Twin Cities shoppers once again get to be guinea pigs for a new program that Target is testing out in its hometown: curbside pickup.
The service, which the Minneapolis-based retailer is calling "Drive Up," went live on Monday at 50 stores around the Twin Cities. Customers who want to use it place online orders through Target's app, click a button when they are on their way to the store, park at a designated parking spot and then employees bring the items out to their car.
The rollout follows an internal test of the service among headquarters employees at three Twin Cities stores over the summer.
Aimed at time-strapped shoppers who would prefer the convenience of not having to get out of their cars, the service is one of the latest ways that brick-and-mortar retailers are trying to fight off Amazon and stay relevant as consumers are increasingly accustomed to having online orders show up on their doorsteps within hours.
Like in-store pickup, curbside pickup also is a more profitable way for retailers to fulfill online orders since customers make the trip to the stores to fetch their orders instead of having to pay for the extra costs of shipping them to people's doorsteps.
Walmart has added curbside pickup areas to hundreds of its stores and is focusing its offering on fresh groceries. CVS also offers a curbside pickup service on orders placed through its website or app.
"We think this is going to be a service that our guests will love, whether they're going to a birthday party and need to grab a quick gift or whether they run out of diapers," said Jamie Bastian, a Target spokeswoman.
She added that the plan is to learn from the test in the Twin Cities, then make tweaks and roll it out more widely. She didn't provide a timeline for when it may be expanded to other markets.