Thursday, January 18, 2024

An Open Letter to Target (formerly Dayton-Hudson) Corp. re : Le Boutique Targét














Attention: Target Corporate Retail Merchandise Manager
{CC: Store Mgr./Merchandise Mgrs.:
Store #XXXX
Store #XXXX
Store #XXXX
Store #XXXX
Store #XXXX
Store #XXXX
Store #XXXX}

Dear silver-medal discount retail kings,

I take virtual pen in hand because it seems you - individually and/or collectively - need a wake-up call about the state of your business.

I write, not about your atrocious corporate policy of grooming children and sexualizing them at an early age with your dreadful LGBTEIEIO agenda, nor even to chide you for the fact that most of your establishments look perpetually as if they had just been pillaged by swarms of Vikings and Visigoths rampaging through the aisles mounted on herds of wildebeests and rhinocerii fed on a diet of methamphetamine and PCP. No, this is about nothing so controversial nor obvious.

And before we get to the crux of the matter, let me start off with a compliment. Your Mondo Llama line of acrylic paints, the entire rainbow of 63 of them (not counting the chalk shades) are simply excellent, and a superb value for the money, providing all the quality necessary for a host of artistic endeavors for less than $2/bottle, when one doesn't need to spend nor obtain commercial artist-quality tubes of the pricier stuff. I frankly couldn't be happier with the product line, and bonus for you, it's one of your store-brand lines.

Having said that, I'm not writing to criticize you now, but rather to offer my heartfelt condolences.

I offer them for what must be a constant source of despair at every level, for the simply abysmal level of illiterate, color-blind, downright stupid and lazy so-called associates you must be forced to hire to stock your shelves.

Is someone holding a gun to your personnel managers' heads when you hire such a shiftless bunch of incompetent retards? Should we call the police? Is it a federal law we need to raise the hue and cry about which requires you to employ such an all-around bunch of lackadaisical doofusii, and entrust them the incredibly complex task of - horrors! - putting things on the shelves where they belong??

Tell us how we can help you; we're here for you.

I ask because - just spit balling here, not telling such a huge corporation how to run their business, mind you - I have a wee suspicion that if you could somehow put the right colors of paint where they're supposed to go, you'd, y'know, SELL MORE OF THEM. Crazy, right? Let me know if I'm wildly out of line there with such rampant speculation.

I can only commiserate with you because not only are the plainly visible colors of the Mondo Llama paint bottles not an actual clue for the people who're entrusted every week with stocking them in the right spots, but because the names of each color are written in English on both the shelves, and the bottle tops. Almost like if someone could read English, let alone look at the flipping colors of paint inside, they could actually work out which bottles go in which place on the store shelves. Every. Single. Time. Mirabile dictu!
























Do your employees need an emotional support animal to help them discern colors? Would putting a giant See-N-Spell on all store shelves help them to get all 63 colors in the right places? I'm baffled.

I just wanted to let you know that, to the extent the colors are correctly located in the stores I CC'ed in on this communication, it's because I take about 2 minutes whenever I'm in one of those stores to straighten them out. You're welcome. I have a leg up on your employees, obviously, because I'm neither color-blind nor illiterate. Just in case you wanted me to check my non-retard not-colorblind privilege.

The pity for you is, you can't seem to be able to motivate any of your $15/hr. employees to spend less than a dollar's worth of your company time to do the same thing. That'd be...work! Icky!

Yeah, I suppose it's a little OCD. And I know, many of your other customers "help" you by putting things on shelves all over the store when they're too lazy to walk them back where they got them, but this isn't that. I know, because I continuously find three bottles of paint with your pick labels attached to the lot, all the same color, and all mis-located. At every store. Every time I drop in. Because that's how your flunkies stock them.

Maybe you could think about doing an Ishihara Color Blindness Test before you hire people. You could still hire the ones that are color-blind, and get some ADA cred and points; and then, just not ask them to sort items by color. You're on your own what to do about the ones who can't read (maybe remedial English classes for the Common Core high school grads?), and the lazy doofuses.

Apparently, to Target employees, any color of blue is
interchangeable with every other color of blue.
And if you can read the number in this test, it's also
evidently the average Target employee IQ.



























Why do I get worked up about the fact that you have thousands of employees stocking your shelves who can't read, can't see colors, and/or don't give a damn? (Worst case for you, all of the above.)

Well, it's like this: Back in the day, when Van Halen (they're a rock band; maybe you've heard of them? You sell their albums...) used to have an infamous clause (#126) in their voluminous tour contract that there would be bowls of M&Ms backstage. But absolutely NO brown ones.

And if they saw a brown M&M, it was a breach of contract, and they could cancel the entire show, for cause, with full compensation owed.

Not because they hated brown M&Ms. Not because they were divas. But because they wanted to make sure, with tons of equipment, electricity, and pyrotechnics going off on a huge show, to ensure the safety of the band, their roadies, and their fans, they wanted a quick test of whether the concert promoters had read the contract and were following the rules.


It was a bellwether; a canary-in-the-coal-mine, if you will, to see if the people they were entrusting their safety to were doing their jobs.

