Walmart Inc. (NYSE:WMT) has severed ties with robotics and automation startup Bossa Nova. The surprise move comes at a time when the retail giant has increased focus on emerging technologies in response to changes in the retail sector.
Bossa Nova Retail Technology
Bossa Nova started in 2005, achieved a significant milestone when it inked a strategic partnership with Walmart in 2017. It is still unclear why the company has ended ties with the robotics firm. The move has since resulted in massive layoffs in the robotics firm, a huge hit at a time when technology firms are thriving. Bossa Nova has had to streamline its operations in the aftermath of the pandemic.
Walmart is ending ties with Bossa Nova at time when it appears to have made impressive strides in AI and robotics. According to co-founder Sarjoun Skaff, Bossa Nova boasts of the best retail AI that works well on robots' fixed cameras. The technology has reportedly excelled in 500 of the world’s most challenging stores
Early in the year, Walmart had confirmed plans to bring Bossa Nova technology to an additional 650 locations. It has since emerged that the nation’s largest retailer felt it was not getting enough out of the deal. While the company’s Robots had found their way into 500 stores, COVID-19 appears to have disrupted everything.
Walmart Bet On Human Workers
In recent months, Walmart has turned its attention to e-commerce in response to changing consumer shopping patterns. The company has since started exploring ways to use human workers to perform inventory while sorting out online fulfillment products.
Even on ending ties with Bossa Nova, Walmart is not planning to end its focus on robotic experiments. There is hope that the COVID-19 pandemic will be brought under control and operation in the brick and mortar business bounce back to normalcy.
Conversely, the company’s Sam’s club subsidiary has announced plans to bring Tenants floor subscribing robots to all its 599 stores. The company is also exploring ways to use these machines to double to and perform in-store inventory checks.