Fall 2026
Posted on 7/3/2026
Global retailer of groceries and essentials
$19.50 - $32.50/hr
Company Historically Provides H1B Sponsorship
Wichita, KS, USA
In Person
On-site at 3137 S Seneca St, Wichita, KS 67207-3254.
Walmart operates as a global retailer with a network of hypermarkets, discount department stores, and grocery stores, plus an online shopping platform. It sells groceries, apparel, electronics, and household items through its stores and Walmart.com, along with financial services and health offerings like pharmacies. Its business model centers on offering a wide range of products at low prices by maintaining a large-scale, efficient supply chain and bulk purchasing. This setup enables both in-store and online shopping, with growing emphasis on e-commerce as demand shifts. Walmart differentiates itself through massive store networks, everyday low prices, integrated omnichannel shopping, and a focus on community support and essential services, including vaccination efforts and veteran programs. The company’s goal is to help people save money and access essential goods and services for their families and communities.
Company Size
10,001+
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
Bentonville, Arkansas
Founded
1962
People at Walmart who can refer or advise you
Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?
PTO: Paid vacation, sick time, personal time and holiday time
10% discount on regularly priced general merchandise and fresh fruits and vegetables
6% 401(k) match to all employees, including hourly workers, after one year
Roth IRA available
Associate Stock Purchase Plan
maximum and eligible preventive care covered at 100%
Health reimbursement plans
Walmart's OnePay CashRewards card: A new era in everyday savings. Discover how Walmart's latest card can boost your cash back on all purchases. Yuri Moreira CEO & Founder, SuperPay AI, Inc. A surprising move in the rewards landscape. Walmart has just launched its OnePay CashRewards card, and it's making waves among savvy shoppers. What's the catch? Cardholders can earn a remarkable 3% cash back on all purchases - yes, all purchases - if they meet certain eligibility criteria. This kind of straightforward cash back offer is a game changer in a market often filled with complicated tiered rewards systems. Why this card matters. The credit card landscape is changing, and consumer preferences are shifting towards simplicity and value. With annual fees often eating into potential rewards, Walmart's OnePay CashRewards card stands out by offering no annual fee, along with a $35 sign-up bonus after spending just $75 within the first 30 days. This means that for many customers, especially those who frequent Walmart, this card could be a fantastic addition to their wallets. Not only does it cater to everyday spending, but it also aligns with the increasing demand for accessible rewards. Making the most of your rewards. To maximize the benefits of the OnePay CashRewards card, consider utilizing it for all your regular purchases - from groceries to home essentials. Pairing this card with savvy budgeting can lead to significant cash back over time. For instance, if you spend $500 a month, you could earn $15 back each month just from using this card. Over a year, that adds up to $180 in cash back! Additionally, keep an eye on Walmart's promotional offerings and seasonal sales. By strategically timing your purchases, you can enhance your rewards even further. For those who love to track their spending and optimize their cash back strategies, the OnePay CashRewards card offers a straightforward path to savings. Should you apply now? If you're a frequent Walmart shopper, now is an excellent time to consider applying for the OnePay CashRewards card. The $35 sign-up bonus and the 3% cash back on all purchases make it an attractive option, particularly for those who want to simplify their rewards strategy. With no annual fee, this card is designed to benefit your everyday spending without the drawbacks of traditional rewards programs. Simplifying your rewards with SuperPay. Navigating the ever-changing credit card landscape can feel overwhelming, but that's where SuperPay steps in. With features like the Smart Card Picker, SuperPay can help you determine the best card to use for your purchases, ensuring you always maximize your cash back. Whether you're at Walmart or elsewhere, SuperPay provides real-time notifications to help you make informed decisions that align with your financial goals. Moreover, the Spending Reports feature allows you to see exactly how much you're earning and what you might be leaving behind, making it easier to adjust your spending habits and maximize your rewards potential. By integrating SuperPay into your rewards strategy, you can effortlessly take advantage of offers like the OnePay CashRewards card while ensuring you're making the most of your overall credit card portfolio. Take action now. Ready to boost your cash back and simplify your rewards? Download SuperPay on the App Store today and start optimizing your rewards with the new OnePay CashRewards card. Don't miss out on the benefits that could enhance your everyday spending and savings. Walmart Cash Back Credit Card News Rewards Optimization Share on X Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn
