The store looks perfect. But if you are looking for women's clothes I recommend you turn and run as fast as you can. Goodwill is more organized. You will need the app to scan prices because no price tags match the items under them. You will find yourself able to checkout within seconds but you needed help with women's clothing you should probably just go online. I'd recommend trying to shop the women's section if you enjoy trying to keep a house clean while having an entire preschool class in it. The women's section should have its own episode on hoarders. Target should really provide lifetime therapy for the sweet dressing room girl who was on her own and was stuck with what I can only compare to an SUV sized pile of clothes she had to fold. No one comes out of that unscathed. If you find joy in politely saying excuse me to the same few people every few minutes then I'd recommend trying to find just 1 item in the women's section because the other person will be as lost as you. Anyone without complete mental stability should avoid the women's clothing section at all costs. It's only a matter of time until either a customer or an employee has a mental breakdown in that section. If you enjoy stress, inability to find things, getting lost, and ultimately finding something but not being able to find the rest of that item in different sizes then the women's section is for you. Do you love when Walmart reorganizes the entire store every few months? Then the women's section is for you. Do you enjoy the feeling of complete destruction around you? Then targets women's section is definitely for you! Have you ever wished to watch hoarders up close and personal? The targets women's section is also for you. At best I could say its similar to a toddler being given gallons of paint and told they can do whatever they want. As long as you aren't buying women's clothes at target then you are good to go if you just close your eyes as you pass the women's section. If I ever go back to the women's clothing there I will remember to bring water so I wouldn't risk dehydration while tracking through what they call a...
Read moreUsually I like this Target and appreciate the staff. Yesterday I had a negative experience with a return. I hadn't been in the new place for returns. There's not a sign visible as you arrive for how to queue. No one was there for several minutes, so I just stood in front of the registers while this woman ran around. At last, she looked up and said "I don't know who to help because I don't know who was here first." By then, two people were in the line. So she said I had to get in line. One woman let me in, because she said you were here first. The sign is weirdly turned away so people arriving can't see it. Then I wanted to return tennis balls. The pop top had been pulled, depressurizing the balls. I'd picked up a canister from the shelf back in the store as an exchange, and many canisters in the area had their pop tops up but they were still there for sale. I explained why I needed to return the one canister. She opened it and said, well this is a perfectly good ball. I don't play tennis but explained the person who received this as a gift said these are supposed to remain pressurized. Once they're opened the balls have to be used immediately. She remained suspicious but let me make the exchange. Why would there be a pop top on canisters for no reason? Why didn't she just accept the explanation? I didn't have a receipt but it turned out all you need to do is present the credit card used. All this for a $3.99 sale. Stores in town generally urge us to patronize them. If I have to run the gauntlet in customer service, it makes better sense to shop online. I think Target is understaffed--not the fault of employees. But this was just absurdly rude...
Read moreVery large selection of clothes for all types and all sizes as well as an environment that is comfortable and relaxing even for someone who is easily nervous and finds shopping to make me feel anxious. The store associates I saw while shopping was dispersed throughout the store well enough that you could seek assistance quickly regardless of what department you were in, without feeling like they hovering over your shoulder while you shop. Most stores have gone too far with their loss prevention and asset protection aspects of their workforce which I absolutely see the need for their employment but these days all it takes is someone like me who has PTSD and is on the spectrum for social anxiety and other "visually odd behaviors" to appear "nervous" or "constantly looking around to see if anyone is looking at them" to be targeted and misidentified as someone trying to steal verses a person who never interacts or is in an environment where the number of people in the same building as me (including me) equals more than 3. So it's very much so sensory overload when I go anywhere. So often I am immediately singled out when shopping at places like Walmart and followed throughout my entire shopping experience which usually ends in me just leaving without purchasing anything because I get so scared and feel embarrassed from the looks I get from asset protection individuals and the employees that have been obviously told to not take their eyes off me because I am behaving atypically. Thank you target for not putting me through this at your place...
Read more