Target reviews

3.5

57% would recommend to a friend

(94,099 total reviews)
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Michael Fiddelke

47% approve of CEO

40% positive business outlook

Target has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 94,099 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Target employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Ventas al mayoreo y al menudeo industry (3.5 stars).

Reviews by job title

94K reviews
3.0
Nov 24, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Our guests love Target and you have a sense of pride when working at Target. They place a huge emphasis on the professional development of yourself and your team. As an executive, you complete a monthly Leadership Status that is reviewed with the Store Team Leader. There are good opportunities for advancement within the company as long as you are willing to relocate. The benefits are good and they match the first 5% you place in your 401(k), with immediate vesting.

Cons

Target has cut back on executive staffing and payroll in 2009. All stores lost at least one executive and two Team Leaders. As an STL, I supervised five executives and four Team Leaders because I have also responsibble for Guest Service. Our store will lose at least one more Team Leader in 2010. We had to improve team member productivity by 9% in 2009 to make the payroll plan. As a result, more and more work falls on the executives, especially in the lower volume stores where payroll is very tight. We often finish stocking the floor on truck days after we get the flow (logistics) team out at 8 A.M. We're doing a lot more physical tasks than Target wants us to do, but it's the only way to make payroll. At Target, almost all store visits are unannounced. Your District Team Leader will visit at least twice a month. How well you lead the visit is very important to your career. If you're very outgoing and can think quickly on your feet, you'll do well here. They like executives that are very outgoing and bubbly. It is difficult to get into Target unless you join them out of college because they mandate that 80% of executives be hired out of college. For those that are brought on board as "experienced" hires, it can be difficult to adjust to the culture. Most executives have been with Target they're entire career and know nothing else. Because of that, it can hard to earn their acceptance and respect because you're not "one of them." They say that the culture is Fast, Fun, and Friendly, but the reality is that your career is dependent on successful store visits from the Group staff. They make quick judgments on you based on a short visit. All discussions with my supervisor were work related. Not once has he asked me about my family. Two thirds of the STLs in my district voiced concern about work/life balance during the annual Best Team survey. It's very difficult to obtain a balance. I am working 12 to 14 hours a day, six days a week in order to get everything done. You may be scheduled for 50 hours a week, but it's impossible to get everything done in that amount of time.

2.0
Oct 30, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

*An opportunity to make a real difference in the lives and working conditions of the store's team *Frequent opportunities to enhance Target's image and reputation within the local community, while reaching out to schools, social service organizations, parks and the like

Cons

*When a new CEO, regional VP, DTL and STL all arrive within months of one another, watch out for house-cleaning much like when a new administration occupies the White House. Allegiances and loyalties disappear, along with your long streak of O review scores *Smacking of age discrimination (given Target has more lawyers on retainer than any of us could afford to hire), execs throughout my district--over the age of 40--began to disappear this past year, involuntarily. I quit, after eight years as a dedicated executive, before I would give them the satisfaction of terming me based upon the most ludicrous assortment of trumped-up frivolousness you've ever read

2.0
May 26, 2009
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Lots of feedback and a great place to learn about great leadership philosophies.

Cons

Although great leadership is the company's main focus, they are fooling themselves by thinking they develop great leaders. The concepts and philosophies that the company is built on are sound, but upper management's adherence to those philosophies falls terribly short. Promotions are earned based on politics and personality, not talent and execution. In addition, the company maps out your path for you, not always considering what you actually want to do. Instead of driving your own professional development, decisions are made for you then shoved down your throat. If you don't agree with the direction they want you to go, you either have to grin and bear it or you will be labeled as a problem and will be "performance-managed out." The "people conversations" that happen behind the scenes (in vans, restaurants, offices and airplanes) at Target are sometimes disturbing and often differ from what the individual TM is being told about their own future. It's disappointing and sometimes deceitful.

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