And that's how I feel about the paint in your craft aisle. If you can't hire people that can get something that simple and basic right, how can you be expected to get anything right that's harder than that??

You guys have exactly three jobs: Stock the shelves, open the doors, and ring up the sales. (And let's get serious: you've tried to outsource that last one to your customers for years, and now you're shocked that one's blown up in your faces.) And if you now can't stock the shelves either, you won't have to worry about opening the doors for much longer either.
QED

So I feel for you, both individually and corporately. Not to mention for your stockholders.

Waaaaaay back in the misty past, like many youngsters embarking on gainful employment, I started out in retail too. At a place called Sears, Roebuck, and Co. Maybe some of the older folks there remember them? At the time I worked there, they really were "where America shopped". They parlayed catalog sales into the premier retail establishment in the country. But they had technological myopia: they couldn't see the internet as the logical extension of their catalog, and you and everyone else ate their lunch, metaphorically.

You folks, with hundreds (1956, at last count) of stores in all 50 states seem to have lost sight of the idea that you're running actual brick-and-mortar stores. And that it's your bread and butter. You get the online aspect; but if your master plan is to be a smaller version of Bezos-mart, with less selection, you're well on your way to becoming the next Sears story.

I feel even sorrier for you when I consider how it got this way. Because as I learned from masters of the craft in the military, you only get the compliance with orders you inspect for.

So this means you not only have incompetent, slovenly, or outright incapable employees, you have nearly 2000 store managers and merchandise managers who frankly don't give a flying fig about this. If they even know about it, because they never check. You'll have to decide for yourselves whether their apathy or their ignorance is worse. And you're paying them for this!

At least your hired flunkies aren't so stupid or incompetent (...yet) they put the paint bottles in the candy or cake frosting aisle, but that's a pretty low bar, don't you think?

I'm not a stock market guy, but if I was, or even if I was invested in it, I think I'd be shorting your stock.

Maybe I've got it wrong. Maybe things are great at the other 1949 stores, and it's just every store within 5 miles of me that can't pull off such a simple task. Ever. Any day in the last several years. Anytime I've checked.

But, like I said, I'm not criticizing you. You do whatever you think best.

I just feel sad that you're paying huge numbers of people (and soon, even starting them out here in Califrutopia at $20/hr minimum!) to be so utterly incapable of doing the most basic function in retail: putting things on the store shelves. And they keep getting it wrong every day, and no one in charge - all hired by you - notices or cares.

But now, we can both live in hope: Me, that anyone in your entire corporation important enough to make a change cares enough to start running your business like a business instead of thinking it's going to run itself; and you, that if they did, I'd drop dead from utter shock.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

The only color they pay attention to is skin color. Sorta ironic since we are told they are "people of color". TBH, I'm surprised they get it on the shelves at all.

CT Ginger said...

If you’ve ever worked retail you’ll understand that keeping the product where it belongs and letting the customer serve himself are two mutually antagonistic policies. Customers handle the product. That’s a necessary evil. Customers stupid enough to shop at Target have no clue about how to put the product back where it belongs. Such stupid people shop just about everywhere and treat inventory with the same lack of care.

terrapod said...

Well stated, Bravo!

But don:t stop there.
McD where a color assembly chart in front of nose at eye level and they fail to place ersatz cheese in the cheeseburger.

Quick Lube where tightening drain plugs is apparently optional.

Supermarkets with product mislabeled or placed out of reach of a 6'2" customer.

Service decay is endemic and a sure sign of a civilization heading for collapse. Pride in workmanship no matter how simple or menial the task is a vanishing ethic.

Mark D said...

My nephew is a former Target employee, he was one of the guys responsible for getting the stuff off the trucks and properly sorted in the warehouse before hitting the shelves. For the last few years of his employment it got increasingly discouraged by the diversity hires and overall wokeness, to the point where he's set out on his own, working harder but much happier.

This is what happens when management loses sight of the fact that stores exist to exchange products that people want for their hard earned money, not to virtue signal.

Mark D.

Aesop said...

@CT Ginger,
As noted in the essay, "this isn't that".
I can tell the difference between occasional customer mischief, and deliberate stupidity/color blindness/apathy.

When all of one color is in the wrong place, times multiple colors that were out of stock last week, because it's too hard to do it right, that sticks out like a sore thumb.

Their associates are simply lazy stupid bastards. x 20,000.

Tucanae Services said...

Couple of points:

1) Great diatribe but no big deal right? Well, lets apply Aesops observation to the Tarjey in-house pharmacy counter. Maybe now there is an increased level of concern? There ought to be.

2) Target has women as their primary target market. As a class, women want to touch anything they intend to buy. They also don't give a damn about putting stuff back either. So a Tarjey employee could do a bang up job at the paints display and within an 8hr shift the customer base will have wiped out the effort. Not defending, just observing.

3) Sadly Tarjey is a BigBox retailer just like HomeDespot or Lowest. All the 'brains' are at HQ, the foot soldiers at the bottom following a script. True whether its store design, product placement, or customer service. The BigBox purveyors only hire the minimally qualified to staff the facilities. So 'the rot' we see in our daily lives is fully planned and is not an accident.

