USA TODAY International Edition

Target to team with Black- owned businesses

Retailer will spend $ 2 billion in diversity push

- Kelly Tyko

Target pledged to add products from more than 500 Black- owned businesses to its inventory by the end of 2025.

The retailer announced Wednesday that it will spend more than $ 2 billion with Black- owned businesses by 2025, which includes marketing agencies, constructi­on companies, facilities maintenanc­e providers and others.

“We have a rich history of working with diverse businesses, but there’s more we can do to spark change across the retail industry, support the Black community and ensure Black guests feel welcomed and represente­d when they shop at Target,” Christina Hennington, executive vice president and chief growth officer, said in a statement Wednesday.

Hennington said Target’s “bold actions” are part of the company’s commitment to advance racial equity for the Black community. “They also represent

significant economic opportunit­y for hundreds of new Black- owned companies, who we look forward to doing business with for years to come,” she said.

The resonance of the products and representa­tion in general, such as brown- skinned mermaids on children’s sheets, with Black shoppers can be seen as members of Target- focused Facebook groups such as Black Women Who Love TARGET share these finds and talk about snapping up the products.

After George Floyd, a Black man, died under the knee of a white police officer in Minneapoli­s – where Target is headquarte­red – the company announced it was donating $ 10 million to “support nonprofit partners focused on addressing the systemic and structural barriers facing Black communitie­s.”

The company created the REACH ( Racial Equity Action and Change) committee and in September, it announced plans to increase the diversity of its workforce, pledging to grow its percentage of Black employees by 20% over the next three years.

Target said it is establishi­ng resources to support Black- owned businesses and help them grow. One of the programs, Forward Founders, will “engage Black entreprene­urs earlier in their startup journey to help them navigate the critical stages of ideation, product developmen­t and scaling for mass retail.”

Target said it has brought in diverse businesses through programs such as Target Accelerato­rs and events such as the Black- Owned Business Vendor Fair. According to Target’s website, the company increased “business with diverse suppliers by 64.4%” from 2016 to 2018.

A list of the brands and the products are posted on Target. com on its Black Beyond Measure page under “Buy Black.” In beauty, Target said, it has a “strong representa­tion of 50 Blackowned and Black- founded brands, with plans to continue to grow the assortment.”

Mented Cosmetics is one of those businesses, Amanda Johnson, co- founder and chief operations officer of the beauty brand, said in a video released by Target Wednesday.

“We are a pigment- first beauty brand celebratin­g women of all hues,” Johnson said, and Target looks after the small brands and helps owners understand the business. “We knew what it felt like to be othered and to not have products that truly were made for you and to not feel like you were a part of the beauty community. ... Mented seeks to change all of that.”

Pernell Cezar, co- founder and CEO of BLK & Bold Specialty Coffee, said having one of the largest retailers investing in Black- owned businesses “not only impacts the economics of the Black community but our society as a whole.”

 ?? KELLY TYKO/ USA TODAY ?? Target touts its “history of working with diverse businesses, but there’s more we can do.”
KELLY TYKO/ USA TODAY Target touts its “history of working with diverse businesses, but there’s more we can do.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States