Jennifer Healy is one of Target's most loyal customers. She frequently shops at the retailer, owns a Redcard and often looks for deals through the company's new digital tool called Cartwheel.
But loyal doesn't always mean happy. Each time Healy shops at the SuperTarget in Edina, she says the store seems to be out of basic goods like flour and corn syrup.
"I don't understand it," said Healy, a resident of southwest Minneapolis. "They are able to know so much about shoppers with all of their technology. But they always run out of things they know people will want. It makes me very frustrated."
Large big-box chains like Target and Wal-Mart operate thousands of stores with complicated inventory systems, so the occasional out-of-stock is not unusual. But some consumers and analysts say Target's ambition has at times outpaced its supply chain, especially as the retailer expands into food and groceries, opens new international stores and faces brutal price wars during the holiday shopping season.
Target officials strongly deny that stores frequently run out of goods. Of the 2 million customers who took weekly online surveys this year, "overwhelmingly the guests are highly satisfied not just for the overall shopping experience but for being able to buy what they came to purchase," said Keri Jones, senior vice president of merchandise planning.
But Target's debut in Canada earlier this year, the company's first international expansion, was marred by reports of empty shelves and shortages of grocery products.
And after Black Friday weekend, Target.com was already out of stock on nearly 60 percent of the top holiday toys, according to a Bloomberg Industries analysis. That percentage is much higher than rivals Wal-Mart, Kmart and Amazon.com.
Out-of-stocks seem to be more frequent in groceries, with customers complaining that even SuperTargets frequently run out of basic items.