Target Corp. has a food quandary.
Six years after it began adding more groceries to its stores, executives say they missed the mark. Its food section is neither as extensive as Wal-Mart's, they say, nor as distinctive as Trader Joe's.
"We're not really special and we're not a full grocery," John Mulligan, Target's chief financial officer, said at a recent investors conference. "So we're sitting in the middle of no man's land."
Fixing food is a crucial piece of the puzzle as Target aims to reinvent itself. Last week, the Minneapolis-based company cut 1,700 headquarters employees in a move executives described as an effort to improve efficiency.
The savings from the job cuts will help fuel investments in one of CEO Brian Cornell's biggest strategic priorities, which is ramping up Target's digital prowess. But analysts say finding the company's positioning in groceries could actually play a bigger role in a rebound.
Digital sales, while growing at a rapid pace, account for only about 3 percent of Target's $73 billion in annual sales. Food, by comparison, accounts for about $20 billion — or about a fifth — of its business.
If a more appealing grocery department can drive a Target shopper to make just one more trip to the store every three months, that would mean an extra $2.5 billion in annual sales, executives say.
"We clearly think it represents a significant opportunity for us," said Cornell, who joined the company last summer after previous leadership roles at PepsiCo, Sam's Club, and Safeway.