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Walmart CEO said paying its star managers upwards of $620,000 yearly empowered them to ‘feel like owners’

Emma Burleigh
By
Emma Burleigh
Emma Burleigh
Reporter, Success
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Emma Burleigh
By
Emma Burleigh
Emma Burleigh
Reporter, Success
Down Arrow Button Icon
November 3, 2025, 12:54 PM ET
Walmart supervisor leads store employees
Money talks, and other companies like Rolls-Royce, Exxon Mobil, Cameo, and Volkswagen have aimed to change company culture through pay hikes. Gilles Mingasson—Getty Images

For many employees, it can be hard to feel connected to their company, especially at huge corporations like Walmart. But in 2024, Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner pulled out the big guns to ensure star managers feel the love—by paying them upwards of $620,000 per year. 

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“What we did last year was make managers feel like owners,” Furner said at a retail and consumer conference in April. “This includes shareholding, which has positively impacted their approach to the company’s profits and losses.”

In a bold move to boost morale and retention after fighting turnover and manager shortages during the pandemic, the $800 billion retail giant gave its top-performing regional store managers a serious payday in January—raising their total compensation to between $420,000 and $620,000. 

Their average base pay was hiked from $130,000 to $160,000, with the rest of the roughly half-a-million dollar salary made up of hefty stock grants and annual bonuses.

“This is the latest wage investment in our people,” Walmart spokesperson Anne Hatfield told Fortune earlier this year. “This has been a yearslong journey with increases in hourly pay that started in 2015.”

With more than 4,000 store managers across the U.S. (and around 1.5 million workers) when the policy went into effect, the payout wasn’t just generous—it was a calculated bet on culture.

And that bet has been working so far. In 2024, Walmart claimed the top spot on the Fortune 500—and landed on the Fortune Best Companies to Work For list not just last year, but again in 2025. Walmart said it has also improved its hourly worker retention rate by 10% over the past decade. And a Harvard Business School study, set to publish this fall, will unveil the business’s success from raising manager and minimum-wage salaries.

With a 1.5-million-strong workforce, it’s not easy to keep everyone happy, but Walmart went straight to the source: cold, hard cash.

Pay raises are essential for employee satisfaction and retention

Bosses may sling around promises of “unlimited PTO” and swanky office amenities, but it’s more money that most workers really want.

About 73% of workers would consider leaving their employer for a higher paycheck, according to a 2024 report from BambooHR. Money talks, yet 40% of employees haven’t received a pay bump in the past year. 

Salary deflation and a slowdown in pay raises have been driving staffers up the wall. As grocery prices continue to soar and the cost-of-living crisis persists, many would be swayed by more money, now more than ever.

“The cost of getting compensation wrong is easily realized in multiples later,” said Kelsey Tarp, director of HR business partners at BambooHR. 

“When employers need to go to market for talent, they might find the salary ranges to be inadequate to attract the talent that is needed; there is wage compression to address—all of which will be more costly in the long run.”

The employers paying up to improve company culture 

Some employers have already caught on. When Cameo wanted workers back at its Chicago headquarters, the company offered $10,000 bonuses for going into the office four days a week, rather than shoving a mandate in their face. 

After Rolls-Royce pulled an extraordinary business turnaround in recent years, it handed out nearly $39 million in shares to employees. It wanted to pay its success forward, by rewarding the people who made it happen. Each staffer got 150 company shares each, worth a little over $900. 

“We want to recognize your contribution to our future success and reward you for the role you will play in it,” CEO Tufan Erginbilgiç said in an internal memo to employees.

Even when companies are hitting a wall, they turn to pay hikes as a Hail Mary to try to turn things around. When thousands of Volkswagen employees in Germany were striking over pay cuts and factory closures, the car manufacturer offered its Tennessee plant workers a 14% pay raise over four years. 

After Exxon Mobil employees faced a tough era of salary freezes, 401(k) match suspension, and intense layoffs, the oil giant changed its tune. On average workers received a pay hike of 9%, above inflationary levels—with some top performers who got promoted seeing raises between 15% and 25%. 

“Our company performance reflects the hard work, commitment, and perseverance of our employees,” Exxon spokeswoman Amy Von Walter said. “We take great pride in the exceptional business results our teams delivered despite it being a time of uncertainty and significant change.”

A version of this story originally published on Fortune.com on April 4, 2025.

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About the Author
Emma Burleigh
By Emma BurleighReporter, Success

Emma Burleigh is a reporter at Fortune, covering success, careers, entrepreneurship, and personal finance. Before joining the Success desk, she co-authored Fortune’s CHRO Daily newsletter, extensively covering the workplace and the future of jobs. Emma has also written for publications including the Observer and The China Project, publishing long-form stories on culture, entertainment, and geopolitics. She has a joint-master’s degree from New York University in Global Journalism and East Asian Studies.

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