'How am I supposed to get anything?' say Target shoppers sick of policy turning beauty section into 'Hunger Games maze'
TARGET clients have slammed an anti-theft coverage that makes it onerous to buy on the department retailer.
Annoyed buyers shared their shopping experiences on social media raging towards the locked cabinets.


"Target is turning into the worst place to buy at with every thing locked up and their magnificence part turned bizarre a** hunger games maze," stated one consumer in a tweet on X, previously generally known as Twitter.
One other shopper tweeted, "Every part at this target is locked up. How am I purported to get something," including a crying emoji.
In November, Target CFO Michael Fiddelke spoke about the company's theft on an earnings name.
"We expect progress there in all probability doesn't happen shortly," the CFO stated on the decision, as reported by& The Wall Street Journal.
In September, it was revealed that retail crime accounted for $112 billion in losses in 2022, up from $93.9 billion in 2021, based on the& Nationwide Retail Federation.
Fiddelke claimed that the company is "targeted on progress over time."
Target corporate announced in September 2023 that the corporate can be& shutting nine of its stores& across four states by October 21.
The shop places included a store in Harlem, New York, two in Seattle,& Washington, three in the San Francisco and Oakland,& California& areas, and three in Portland,& Oregon.
"We can't proceed working these shops because theft and arranged retail crime are threatening the security of our workforce and visitors, and contributing to unsustainable business efficiency," Target informed its clients.
Additionally in November, Target's CEO Brian Cornell spoke to& CNBC& about what he has heard from clients relating to their purchasing experiences.
"Truly, what we hear from the visitors is an enormous thank you, because we are in inventory with the manufacturers that they want once they're purchasing in our stores," he stated.
"And since we've invested in workforce member labor in these aisles and make sure we're there to greet that guest, open up those instances, and provide them the gadgets they're in search of."
The U.S. Sun has previously reported on quite a few buyer complaints which were posted to social media.
One shopper claimed that they would rather wait for Amazon than cope with the shop's locked shelves.
The fed-up buyer posted their feelings to X.
"Pricey @Target," the& tweet& started, addressing the corporate.
"You have to weigh the price of petty theft to dropping clients on account of horrible buying experiences.
"4 gadgets on 4 aisles, all locked up, requiring an employee to unlock.
"The shop is lifeless, yet nobody comes once I activate 1 sensor.
"I'd moderately wait a day for @Amazon."
The U.S. Solar has reached out to Target for comment.
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