Visa vs. Walmart: 'battle' of titans playing out in Thunder Bay - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 11:45 PM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Thunder Bay

Visa vs. Walmart: 'battle' of titans playing out in Thunder Bay

A battle of corporate titans is playing out in Thunder Bay, Ont., and a business expert says both Visa and Walmart are using the city as a testing ground for their respective strategies.

Northern Ontario city a testing ground for how dispute might play out in other markets, says expert

'We know that Visa cardholders are being inconvenienced by not being able to use their card everywhere they may want to, and we want to encourage them to use their cards wherever they can,' a spokesperson for Visa Canada said of the campaign in a statement. (Amy Hadley/CBC)

A battle of corporate titans is playing out in Thunder Bay, Ont., and a business expert says both Visa and Walmart are using the city as a testing ground for their respective strategies.

"They're going to war,"said Steve Tissenbaum, an adjunct professor at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Toronto's Ryerson University.

And Visa is "taking onWalmartwhereWalmarthas decided to start the battle, and that's in Thunder Bay."

In recent weeks, Visa has plastered thenorthern Ontario citywith billboards reminding customers that thousands of local stores accept its card. Drive down a main street and you might encounter two or three of the adsin the span of just a few blocks.

In July, the company also offered several incentives to customers who made purchases using their Visa cards.

The campaign comes after Walmart Canada banned the use of Visa cards at its stores in Thunder Bay, with the intention of rolling out the same policy in other stores across the country.

Back-to-back Visa billboards on Fort William Road in Thunder Bay, Ont. (Amy Hadley/CBC)

Thunder Bay a 'canary' in the coal mine

Visa's campaign isan "attack" on Walmart, said Tissenbaum, but it also conveys another message: Itremindsloyal customers to stick with Visaand sendsa messageof support to other retailers that accept the card, he said.

With thebillboardads, and other incentives in Thunder Bay,"Visa is test marketing what might be the most effective way to fight Walmart."

Thunder Bay is a "canary [in] the mine," said BahramDadgostar, Dean of the Faculty of Business Administration at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, as both companies viefor customer loyalty after a public battle over card fees.

"Since both kind of tarnished their ... reputation in order to fight in front of the customer," said Dadgostar, "they are worried that they may actually lose the loyalty of customers."Visa will not "shy away from spending a good amount of money" to keep them.

It's a battle in which "there is no winner," he said.

Many Thunder Bay, Ont., residents received this promotion in the mail last month. A spokesperson for Visa says the company periodically offers incentives to encourage customers to use their cards. (Amy Hadley/CBC)

Grocery battle on the way?

While the immediate fight may be for customer loyalty, Tissenbaum said it's possible something else is going on.

One of Visa's incentives for customers in Thunder Bay involves a gift card for cardholders who spend a certain amount of money at grocery stores.

That tactic could be connected to Walmart's goal of beefing up its share of the grocery market inCanada, Tissenbaum theorized.

"Walmart is in the process of planning to enter Canada with its grocery stores ... to directly compete with Loblaws, Sobeysand Metro," he said.

"There's no question in my mind this is directly targeting Walmart to say 'We know where you're heading with your strategic plan, we know what you have in mind for Canada, and be ready we're going to fight you on this.'"

As to whether the two companies might still strike a deal over fees, anything is possible, said Tissenbaum.

"But I think that train has left the station."

In addition to more than a dozen billboards, Visa has also taken out ads at bus shelters in Thunder Bay, and offered customers incentives. (Amy Hadley/CBC)