The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A year after Target layoffs, futures reinvented

Many find they’re happier after making changes.

- By Kavita Kumar Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

One morning last March, hundreds of employees came streaming out of Target Corp.’s towers in downtown Minneapoli­s with boxes in hand in one of the largest — and most shocking — corporate downsizing­s Minnesota has ever seen.

A year later, those workers have discovered there is life after Target — and in many cases it’s much brighter than they imagined.

Nearly all have found jobs, a testament to the respect other employers have for Target, the robust job market in the Twin Cities and the ability of white-collar workers to reinvent themselves.

A striking number, about 170, found themselves back at Target after the company realized it had cut too deep in certain areas. Another retail giant, Amazon.com in Seattle, hired scores. And so did UnitedHeal­th Group, the Minneapoli­s-area insurer that in October said it would hire 1,700 people in the Twin Cities by April.

“Frankly, I’m surprised how happy I am here,” said Nikki Shultz, who was hired by UnitedHeal­th’s Optum unit after being laid off from Target, where she’d spent more than a decade.

“A lot of people realized how much they enjoy working at a small company or working in a different industry or in a totally different job,” she said. “Those were things they would have never done unless they were pushed out of the nest.”

For decades, Target, one of Minnesota’s largest and bestknown companies, grew by leaps and bounds. It regularly added legions of workers to its Minneapoli­s headquarte­rs, then trained them to move up the ladder. But its growth slowed in recent years as it neared saturation in American suburbs and grappled with emerging online competitor­s.

When Brian Cornell arrived as chief executive in August 2014, he saw that layers of bureaucrac­y made Target slow to innovate and adapt to changes in the marketplac­e. The ax fell on 1,700 workers in one day last March, followed by several smaller layoffs. In total, Target cut about 2,600 Twin Cities jobs, about one-fifth of its corporate staff.

In addition to severance, Target paid outplaceme­nt firms to help the laid-off workers find new jobs. Among those who used that help, the average time to land a new job was 10 weeks. Four out of five stayed in Minnesota and three out of five left retail. About 44 percent changed roles, according to Target.

Several major retailers sent recruiters to the Twin Cities last spring after the Target layoff. None tried harder to get them than Amazon, which has been aggressive­ly growing and had already hired dozens of Target workers.

One laid-off Target employee said he got several messages from Amazon on LinkedIn before he responded to the firm. Amazon hosted an event in Minneapoli­s with free beer and food. “It was a madhouse,” said one laid-off Target worker who took a job at Amazon just two weeks later. “Anyone who had the Amazon shirt on had six people around him.”

An examinatio­n of LinkedIn by the Star Tribune found that about 90 Target headquarte­rs employees took jobs at Amazon last year. Some of them had lost their Target jobs; others quit. In one case, Amazon hired about half of a 30-person strategy team who were all laid off from Target. In 2014, about 70 people left Target for Amazon.

So many former Target employees are now at Amazon that some do double-takes in the hallways. “It’s like, ‘Hey, I didn’t realize you were here. Welcome!’” said one Target-turned-Amazon employee who spoke on the condition his name not be used. “The tonguein-cheek response is that the cold got to them after a while. You don’t want to wake up at 4 a.m. to shovel your driveway.”

Amazon did not respond to requests for comment.

But many laid-off Target workers have family roots and other connection­s in Minnesota, making relocation unattracti­ve. One factor that helped some of them stay in the Twin Cities was Target’s decision, in many cases, to waive a policy of requiring that former employees wait two years before taking jobs with companies that directly do business with it.

Target did that for Brian Stanchfiel­d, who ended up joining Jacobs Marketing, a retail broker that represents vendors selling products at Target.

“I still felt bullish on where Target is going,” said Stanchfiel­d, whose wife works at Target. “I was disappoint­ed to not be part of the next chapter. But I came to the realizatio­n that I can still be part of the Target ecosystem and to be part of it through this end of it.”

His new office is across the street from Target’s headquarte­rs, and he still works with many of the same people.

Not everyone has had good luck. Kevin Khottavong­sa was three months into a new job at Target when he was let go. A year later, he’s still looking for a permanent job while going to school parttime at Augsburg College working toward an MBA. “I wish I could tell a better story, but I still haven’t landed anything solid yet,” said the 28-year-old from St. Paul.

Meanwhile, Target is in the midst of a hiring spree of its own, though it’s mostly for software engineers and other tech-oriented folks to help improve its online game. Company executives said last fall they wanted to hire 500 people for those jobs.

Target may continue to tweak its workforce with small reductions in certain areas, but executives have said the bulk of that part of the company’s transforma­tion is behind it.

 ?? PHOTOS / MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE GLEN STUBBE ?? Kevin Khottavong­sa goes to Augsburg College as a part-time student working on his MBA. He is still looking for work after being laid off from Target last year.
PHOTOS / MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE GLEN STUBBE Kevin Khottavong­sa goes to Augsburg College as a part-time student working on his MBA. He is still looking for work after being laid off from Target last year.
 ??  ?? Jon Koss works for a consulting firm called Slalom in the IDS center in Minneapoli­s. He worked for Target for almost 10 years and is now an organizati­onal effectiven­ess consultant for Slalom. From his perch on the 39th floor at IDS, he can look down on...
Jon Koss works for a consulting firm called Slalom in the IDS center in Minneapoli­s. He worked for Target for almost 10 years and is now an organizati­onal effectiven­ess consultant for Slalom. From his perch on the 39th floor at IDS, he can look down on...

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