Target has announced plans to eliminate roughly 1,000 corporate roles and to cancel about 800 open positions, as part of a sweeping corporate restructuring. The company said the cuts account for about 8% of its global corporate workforce. The actions come ahead of the incoming appointment of Michael Fiddelke as CEO in February 2026 (he is currently the Chief Operating Officer). The announcement was made via a company memo to staff on October 23.
Most of the reductions will occur at Target’s Minneapolis headquarters and concern management and leadership layers rather than stores or supply-chain workers. The company has stated that it will not impact store-level or production staff, focusing instead on corporate overhead and open head-count.
Why Target Says It’s Doing This
The incoming CEO, Michael Fiddelke, has been explicit: Target’s growth has been hampered by “too many layers and overlapping work” which slowed decision-making. In his memo, he identified excess complexity as a drag on innovation, causing slower execution of ideas.
The retailer has also published a four-year stretch of stagnant or slightly declining comparable sales, and net-income declines in recent quarters. For example, Target’s comparable sales for the second quarter fell by 1.9%, and net income dropped 21% year-on-year.
Fiddelke’s published priorities for turnaround are clear: restore Target’s leadership in style and design, ensure stores are well stocked and appealing, and invest in technology to enhance the consumer experience. The job cuts are framed as an early, necessary step in freeing up resources and agility to deliver on those goals.
The Scope and Execution of the Restructuring
Target is eliminating around 1,800 corporate roles in total: about 1,000 existing jobs will be cut and 800 open positions will be removed (i.e., roles were never filled). This restructuring predominantly affects leadership and corporate personnel rather than frontline retail or operations functions.
Employees impacted by the corporate reductions will receive severance and continued compensation and benefits at least through early January 2026. Target’s spokesperson clarified that store and supply-chain employees are not affected.
In a tactical move anticipating the transition, the company instructed U.S.-based corporate headquarters staff to work from home the week following the announcement. This step was taken ahead of official notifications being sent to affected employees.
By reducing corporate head-count and cancelling open roles, Target aims to accelerate organisational speed and responsiveness in an increasingly competitive retail market. The company must contend with powerful rivals like Walmart Inc. and Amazon.com, Inc., as well as shifting consumer behaviour especially in discretionary categories like apparel and home goods. The job cuts reflect an intention to reallocate resources into store experience, merchandise refreshment and technology rather than maintain large overheads.
For investors and market watchers, the restructuring signals seriousness about cost-control and operational discipline. It may enhance profit prospects if Target can simultaneously improve its product offer, store condition, and customer engagement. However, the move also indicates that organic growth is under pressure and that the company is relying on a strategic reset rather than simply riding favourable market trends.
While the planned job cuts may help streamline the organisation, there are potential risks and caveats. First, execution risk: eliminating layers and overlapping roles is one thing, but ensuring that critical leadership and functional capability remain intact is another. If too many key roles are removed or morale is damaged, execution may suffer.
Second, timing and optics: The cuts arrive ahead of the holiday shopping season, which is historically crucial for mass-retailers. If store performance falters in the interim, Target could face reputational or operational headwinds.
Third, customer perception: Target’s brand has leaned heavily on appealing store environment, design-led merchandise and differentiation from discount retailers. If the cost-cuts translate into weaker in-store experience, slow stock refresh or inferior customer service, the brand may suffer.
Finally, cost-savings expectations: While the company has indicated the job reductions are necessary, the realisation of benefits depends on how effectively the freed resources are redeployed and how quickly improvements materialise in sales and margin. Flat or declining sales in recent quarters suggest that improving top-line remains a challenge.
For corporate employees at Target’s headquarters, this announcement brings uncertainty and change. Affected employees will receive notification in the coming week and will benefit from severance packages and continued benefits through early January. For those retained, the organisational structure and roles may shift significantly.
For store-level workers and those in supply-chain operations, Target has clarified they are not part of this round of cuts. That may provide some reassurance, yet the broader business changes may still ripple into mindset and culture across the company.
Target’s decision to cut roughly 1,000 jobs and eliminate 800 open roles is a decisive move by the incoming CEO to streamline the organisation, reduce complexity and refocus the company on growth, customer experience and technology. The company is responding to a period of stagnant performance by reallocating resources toward its core strengths and trying to become nimbler in execution.
Still, this restructuring is just one piece of a larger turnaround effort. The ultimate success will depend on whether Target can improve merchandise quality, enhance the in-store experience, rebuild brand momentum and generate meaningful improvement in sales and profits. For now, the job cuts serve as a clear signal of intent but the real test will come when consumers vote with their wallets and when profit margins begin to reflect the changes.




