Target Stops Trying to Be Everything — Why “Targeting Less” Is the Growth Move

Growth doesn’t come from catering your product to everyone… It comes from narrowing your focus to the right audience.

For example, Target recently announced they are done being a brand for everyone. (This might be the most “Target” move they’ve made in years.)

Target told investors it’s refocusing on “busy families.” More baby care. More groceries. Less of everything.

Because when you try to serve everyone, you end up being memorable to no one.

This is the part most brands miss.

Target wasn’t losing because they don’t offer value. They were losing revenue because “value for everyone” is an impossible position to defend.

Walmart can win on price. Amazon can win on convenience. Target has to win on something else.

A clearer customer. A clearer trip. A clearer reason to come back.

That’s what “busy families” really means. Speed and reliability. The basics that get bought every week.

Target is putting real money behind that shift, investing an additional $1B into its supply chain, technology, and stores.

Because positioning only works if operations can keep up.

They’re also projecting 2% net sales growth this fiscal year. A massive signal that their new strategy is backed by facts.

If you’re building a mid-sized brand, this is the lesson:

Your job isn’t to be everything to everyone; it’s to pick a Target. Then build the product, messaging, and experience around that one bullseye.

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