burnley, now deputy CEO, steps up to his new role on January 1. McWilliam initially will work just a couple of days a month, although that may be increased in the future, one of the people said.
An Asda spokesman declined
to comment.
Before joining Amazon in 2013, McWilliam worked alongside Burnley at Asda during a 16-year stint at the UK’s third-biggest grocery chain. The 48-year-old’s tenure culminated in his becoming Wal-Mart’s strategy chief for Europe, the Middle East and Africa after a spell as Asda’s finance director. McWilliam joined Amazon as UK finance director before overseeing the launch of its Pantry service in the UK, according to his LinkedIn profile.
McWilliam will be joining a business that’s under pressure. Asda’s long-held position as the lowest-priced mainstream UK grocer has been undermined by the rapid expansion of discounters Aldi and Lidl, which precipitated a three-year slump in sales. The ensuing price war dragged down Asda’s operating profit by 19 percent to 845 million pounds ($1.1 billion) last year.
McWilliam’s experience could benefit Wal-Mart, which is trying to position itself as a rival to e-commerce powerhouse Amazon.
The world’s biggest retailer said that it’s changing its legal name to Walmart Inc. to reinforce this shift from bricks to clicks. It has acquired web merchants like Bonobos, ModCloth and Moosejaw over the past year to lure new online customers.

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