Renee Jones Schneider/The Minnesota Star Tribune via Getty Images
- Target is calling about 150 remote workers back to its Minneapolis headquarters.
- The relocation mandate impacts workers within its merchandising division.
- The retailer, which brought on a new CEO earlier this year, has been working to turn the business around.
Target is calling more remote workers back to its headquarters.
The retailer is requiring about 150 remote workers within two teams in its merchandising group to relocate to Minneapolis, a spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider. Bloomberg earlier reported the news.
The company is offering relocation assistance to those who decide to move and severance to those who choose not to.
A company spokesperson said in a statement that “increased in-person collaboration across a core part of our merchandising team will help us reinforce our merchandising authority, unlocking greater creativity and enabling us to move faster to deliver on our strategy.”
The retailer, which brought on a new CEO earlier this year, is in the midst of a turnaround strategy to revive growth, and improving its merchandise is a pillar of that effort.
The relocation mandate comes as more companies, such as Amazon and AT&T, have been calling workers back into the office in recent years. Target last year ramped up in-office days for employees already based in Minneapolis.
Target does not have a companywide mandate and has left in-office requirements to team leaders.
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