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Brian Cornell is near the end of an 11-year tenure as Target’s CEO, and he will leave with industry-leading successes and ...
Target is grappling with worsening financial and reputational fallout as the boycott launched by the Black Press of America ...
Target chief Brian Cornell — who led a major comeback at the retail chain — will stay on the job for three more years, the company announced Wednesday. CNN values your feedback 1.
Target boycott efforts are intensifying as the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) steps up its push for corporate ...
Congressional Black Caucus members feel they didn't receive many answers after meeting with Target to to address itss DEI ...
Companies have been conflicted about diversity policy because the Trump Administration has pushed hard against diversity and ...
Target CEO Brian Cornell is unique among chief executives of the Minneapolis-based retailer. In 2014, he became the first outside hire to take on the role as CEO of Target.
Target’s first quarter results were met with a negative market response after both revenue and adjusted profit came in below ...
Cornell beat out AMD’s Lisa Su and Chipotle’s Brian Niccol (who was our pick as top CEO in 2018) for the honor. Target’s sales and profits consistently topped Wall Street’s forecasts this ...
Cornell was formerly CEO of PepsiCo Americas Foods. Hiring an outside leader for the first time, Target named PepsiCo executive Brian Cornell as the retailer's new CEO and chairman Thursday ...
Target CEO Brian Cornell’s compensation down 47% to $18.1M. The company’s profits improved last year which meant a higher annual bonus, but he earned a smaller amount from equity awards.
Target has been hurt by operational missteps, inflation’s dampening of consumer sentiment and tariff costs. On top of all ...