Lincoln's Luke Field achieves 100% occupancy with two full-building leases totaling over 1.1 million SF. Tech infrastructure specialist fills Buildings A and B at 2.4 million s.f. logistics campus Lincoln Property Company ("Lincoln"), a global, full-service real estate firm with over $31 billion of assets under management, has executed two full-building leases at its 2.4 million-square-foot Luke Field development in Glendale, Arizona. Totaling over 1.1 million square feet, the commitments bring the Class A, three building, LEED certified logistics campus to 100% occupied. The new user, a leading company in the artificial intelligence sector, will occupy Luke Field's 695,750-square-foot Building A and 454,761-square-foot Building B. It joins existing Luke Field tenant, Walmart, which purchased the project's 1.28-million-square-foot Building C in late 2025 for $152 million. The deal marked Arizona's largest industrial building sale of the year. Luke Field is located at 13543 A and 13543 B Northern Ave., and 7733 Litchfield Rd. The 140-acre development sits at the southeast corner of Litchfield Road and Northern Avenue, bordered by Luke Air Force Base and the high-capacity Northern Parkway. The location provides direct connectivity between Loop 303 and Loop 101/US 60/Grand Avenue. "Speed to market was essential for this tenant. It selected Luke Field after a multi-market search, citing the project's design, location and move-in-ready improvements as deciding factors in its lease decision," said Lincoln Executive Vice President John Orsak. "Aligning on any million-square-foot requirement is an achievement, but doing so this quickly is a testament to the foresight that this project team built into Luke Field from the start." Developed by Lincoln and Goldman Sachs, Luke Field's buildings feature 40' clear height, 25' tall glass entries, 3,000 amps of power (expandable), automated dock doors, steel moment frame shear bracing and 5' x 10' clerestory windows providing sky views and natural interior light. The campus also offers Lincoln's trademark "creative industrial" amenities, such as barbeque stations, a shaded outdoor eating area and employee collaboration spaces. Earlier this year, Luke Field achieved LEED Gold v4 for a Core & Shell and Warehouse Distribution Center, becoming Arizona's highest-scoring LEED industrial building. Sustainability features exceed industry standards with 59% energy savings, 77% total water savings, 87% outdoor water savings, 61% landfill diversion, 20% recycled content and the use of more than 20 materials recognized as low-impact and responsibly sourced. "Luke Field has redefined what modern logistics space can deliver," said Lincoln Vice President of Development Michael Monroe. "Seeing it reach full occupancy with tenants that can benefit from its operational advantages and workplace environment is especially meaningful. We look forward to the success that these tenants will achieve here." Corporate neighbors to Luke Field include Boeing, Microsoft, White Claw, XPO Logistics, UPS, REI, SubZero, Daimler-Benz, Red Bull, Ball Corporation, Aldi and Williams Sonoma. Lincoln served as the developer, leasing agent and property manager for Luke Field. The new tenant was represented by Bob Mohr and Elizabeth Loving of Mohr Partners Inc. To discuss general leasing and development opportunities with Lincoln, contact David Krumwiede or John Orsak at (602) 912-8888.
How AI shopping bots are reshaping online marketplaces. Patrick Cooper Three-time founder in re-commerce June 26, 2026 Introduction. The rise of AI shopping bots marks a turning point in AI-powered e-commerce. These intelligent agents now explore, compare, and suggest products in real time, fundamentally altering shopper behavior and marketplace dynamics. For sellers on platforms like eBay, Shopify, Vinted, and Depop, adapting to this shift is essential to thrive in online sales. What are AI shopping bots? AI shopping agents operate autonomously using large language models (LLMs), NLP, and computer vision to navigate websites, interpret prompts, and complete transactions with minimal human input. For instance, advanced bots now browse, select, and order products across major marketplaces - demonstrating how these agents function across the online sales ecosystem. Why they matter for online marketplaces. eBay. eBay has rolled out an agentic AI shopping assistant that delivers real-time, hyper-personalized product suggestions based on shopper behavior, either reactively or via predictive in-page messaging. These tools help eBay serve customers more efficiently and understand their needs deeply, positioning the marketplace at the forefront of the agent-powered e-commerce landscape. Shopify. Shopify has introduced Shopify Magic, an AI suite offering automation across product descriptions, image generation, and personalized experiences. This AI integration is driving strong merchant growth, with AI features aiding small businesses in saving time and boosting page views and conversions significantly. At the same time, Shopify has introduced new rules limiting fully autonomous agent checkout flows - demonstrating a cautious but forward-looking stance on AI commerce. Major players & current developments. Walmart has launched a suite of AI-powered "super agents" targeting customers, employees, sellers, and