About Retail Industry

BNET Retail provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives about the key players in the consumer retail industry. In addition to detailed retail company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new retailers, products, mergers and acquisitions, consumer spending figures, and a host of other important issues pertinent to the retail sector.

Target Talks Cheap but Can't Resist Chic

By Mike Duff | Aug 25, 2009

Target is trying to balance its proposition to consumers measuring, as the company puts it, the relative importance of the expect more and the pay less elements of its brand promise, or, as others might put it, weighing the cheap and chic ends of its popular reputation.

No one should yet judge just how the matter might tilt, however.

Lately Target has emphasized how it is making itself more attractive to shoppers by expanding relatively inexpensive private labels, expanding price matching guarantees and otherwise taking measures to convince consumers that what it charges is competitive with its major rivals. Yet, even if it talks cheap, it hasn’t stopped thinking chic.

And it probably shouldn’t. After all, its distribution probably isn’t going to match Wal-Mart efficiencies any time soon, so a true price war would be foolhardy. The risk is particularly acute at a time when its rival is muddying the waters that are supposed to separate the two with cleaner, brighter and more attractive store environments that Wal-Mart claims are winning market share at the focal points of its efforts, electronics and home. When the recession ends, the more the two rival retailers are alike, the less reason customers who have traded down from Target to Wal-Mart will have to trade back up.

So, Target will keep doing what it did to get its chic on, which means trotting a lot of stylish names through its aisles. “Throughout the fall season, we’ll continue to demonstrate our commitment to differentiated content and provide compelling reasons for guests to shop at Target with the introduction of several new up and coming designers,” said Kathryn Tesija, the company’s executive vice president of merchandising in a conference call last week. Among the initiatives coming this month and next:

It doesn’t end there, as later in the year Target is determined to bring in even more handbags, these from designer Carlos Falchi in another limited edition handbag collection.

In the conference call, as transcribed by SeekingAlpha, Tesija described that line as offering vivid color, pattern and texture “in deep hues and jewel tones on signature silhouettes.”

She added:

The hobos, satchels, shoulder and messenger bags in shades of plum, teal, brown, black and grey, are elegant yet functional with their interior compartments and pockets large enough to fit everyday needs. The exotic collection features Falchi’s iconic techniques and prints with intricate stitching details at amazingly affordable prices ranging from $19.99 to $49.99. The collection will be available at Target stores and on Target.com beginning early November through the end of December.

And that says a lot about how Target feels about — and positions — chic.

Handbags might not be a bad focal point for Target. Given what women were paying for purses before the recession, even $49.99 is cheap, and chic is a relative attraction when consumers are wondering when unemployment will hit 10 percent.

Mike Duff has written about retail and related fields over 20 years. His work has appeared in publications as diverse as Retailing Today, Drug Store News, Supermarket Business, Consumer Digest, MarketingWeek, American Food and Ag Exporter magazines.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Groceries Target-Style

    RetailWire - 149 days 18 hours 14 minutes ago

    "Expect More. Pay Less." That's the Target tagline and now the company appears intent on getting consumers used to the idea of expecting to buy groceries at prices well below most other food outlets. Has Target hit on a viable food strategy with its test of expanded grocery departments

  • The Inside Scoop on E-mail Subscribers

    Website Magazine - 49 days 19 hours 54 minutes ago

    The advantages of e-mail marketing are many - for starters, it's targeted, direct and measurable. But it's extremely important to know the minds of consumers when crafting an e-mail strategy. Miss the mark and you can easily earn a black eye for your company. New research from Epsilon, a direct marketing company, reveals some important... [[...

  • Hearst Newspapers Trying To Figure Out Where To Build The Pay Wall

    PaidContent.org - 263 days 9 hours 49 minutes ago

    As online advertising revenues are expected to slow to little more than a trickle this year, Hearst is the latest newspaper company trying to figure out how much of its content it can put behind a pay wall. Earlier this week during the Q4 earnings call, a Cablevision (NYSE: CVC) exec touched on plans to make Long Island's Newsday.com a...

  • Activists ask GSK to pool HIV patents

    Fierce Pharma - 74 days 16 hours 4 minutes ago

    Anti-AIDS activists are calling on GlaxoSmithKline to contribute its HIV-related intellectual property to a patent pool. In a letter from 15 organizations--including the Médecins Sans Frontiéres, Unicef and Christian Aid--the pool is touted as a way to improve access to medicines to combat AIDS. The request comes after Glaxo chief Andrew Witty...

  • Marketing Daily: Quaker State Lays Down The Gauntlet

    MediaPost - 246 days 17 hours 59 minutes ago

    The engine-wear wars are heating up. Today, a letter in a full-page ad in USA Today, signed by Steve Harman, president of Americas, Quaker State, invites competitive motor oil brands -- Valvoline, Castrol and Mobil -- to a put-up-or-shut-up challenge. Says the letter, "In recent months, some companies have generated marketing materials that make...

 
Reply to Story

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Subscribe to this discussion via Email or RSS

  •  
    1

    adwatchblog

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Target Talks Cheap but Can't Resist Chic

    What is that long-standing saying that beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

    In making a compasrison of Target to Walmart, while the Target store experience is VERY clean and uncluttered, for some strange reason or obsession the managment seems to have the experience designed for a shopper to be strolling in a sterile food shopping museum, from my perspective.

    Notice that no music is played over the Target store speakers, making for an eery quiet especially in stores underperforming relative to their sq. footage. I can even go to my Dollar Tree store where everything is under $1.00 and clutter should be part of their trade name, but still have a more enjoyable experience in regard to a soothing music experience when shopping. I do admit that Walmart is way out there in the excess with all of their televisions blaring everywhere in addition to the normal music experience one would expect when shopping, and Walmart borders on being a carnival atmposhere and needs to correct in the other direction to let the brain actually shop rather than process information overload.

    Also, in being uncluttered at Target, the variety of shelf SKU offerings is severely lacking in Target compared to a Walmart. While Target does a good job of managing fewer skus for less out-of-stocks, that lack of variety is a concern.

    I personally think that Target is a bit too insular and self-absorbed in their marketing and merchandising and they might do a better job in running some focus groups with their desired consumer group to understand what they actually desire in the total experience rather than Target's assumptions of what the shopper desires. My unscientific survey of shopper feedback to accompany my own opinion says they have some upside to improve the experience.

  •  
    2

    bardmike

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Target Talks Cheap but Can't Resist Chic

    The thing about Target has been it has wanted to consumer to have the same experience from California to New England. That's a dicey proposition and requires a lot of homogenization to work. My personal experience of Target is, I don't feel like I'm shopping. I rush in, see if the store has what I want and rush back out. From the point of view of an observer, it seems to me that Target recognizes that what has brought the chain success, including that homogenized, centrally controlled store environment might not generate enough additional sales as its store growth declines and now is looking for ways to create a less soothing, bigger spending store.

    --Mike

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
Click Here