As my ole Man used to opine -- 'There are no poor countries, only poor mindsets.'

Stealth Spaniel said...

I'm working in the BigBox now, and we all bitch about the stupidity of management. We have a former Target employee in our midst and he has extrapolated how absolutely moronic Target management is. He said that he had to leave before they literally made he a retarded kid. No one is watching the store-so to speak. They promoted a Hispanic woman and lo and behold! Only folks she hires are....wait for it.......Hispanic. She has told many white people that they "wouldn't fit in" with Target corporate policies.
There is no fixing retail-at any level. It is the same game as government; do the least for as much graft as possible. Andrew Torba is correct, we need a parallel society.

TRX said...

There's a Target about 20 miles from me. I hadn't been in there since the 1980s. a few years ago I went back for some reason, and they had not one, not two, not three... but SIX gun-buster signs on the entry doors; three per door.

Since this is a Constitutional Carry state their signs mean nothing, but I figured the signs indicated they didn't want me or my money, so I turned around, got back in my truck, and drove away.

Aesop said...

@Tucanae,

Re: Point 2. Re-read my essay, and earlier responses. I worked retail too. I know all about customers fornicating up the shelves.
This. ISN'T. That.
Customers don't put all of one color in the wrong row, X seven colors. With pick labels still attaching all three bottles still attached.

This is sheer employee illiteracy, incompetence, and apathy.
At every store.
Everywhere.
All the time.

Re: Point 1.
That was my underlying point in the essay. If they can't get something as bog-simple as craft paint right even one day out of 365, why should anyone think they can get anything harder correct?

I have treated people in the ER because a major chain pharmacy (not Target) doubled the dose and tripled the frequency of a patient's prescription refill of a cardiac medicine. That patient was getting nearly a week's dose per day, and in three days, it almost stopped her heartbeat - forever.

This company does billions in annual revenue, has 44,000 employees, and makes up the actual S&P 100 and 500 stock indexes, and they can't even master the simplest function of their core business.

This is DIE melting down Western Civilization in one generation.
The crash is going to be epic.

Mark Jones said...

"The crash is going to be epic."

And quite literal, when planes built by DEI-infected companies are driven into the ground by pilots who checked the DEI boxes but lacked in basic competence.

TCK said...

Huh, I literally just had a similar experience at work today. Except instead of $2 paint bottles it was a $239 baby monitor that someone had stocked behind a $30 clearance label for a completely different item. And it had to be the stocker because we keep that shit locked up in my store (along with the baby formula, the tide pods, and well, a shit ton of other things you'd never see locked up even just 10 years ago).

Fortunately (for the company) the customer didn't care to make a fuss about the manager on duty not wanting to let it go at the listed price.

Glacialhills said...

A few years before Kmart turned off its lights for the last time, when Martha Stuart had began shilling for them, I went in a store my folks used to take me to just to re-live some childhood memories.
As I wandered the aisles looking for the blue-light I found a circular rack of wrangler heavy duty, reinforced knees camo jeans marked down from 49.99 to 29.99 in the sale flier, but as I looked on a pair in my size they had a sticker on the tag for 9.99.ALL OF THEM DID!!! So I bought a pair,paid 29.99 it rang up as, and then, since Michigan has a Bounty law

(Basically a bounty is if you catch a price that rings up mismarked you get the difference plus 5 dollars cash bounty,when you show customer service the receipt.)

so I got the jeans for 9.99 and five dollars cash bounty bringing the final price to 4.99. Amazing price, right?
Well I go back a couple days later to see if they had any pairs in my size left and had they fixed their colossal goofup...nope, still mismarked and still a full rack with multiple real tree camo patterns(they even had the snow pattern) so I repeat the process and got another "deal" this time buying 5 pairs. Only Caveat for doing this is You can only get one bounty per item per day, so I couldn't just buy the whole rack all at once and get bounty on each, but I kept stopping in every day, and for the entirety of the sale they never fixed it.
I thought at the time,how can this manager keep ignoring this huge blunder, mismarking this item by 20 bucks less than the corporates own flyer, and if that wasn't enough, shelling out all of this bounty money day after day,literally giving away 50 dollar jeans...I
came to the conclusion then, this company, kmart, is doomed...and I was correct.

Anonymous said...

It really bugs me to go to a real store to buy something only to find it's an item not stocked and told I can order it on-line.

Yes I can. But that doesn't mean I'll buy that item from that store's web site. Matter of fact, if I can, I won't order it from that store (JCP being one example. Are they even in business anymore?)

Anonymous said...

I shop at the Target on Clydesdale Road in Medina MN. That store is always clean, neat, with shelves stocked and properly faced. It just might, maybe have something to do with several members of the Dayton Family live in the area.

I eavesdropped on two high school aged employees when I started shopping there three years ago. The senior one was explaining and demonstrating to the new guy; this is what your section had better look like, or you will hear from the managers. Stocked, Organized, Faced, and clean.

John Wilder said...

Last time in a Target: 2008.

Anonymous said...

Had a part time job at Ace for many years. Everyday you went through your area and made sure the items are in the correct spot and you pulled everything forward on the hooks. Every Ace I've ever been in is that way.