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    Home»Money»Inside Target’s Push to Get Black Friday Merch Out to Stores: Photos
    Money

    Inside Target’s Push to Get Black Friday Merch Out to Stores: Photos

    Press RoomBy Press RoomNovember 26, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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    2025-11-26T10:16:01.257Z



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    • Retailers across the US are gearing up for the peak sales event of the holiday shopping season.
    • For Target, this means loading stores up with toys, electronics, apparel, and more.
    • Target took Business Insider inside a warehouse where products are sorted and sent to regional stores.

    Target really needs a win this holiday season.

    The company has struggled in recent years with declining comparable sales, and it has cautious expectations for the all-important fourth quarter of this year.

    One aspect of the business that incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke is keenly interested in improving is making sure products are actually available on shelves for shoppers to buy.

    “If you’ve trusted us with a trip to the store, we can’t let you down by being out of stock, and we haven’t been good enough over the last several years on that front,” he said during a November earnings call.

    Few days are more unforgiving of out-of-stocks than the day after Thanksgiving. Black Friday has changed a lot in recent years, but it’s still the marquee sales event of the holiday shopping season.

    That means stocking stores with the right quantities of toys, electronics, apparel, and other items.

    The bullseye retailer invited Business Insider to take an exclusive look behind the curtain at one of its distribution centers, where merchandise from suppliers gets sorted and sent to individual stores across the region.

    Target also fulfills more than 97% of its e-commerce orders from one of its retail stores, so that means almost everything the company sells online or offline must first pass through one of these distribution facilities.

    Business Insider visited the warehouse a week before Thanksgiving and saw firsthand the overwhelming volume of items that go into ensuring each Target store has exactly what it needs each day.

    Here’s how Target is gearing up for the holiday rush.

    Target’s regional distribution center is located a half hour outside Milwaukee in the town of Oconomowoc, Wisconsin.


    A mural shows where the Target facility is on a map of Wisconsin.

    A mural showing the location of Target’s Wisconsin distribution center.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    The 1.5 million square foot facility serves 81 stores across four states: Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.


    Inbound trucks are unloaded at the loading docks.

    Semi-trailers sit at the loading docks.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Senior site director Julie O’Clary started her career with Target as an intern at this facility and has worked at several locations over the years.


    Julie O'Clary is the senior site director in charge of the distribution center.

    Target’s Julie O’Clary.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    O’Clary says her facility typically processes about 600,000 cartons of merchandise in a normal week, but that number balloons to 800,000 a week during the holiday rush.


    A forklift operator retrieves merchandise from the racks.

    A forklift operator moves a pallet of merchandise.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    An additional 300,000 cartons also flow through the facility without active sorting, bringing the holiday volume to well north of a million cartons this week.


    Merchandise towers high overhead.

    Pallets of merchandise stacked high.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    The sprawling warehouse could fit nearly 26 football fields and runs like a small city with more than 1,050 employees.


    A worker operates a forklift.

    Employees move through the warehouse.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Trucks arrive from suppliers with inventory that must be unloaded and sorted. The warehouse handles roughly 45,000 different product codes.


    Machinery scans boxes as they are unloaded from trucks.

    Workers load boxes onto a conveyor belt.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    A shipment of toys is unloaded from the truck onto conveyor belts and scanned with a laser rig.


    Boxes are scanned on a conveyor belt as they are loaded into the warehouse.

    Boxes are scanned as they are unloaded from a truck.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Here’s where pallets of toys like these Cozy Coupe cars from the Little Tikes brand arrive.


    A pallet of Little Tikes brand Cozy Coupe toys.

    Pallets of merchandise wait near the inbound loading docks.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    The inbound loading docks are a ballet of people and forklifts in the days leading up to Black Friday.


    A forklift operator moves a pallet of boxes.

    A forklift operator moves a pallet of merchandise.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    “We see a lot of brown boxes here, but inside that brown box, there’s toys or cosmetics — something that our guests want, something that brings them joy — so that’s our job,” Clary said.


    Hot pink boxes of Barbie accessories stand out among brown cardboard.

    A pallet of Barbie toys are seen on a shelf.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    All around the facility, towers of best-selling Black Friday items can be seen — such as these flat-screen TVs.


    TVs stacked up.

    TVs stacked high.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    The warehouse also gives a sneak peek into what could be the next viral toy, like these child-sized Target shopping carts.


    A pallet of child-sized Target shopping carts.

    Child-sized toy Target shopping carts.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Here, pallets of Mario Kart racing toys are stacked next to electric scooters and kid-sized four-wheelers.


    Pallets of Christmas toys are stacked high.

    Children’s toys stacked high.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Almost everything in the building needs a label, and these printers spool off barcodes nonstop.


    A printer runs off a spool of box labels..

    An employee checks a label printer.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    The company also routinely tracks all problems — and potential problems — on whiteboards throughout the facility, which are updated hourly.


    A worker updates a Gemba process board.

    An employee writes on a whiteboard.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Though it’s not a store, some employees still wear Target’s classic red plaid shirts.


    A forklift operator wearing a red plaid shirt.

    An employee drives a forklift.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    This facility is also where Target tailors inventory orders to give each individual store the exact number of items it needs.


    A worker fills boxes with specific merchandise for individual Target stores.

    An employee fills inventory orders.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    For example, each box here is headed to a different store, and each contains different quantities of apparel in the right sizes and colors.


    Boxes of merchandise for individual Target stores.

    Boxes with apparel.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Items are then sent upstairs to a network of conveyor belts that guide each box to the correct truck.


    A box moves along a conveyor belt.

    Boxes move down a roller track.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Boxes pass by at high speed, and the system automatically slows down to allow items from multiple belts to merge into one.


    Boxes race along a conveyor belt.

    Boxes move down a conveyor belt.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    As one of Target’s higher-volume distribution centers, the flow of goods continues around the clock.


    Boxes race along a conveyor belt.

    Boxes round a curve toward the outbound loading dock.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    An elevated conveyor belt carries sorted merchandise to trucks waiting at the loading docks. Other big and bulky items are stored near the outbound docks for quicker access.


    Big and bulky items are stored near the loading docks.

    Big and bulky items are stored near the outbound docks.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    Boxes are automatically tipped onto rollers that feed right into a waiting truck.


    Forklift operators move products into position to be loaded onto trucks.

    Workers move pallets of inventory to the outbound loading docks.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    The parade of boxes are then loaded into tractor-trailers like a life-size game of Tetris.


    Workers fill trucks with merchandise destined for Target stores.

    Workers load trucks destined for Target stores.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    More evidence of the holidays is on display in the form of a pallet of Target-branded artificial Christmas trees on the loading docks.


    Boxes of artificial Christmas trees sit near the loading docks.

    Christmas trees and other merchandise wait near the outbound loading docks.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    O’Clary says the facility processes about 40 million outbound cartons a year. Some stores receive a truck every day, but during the holiday rush, they may take multiple deliveries a day.


    Outbound trucks at the loading dock as they are filled with merchandise.

    Outbound trailers are loaded with merchandise before heading to stores.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

    O’Clary says her team is putting in thousands of hours of overtime this week to make sure Target customers have well-stocked shelves for their holiday shopping.


    Semi trailers wait near the inbound loading docks.

    Target trailers are parked in a designated area.

    Dominick Reuter/Business Insider

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