developers. Among these, "Sparky" assists shoppers with personalized recommendations, reorders, and even recipe suggestions via computer vision. These tools are central to Walmart's goal of driving 50% of sales online in the next five years. Amazon is developing an internal project codenamed Starfish, aimed at synthesizing product data from millions of brand sites to bolster its "Buy for Me" recommendation system - potentially adding billions in GMV by improving conversions across both Amazon and external products. Early gains vs emerging challenges. Benefits. * Faster discovery: AI agents reduce friction in product search and selection. * Hyper-personalization: Agents offer context-aware recommendations superior to generic search mechanisms. * Sales impact: Early adopters see measurable efficiency and personalization gains - all contributing to stronger outcomes in AI-powered e-commerce. Challenges for sellers & marketplaces. * Transparency concerns: Sellers may have limited insight into how listings are selected or ranked by agentic systems. * Trust and privacy risks: Data misuse or opacity can erode customer trust and the value proposition of agentic shopping experiences. Strategic implications for sellers & marketplaces. * Optimize for AI-first discovery: Prioritize intent-rich, structured descriptions and multimodal content to improve visibility in agent-driven recommendations. * Compete on value: As agents surface products based on price and relevance, sellers offering the best value gain favor - loyalty programs must adapt or integrate into agent ecosystems. * Pioneer agent-to-agent commerce: Deploying seller-side bots that communicate with buyer agents opens opportunities for dynamic pricing, curated product bundles, and exclusive offers. Listing Monster's AI-Powered Pricing Recommendations & Background Removal Practical tips for AI-Powered ecommerce success. * Audit listings for clarity, context, and rich metadata. * Invest in high-quality visuals to aid agent evaluation and recommendation. * Monitor performance via conversion and discovery metrics tied to AI-driven channels. * Highlight trust signals - transparent policies, seller ratings, and strong privacy practices build confidence. Conclusion & future outlook. AI shopping bots are rapidly transforming online sales and marketplace optimization. By shifting discovery from keyword-driven to intent-focused engagement, they're redefining visibility, personalization, and competition. Sellers and platforms that embrace structured content, value-focused positioning, and transparency will lead in the AI-first e-commerce era.
Walmart and Vibe.co today announced they have entered into an agreement under which Walmart will acquire Vibe.co, a self-serve, connected TV (CTV) advertising platform designed to simplify advertising for small and mid-sized businesses (SMB) and mid-market brands.
Vestavia council OKs up to $3 million tax rebate for new Walmart in Cahaba Heights. June 15, 2026 10:29 PM The Vestavia Hills City Council meets at Vestavia Hills City Hall on Monday, June 15, 2026. The Vestavia Hills City Council on Monday night unanimously approved up to $3 million in tax rebates for a proposed Walmart Neighborhood Market slated to go on the site of the former Winn-Dixie grocery store in Cahaba Heights. Walmart has a contract to buy the property at 3925 Crosshaven Drive and is proposing to tear down the current building and put a 45,000-square-foot Walmart Neighborhood Market in its place, but there are certain costs involved that might push Walmart to choose another site outside the city, City Manager Jeff Downes said. Walmart deems the former Winn-Dixie building as being obsolete for its purposes and would have to tear down the current building and restructure the underground infrastructure, so there is a $3 million "feasibility gap," Downes said. "They could go somewhere else, or they could consider in a positive economic fashion this site in Cahaba Heights," he said. If the city were to cover that "feasibility gap," it could bring a new grocery store to the city and keep those tax dollars in the city, he said. Sales taxes are the No. 1 source of revenue to support city government, and grocery stores are the No. 1 taxpayers of sales taxes, he said. Instead of providing $3 million upfront, the city prefers to provide the incentive money on the back end as a rebate of tax dollars actually received, Downes said. That guarantees that any incentive payment is a direct result of the success of the store and not a gamble that the store will succeed, he said. The agreement approved by the City Council on Monday night was to provide Walmart a sales tax rebate of up to 46.875% of actual sales taxes paid over 10 years, not to exceed a total of $3 million. The new Walmart Neighborhood Market is expected to generate about $25 million in annual sales, which would provide the city with $11.1 million in sales tax revenue over 10 years. After the $3 million rebate is applied, which is projected to happen over 4[1/2] years, the city would have a net gain of $8.1 million over 10 years, Downes said. In addition to the new tax revenue, it also provides a quality-of-life amenity for residents in that community, which is super important, he said. Councilman Rusty Weaver said most of the comments he has