Inside Target’s 500 Job Decision | Fast Five shorts

This Omni Talk Retail Fast Five segment, sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Mirakl, Ocampo Capital, Infios, Quorso, and Veloq, examines Target’s decision to cut 500 roles while increasing investment in frontline store staffing.
Chris Walton and Anne Mezzenga, alongside Shoptalk’s Joe Laszlo, break down the labor math behind the move and debate whether this represents meaningful operational change or a strategic reset.
⏩ Tune in for the full episode here.
#Target #RetailLabor #StoreOperations #RetailStrategy #OmniTalk
00:00 - Untitled
00:00 - Target's Strategic Staffing Changes
01:49 - Skepticism Surrounding Target's Strategy
02:51 - Analyzing Corporate Layoffs and Impact on Workforce
03:50 - The Future of Target: Expectations and Accountability
04:53 - Target's New Goals and Expectations
05:50 - Strategic Decisions in Business Management
Target is cutting about 500 rolls at distribution centers and regional offices while simultaneously investing more money into frontline store staffing to improve customer experience, according to CNBC.
Speaker AAgain, Target is eliminating around 100 positions at the store district level and about 400 across its supply chain site while redirecting those resources to add more hours for frontline store employees.
Speaker AThe big box retailer said it's making changes to the way it runs an overseas store stores to improve the customer experience, a top goal of new CEO Michael Fidelke, who took over on February 1.
Speaker ATarget is reducing the number of store districts to streamline operations and putting money toward additional labor hours and new guest experience training for every team member at every store.
Speaker AJoe, I'm curious, how meaningful do you think Target's announcement to invest more in store staffing actually is?
Speaker BWell, I certainly think it's addressing the thing that comes up the most when people critique Target's current performance guest experience.
Speaker BWhat's causing the most problems with people who used to love Target but maybe don't shop there as often anymore or kind of used to go to Target because they wanted to and now kind of only go when they need to.
Speaker BI think improving that frontline experience, just having more bodies in stores because that's a thing that robots can't do yet, can only help.
Speaker BBut I think the, the proof is certainly going to be in the execution of that.
Speaker BSo I think, I think, I guess I would say they're, they're saying the right thing, but we're going to have to see how that manifests.
Speaker BIt's also not the kind of thing you can change overnight, especially not with a store fleet as big as theirs is.
Speaker BAnd so, so it's going to be a, a big gap between kind of, kind of saying the right thing now and, and having it come to reality, you know, three months from now, probably at the soonest.
Speaker ASo Joe, if I read between the lines.
Speaker ASo you're a little skeptical of the impact of this announcement?
Speaker AA little bit.
Speaker AThere's a little skepticism that you're viewing.
Speaker BThis announcement with, I guess, I guess a little bit.
Speaker BAnd also like kind of there needs to be some expectation setting just about around.
Speaker BLike it's not going to be an overnight.
Speaker BSuddenly the shelves will be stocked with everything that people want to buy and it'll be a back to the, the Target in store experience that we were all used to say five years ago.
Speaker BI think they're going to need to temper expectations about just how fast they can execute on what they're talking about.
Speaker AToday, especially Amongst the leadership changes they just announced too.
Speaker AThey've got a lot of things to sort out internally now as well.
Speaker AYeah, I mean, I'll go a little heavier handed on this.
Speaker AI don't think this is going to surprise anybody, but I think it's backed up by the math.
Speaker ASo I think, I think it's smoke and mirrors as a PR announcement and they're the.
Speaker AAnd it's smoking mirrors from the master of PR smoke and mirrors, which is Target said you do the math on this.
Speaker AThe article states very clearly that the average pay rate starts, starts at $15 an hour.
Speaker ASo annually that's $31,000 a year.
Speaker AThe average position eliminated.
Speaker AOn the high side, on the high side is $200,000 per year.
Speaker ASo that's basically an additional six and a half people for each eliminated position, which equates to, best case, an additional 3,225 workers, which, which is less than one extra one and a half workers per store across the entire fleet.
Speaker ATo say nothing of the added expense that comes from initiatives when you start saying things like we're going to increase employee training as well, in addition to having to replace the work from the workers who've left.
Speaker ASo these investments, to me, they don't, they on the core, they don't amount to anything when you step back and you do the numbers.
Speaker AUnless they're also putting more money behind training and store efforts.
Speaker ABut the articles didn't really hint to that.
Speaker AThey said it was all coming through the layoff.
Speaker ASo, and I don't know what's your take here?
Speaker ADo you agree with me?
Speaker ADo you disagree with me?
Speaker AAre you more on Joe's side or maybe Joe agrees with me now too.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker ABut where do, where do you come down?
Speaker CLook, I think the most important thing about this is Target.
Speaker CWhat Joe said, Target is acknowledging the state of their stores in the statement.
Speaker CSo I think that's not PR smoke and mirrors, that's just calling it and saying we see it now.
Speaker CThis, that, that it gives me hope that we'll start to hear from Michael Fedelke some of the other things that are plaguing Target right now and that he's going to address them.
Speaker CHowever, I think Joe and you bring up very good points.
Speaker CWe, the customers are going to expect to see some changes.
Speaker CSo they're, you're putting something like this out there.
Speaker CSo within a few months, customers are going to expect to see that stores look better, that they're getting better support within their store, their Target stores on their Target runs.
Speaker CAnd so I think it's really up to Target to, to prove it themselves.
Speaker CThey'll, They've.
Speaker CThey've put it out there, they've set a goal publicly, and now we'll see if they can.
Speaker CIf they can make good on it.
Speaker CBut I think, you know, you also bring up some good points when you were doing the math.
Speaker CLike, I think there's also stuff going on behind the scenes that we are not privy to that is like, what.
Speaker CWhat does this mean then?
Speaker CDoes a, Does a DTL now have a bigger territory that they have to look after?
Speaker CWhat does that mean for their role and making sure that there's consistency across all of these things that are being done to change what the store experience is like.
Speaker CLike, there's a lot of open questions there and what this is actually going to look like.
Speaker CBut Target said it, and now I think all we can do is wait and see.
Speaker CDo they pay, Pay or make good on this promise?
Speaker CAnd, and is this the first, hopefully, of many things that we see Target outwardly acknowledge and then make good with?
Speaker AYeah, and as a former district manager, I can tell you, yes, that's going to be the case.
Speaker ALike, that's, that's how this works.
Speaker AThey're going to have more territory to cover.
Speaker AIt's going to be more travel expenses, too, that have to be, you know, accounted for.
Speaker ASo, Joe, any last word on this one?
Speaker BNo, I, I think I agree with you both that, you know, if this is, if this is it, if, you know, here's.
Speaker BHere's the plan, like, we fire these 500 people and everything will be golden in our stores.
Speaker BLike, clearly that doesn't seem possible to me.
Speaker BAnd as the shop talk guy, I'll always probably be more diplomatic than you guys could be about it.
Speaker BBut, but, but, so, so I guess my, my optimistic view is, is like, Ann, like, this is, this is the first step, and there will be more steps announced in, in coming weeks, and then, you know, hopefully again, shoppers will start to see execution, you know, in, in the next six, eight weeks, few months.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, Joe, I think everybody's more diplomatic about things that I am.
Speaker AThat's probably the rule of this show.





