Target: Layoffs to help cut $2B

Restructuring is tech focused

 In this May 20, 2009 file photo, shopping baskets are stacked at a Chicago area Target store. Target Corp. on Tuesday, March 3, 2015 said it plans $2 billion in cost cuts over the next two years through corporate restructuring and other improvements.
In this May 20, 2009 file photo, shopping baskets are stacked at a Chicago area Target store. Target Corp. on Tuesday, March 3, 2015 said it plans $2 billion in cost cuts over the next two years through corporate restructuring and other improvements.

NEW YORK -- Target Corp. is cutting several thousand jobs as part of a plan to eliminate $2 billion in costs over the next two years.

The goal is to make the Minneapolis-based discounter more agile to compete in an increasingly competitive landscape and appeal to shoppers who are buying and researching on their mobile devices.

As part of the restructuring plans, Target will eliminate positions primarily at its corporate headquarters -- which employs 13,000 -- and establish centralized teams based on specialized expertise.

Target also plans to invest between $2 billion and $2.2 billion in capital projects for the current fiscal year. That's in line with what it spent a few years ago, but this year, about half, or $1 billion, will be spent on technology. That's a big shift from past years when most was spent on new stores and renovations of its chain of about 1,800 stores.

"We have to be more nimble, more agile. We have to create a more innovative culture," Brian Cornell, Target's CEO told analysts Tuesday at a meeting in New York to outline growth plans.

Target CFO John Mulligan told Wall Street that he expects sales at stores to rise 1 percent and for digital sales to rise 40 percent this year, for a total projected sales growth of 2 to 3 percent.

Cornell took over in August and is tasked with reclaiming the retailer's image as a purveyor of cheap chic fashion merchandise. He replaced Gregg Steinhafel, who resigned last May after a data breach that hurt sales and profits.

Even before Cornell took the helm, Target had begun to reassess its operations, sprucing up its baby departments and adding mannequins to its fashion areas. Cornell wants to double down on a handful of areas such as fashion, children's products and home furnishings. Target is also changing its grocery area and wants to focus on organic, natural, gluten-free and locally produced food.

The moves come after Target lost its way during the recession when it aggressively expanded into basic groceries. That helped drive traffic but diluted its cheap chic image, analysts have said. The company was also dragged down by its botched foray into Canada two years ago. And Target was behind other rivals in e-commerce services.

In January, Cornell made the decision to close the Canadian division and focus on revving up sales in the U.S. And the company is expanding its services, such as shipping goods from stores to speed up deliveries. It also permanently cut in half its minimum online purchase to qualify for free shipping, to $25. Target said shoppers responded to its no-minimum free-shipping offer during the holidays.

So far, the early efforts are paying off. The discount retailer recorded stronger-than-expected sales during the Christmas season as shoppers bought more clothing and other items.

As for its store expansion, the company is taking a measured approach even with its smaller stores. Target will open just eight TargetExpress locations across the country this year. It will also test new layouts in its general merchandise stores.

Business on 03/04/2015

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