heard from the community about the incentive package have been positive, but some people expressed concerns about the amount of the incentive. Weaver said trying to judge a project like this based on the amount of the tax rebate alone is a "fool's errand" because there are so many other factors to consider. The "feasibility gap" is what drives the amount, he said. But you also have to consider what the city gets if the site remains vacant as it has been for more than a year, and that is zero tax dollars, he said. Also, Walmart plans to invest at least $20 million into the property in land acquisition, demolition, construction and related site improvements to make the site operational as a Walmart Neighborhood Market, city records show. The city will gain construction-related sales taxes and building permit fees, Weaver said. "All of these things create a huge benefit to the city that, when taken in the context of the amount of the tax rebate, makes total economic sense," Weaver said. "That's the bottom line for every one of these analyses that we do is - does it make economic sense?" Other people have claimed the city is setting a precedent by giving Walmart $3 million, but that's not true either, Weaver said. "Every single one of these requests is taken independently and has to stand on its own," he said. "Whatever's happened before and happens in the future has nothing to do with each individual request." Vestavia Hills Mayor Ashley Curry said the Walmart Neighborhood Market on U.S. 31 in Vestavia Hills has been an outstanding investment for the city. "If the one in Cahaba Heights can replicate what the one down the street did, we'll be OK," he said. Councilwoman Kimberly Cook said one of the major benefits of this deal is that the city is getting rid of an older building and replacing it with something new and that fits with the improvements the city has already made on Crosshaven Drive in the Cahaba Heights business district in the form of new sidewalks, wider roads and improved traffic flow. The Walmart Neighborhood Market will come with a new building and new landscaping, she said. "It will be beautiful, so I'm very excited to present this to the community," she said. Donald Harwell, a resident in the city, said he's not at all against the economic incentive package, but he thinks the $3 million should be going to the people who will be shopping at the Walmart, not the company. He would prefer to see the city waive the city's 4% sales taxes for the first three years the store is in operation so the shoppers benefit, he said. "Let them have the rebate, not Walmart," Harwell said. Walmart is expecting to get $25 million in annual revenue from this store. "They're making money out of this deal, and they're a trillion-dollar corporation... I don't know why we're giving Walmart $3 million." In other business Monday night, the Vestavia Hills City Council voted unanimously to: * Rezone 3.8 acres at 3034 Green Valley Road in Cahaba Heights between Green Valley Road and Sunview Drive to accommodate 19 detached single-family homes instead of the current nine existing lots. Read more about that project here. * Allow a drop-off donation center for the Vapor Ministries thrift stores at 3253 Cahaba Heights Road. This would be a drop-off center only with no sales taking place there, and there would be no outdoor storage or donation bins, the nonprofit said. * Allow a Scenthound dog bathing and grooming business in a shopping center at 3155 Green Valley Road. There will be no boarding or veterinary services offered. * Extended a cable TV franchise agreement for Spectrum Southeast to continue doing business in Vestavia Hills for another 10 years, adding in a $50,000 performance bond for any damages caused by the company and not resolved in a reasonable amount of time * Authorized the mayor and city manager to execute agreements to secure manufacturer incentives that will come with the purchase of $1.7 million worth of Motorola police and fire radios that will replace the 2017 models currently being used * Approved a license to sell alcoholic beverages for Hilltop Liquor at 790 Montgomery Highway, Suite 100 * Extended the deadline for demolition of an unsafe structure at 2750 Smyer Road until Oct. 13 to give more time to properly dispose of asbestos Downes also gave the council and public an update on the upcoming renovation of Vestavia Hills Fire Station No. 4 in Liberty Park. The city will seek bids on that project later this week and hopes to begin construction in late September, he said. The city also has bids due in about two weeks for 30,000 cubic yards of dirt needed for sitework for expansion of city facilities at the Sicard Hollow Athletic Complex, Downes said. Another big project almost complete is the installation of the heater for the competition pool at Wald Park, he said. A final walkthrough is scheduled for Wednesday, and the pool heater will be ready for operation when it's needed later this fall, he said. Editor's note: This story was updated at 4:36 p.m. on June 16 to correct a direct quote from Councilman Rusty Weaver. Weaver said that trying to judge a project like the Walmart Neighborhood Market economic development agreement based on the amount of the tax rebate alone is a "fool's errand" because there are so many other factors to consider.