Target has launched ten $1B+ brands

Target has 45 in-house brands. Ten of them make $1B+ while 4 make $2B+.

Have you ever walked into Target looking to buy a single item (e.g., milk) but walked out with a bounty of other goods you didn’t know you needed?

Target has launched ten $1B+ brands

In industry parlance, that’s known as the “Target Effect,” which is driven in large part by the retailer’s mastery of…

… creating desirable in-house brands

According to Fast Company, the $129B retail giant has launched 48 ”owned brands” across home, fashion, beauty, and other categories.

Of these, 10 brands have cracked $1B in sales (the most recent was activewear line All in Motion) while 4 brands generate $2B+ a year:

  • Cat & Jack (Kids apparel)
  • Good & Gather (food brand)
  • Up & Up (household)
  • Threshold (home decor)

Target capitalizes on the hottest trends

It does so by combining an analytics team (tracking search and social data) with an in-house design team (including chemists and material scientists).

Target also regularly gives shelf space to popular online D2C brands (e.g., Casper, Quip).

There is risk in these partnerships, though, as the company has a track record of launching competing in-house brands.

Some call Target’s copycat tactics dirty

Notably, luxe brand Burberry and shoe brand Vans have both sued the Minneapolis-based retailer for trademark infringement.

To be sure, copying is very much par for the course in retail:

  • Amazon and Walmart have white label brands
  • Zara and H&M rip off the latest runway designers

A fashion lawyer tells Fast Company most of Target’s moves are “perfectly legal” (though, we weren’t able to confirm this).

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