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Retail

  • About that Target spread in Vogue…

    New York -- Target Corp. is making headlines with its bold, digitally savvy 20-page insert in Vogue. The retailer’s chief creative officer, Todd Waterbury, discussed the new campaign in a Q&A on Target’s Bullseye blog. Here are some excerpts:

    What was the inspiration for this idea?

  • Nike, Seattle

    Nike has made over its Seattle flagship with a more contemporary look and technology that help customers select running shoes that are the perfect match for their feet and gait.

    The store features such unique design elements as a custom neon sculpture celebrating sport icons and the city's cultural symbols. An art installation signed by Seattle Seahawks players honors Seattle's sports fans.

  • More curbside pickup at Target

    Palo Alto, Calif. -- Target customers at select stores in New York and New Jersey won’t have to get out of their cars anymore to pick up online orders.

    Curbside, a Bay Area-based startup, announced that is has expanded its curbside pick-up service to New York and New Jersey with the rollout of 10 new Target locations. Until now, Curbside had only been available in the San Francisco Bay Area.

  • Restoration Hardware to launch teen concept

    Corte Madera, Calif. -- Teens with a hankering for pricey furniture and décor — and affluent parents — will now have a new place to shop.

    RH (Restoration Hardware) is launching RH Teen, which will offer “tasteful, high quality” furniture, lighting, linens and décor for teens. Launching in late September, RH Teen will have a own dedicated 200-page catalog (or, in RH lingo, “source book”), website and dedicated retail space in the company’s next generation of stores.

  • Company expands c-store network

    Westlake, Ohio -- TravelCenters of America has completed its previously disclosed acquisition of 33 convenience store locations in northern Illinois.

    The company expects the stores, which average approximately 3,400 sq. ft., will be rebranded as Minit Mart convenience stores and the sites will undergo improvements in the coming months.

    TravelCenters of America operates some 370 convenience stores under the Minit Mart, TA and Petro Stopping Centers brands.
     

  • Another giant enters the mobile payment wars

    New York -- Move over Apple and Google — and make way for Samsung.

    Samsung Electronics Co. on Thursday announced Samsung Pay, a mobile payment service that will let customers pay with their phones at nearly any credit-card terminal. The new system will launch in Korea on Aug. 20 and in the United States on Sept. 28.

  • Good news for brick-and-mortar retailers about back-to-school

    Chicago -- Retailers still have time to capitalize on what is turning out to be a late back-to-school shopping, according to a just-released study.

  • Dillard’s feels department store pain

    Little Rock, Ark. -- Dillard’s Inc. profit declined 13.3% in the second quarter, but it still came in better than analysts had expected.

    Growth in shoes and some apparel categories helped Dillard’s post a feeble second quarter same-store sale increase, but it was too little for the department store retailer to avoid the sharp decline in profitability. The retailer’s profit for the quarter ending Aug. 1 was $29.9 million, down from $34.5 million in the year-ago period.

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