Walmart’s new CEO: Tell me what’s broken

After a more than 50-year career with Walmart, John Furner took the reins of the retail giant as CEO this week. One of his first orders of business? Inviting employee complaints.

In his first memo sent to all employees, Furner seemed to lay out his vision for the relationship between employees and leadership, with a focus on transparency and trust.

“Simple ask,” he wrote to the company’s 2.1 million employees. “Tell me one thing that slows you down or makes it harder to do your job.”

Furner emphasized that he plans to prioritize employee feedback in his first weeks on the job, during which he said he will visit stores, offices and warehouses around the globe to speak directly with employees.

In marking the start of Furner’s tenure, Walmart Chief Communications Officer Allyson Park suggested on LinkedIn that the memo reflects the new CEO’s broader leadership style.

“He asks great questions, is inquisitive yet trusts his people, likes to understand how things work, pushes for better and is deeply committed to our purpose, values and culture,” she wrote.

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A shift to simplicity

Despite the complexities of today’s talent landscape, Furner isn’t the only executive emphasizing simplicity in his strategy for problem-solving. Tesla’s Elon Musk recently made waves when he announced his new approach to hiring for his chip team: No resumes, cover letters or lengthy application processes—just three bullet points calling out the candidate’s biggest tech wins in their career thus far.

“He’s showing where hiring is going,” wrote Twill founder Michelle Volberg, who was quoted in a Business Insider story on the Musk move. Despite the strategy not being “perfect,” she suggests a straightforward approach, in a hiring sense, can cut through the jargon—and AI influence—that candidates may bring in the hiring process.

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“The core idea is right: Results beat resumes. Proof beats polish,” she says.

Whether Furner’s own emphasis on straightforward simplicity in navigating employee pain points will strengthen outcomes remains to be seen; yet his approach could strike a chord that resonates with employees.

Gallup recently found that just 28% of workers surveyed strongly agree that their opinions matter at work, which could be fueling what the firm calls “anemic” levels of employee engagement.

“Employees want transparent leadership, visibility and two-way trust; not top-down directives in isolation,” researchers write, noting that empowering employees to offer feedback is particularly meaningful in times of rapid change.

“Employees want leaders who show up, explain the ‘why’ and invite input,” they say. “Without space for employee voice, trust breaks down, and building trust becomes even harder.”

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