Don't give Lilly Pulitzer the credit for Target Corp.'s surprisingly strong first quarter.
Though the Minneapolis retailer created headlines, and some headaches, in last month's blast sale with the designer, executives said a number of lower-profile initiatives helped it through the shopping lull of late winter and early spring.
Its results Wednesday outshone those of Wal-Mart and several other retailers.
In the February-to-May quarter, Target reported a 52 percent increase in profit, to $635 million. Revenue was up 3 percent to $17 billion and same-store sales were up 2.3 percent.
Target had an easy comparison on its side. A year ago, it was grappling with losses in its Canadian stores and the lingering effect on its reputation from the data breach that happened at the end of 2013.
But even excluding the Canadian operations that Target has since shut down, profits were up 14 percent.
"The momentum we've seen so far makes us more confident than ever that we're moving in the right direction and encourages us to move even faster," Chief Executive Brian Cornell told analysts and investors in a conference call.
As he and other executives described the details, they made clear that little steps were paying off.