Toilet paper trumps decor at Target's Great Save
Move over Italian dinnerware and Chinese accent armchairs. Target Corp
Starting on January 3, Target, the No. 2 U.S. discount retailer, is introducing The Great Save in its 1,740 stores.
In the space where it typically sells seasonal merchandise, Target is setting up a warehouse-club-like experience, taking aim at the success of clubs like Costco
For the next seven weeks, Target's Great Save will feature items like a six-pack of bath towels for $19.99, children's T-shirts for $3, and 35-packs of Market Pantry bottled water for $3.59. Its stores typically carry 24-packs of the Market Pantry water for $3.99.
Warehouse clubs like Costco and Sam's Club, part of Wal-Mart Stores Inc
The move marks a switch from the past five years, when Target used temporary events in January and February, like its Global Bazaar, to entice U.S. shoppers with African wood carvings or Asian accent tables.
For 2010, Target is betting shoppers will be more focused on buying necessities than new home furnishings. The company has acknowledged that its focus on trendy, but optional, merchandise had hampered its business.
As we round the corner here post holiday, our guests are looking for ways to get back to everyday life, to stock up on the basics that they use all the time, Kathee Tesija, Target's executive vice president of merchandising, said in an interview.
Target's profits plunged in the recession as shoppers who once eagerly snapped up its home decor or fashionable clothing stuck to buying staples like food and medicine.
To get its business back on track, Target has turned up the volume on its value message, emphasizing the Pay Less side of its Expect More. Pay Less tagline. It is responding faster to price cuts from rivals and offering to match their prices.
Many of Target's shoppers overlap with those who shop in warehouse clubs, particularly Costco, Tesija said.
But Costco also thrives by stocking unexpected treasure hunt items like designer clothing or high-end jewelry, mixed in with its typical selection of supersized ketchup bottles or multi-packs of tissues.
Target is following Costco's lead, and is interspersing treasure hunt items in its Great Save. In roughly 1,000 of its stores, the retailer will sell goods from designers not typically offered, such as polo shirts from Ralph Lauren and T-shirts by Calvin Klein.
The Great Save will have the look of a warehouse club, with merchandise -- like 12-packs of giant Bounty paper towels for $14.99 or 24-packs of triple roll Charmin toilet paper for $17.99 -- displayed on pallets or laid out on tables.
Tesija said Target does not plan to extend the event beyond February 21, but if some products are very popular with shoppers, the retailer could add them to its regular product assortment.
(Reporting by Nicole Maestri; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Leslie Gevirtz)
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