Discount Stores Essay, Research Paper
The general issue that this article touches upon is the economic growth of the ‘discounter’ store called Target. Economic growth occurs because after deflating, or subtracting the inflation from the profit, the real income is higher than that of the year before. Target offers an original blend of products in the latest fashion and low-rent prices. It is called the “Kmart for yuppies”(Naughton). Initially, the regally pronounced “Tar-jaay” opened its services in the midwestern region, however, after the huge success, it is now planning to enter the Northeast market. There it will have to compete against another ‘discounter’ store, Wal-Mart. Target has launched a new ad campaign to create an image for itself as the ‘icon of affordable chic”(Naughton). To finance the campaign, the store is using part of the great profits it has made in the Midwest. Target’s profits have nearly doubled in the last four years and now account for three quarters of Dayton’s bottom line, which it its parent company. However, the analysts are warning that Target could miss the mark trying to cater to the fickle fashion sense of the Americans.
At the end of my junior year, Mr. Blanc has introduced economics by playing a game. The Students were to choose a corporation out of 40 choices or so, among which one could find such companies as Disney, etc. The students’ choice was to be based on the assumption of which of the latter would experience greatest development and thus, return the greatest profits. The option offering the largest returns turned out to be Target. One of the reasons why the store is experiencing such excellent results is because of the product it offers, which is referred to in the article as the “unconventional blend of high-style offerings and low-rent prices”. This means that the products that the store carries are satisfying the consumers’ demand for both quality and cost. They receive (most of the time) the upscale product that is currently in fashion for a very reasonable price as in comparison to their wages. The consumer does not have to compromise between getti
Reference:
Naughton, Keith. October 11, 1999. Hitting the Bull’s-Eye