Sponsored By

Cup of joe with your Target Run?

Target tests Starbucks orders, returns, expanded backup items for Drive Up service

Russell Redman

February 23, 2022

3 Min Read
Target Drive Up curbside pickup expansion.png
In the pilots, Target would enable Drive Up curbside pickup customers to place Starbucks orders and make returns through its mobile app.Target

Target Corp. aims to enhance its Drive Up curbside pickup service via pilots to include orders from in-store Starbucks locations and to accept item returns.

Minneapolis-based Target said Wednesday that, with the planned Starbucks feature, Drive Up customers indicating via the Target mobile app that they’re on their way to the store will also be able to place an order from the Starbucks menu and have it brought out to their vehicle along with their full Target order. For product returns, curbside customers will be able to initiate a return through the Target app and complete it at the Drive Up lane.

Target noted that it also plans to expand its “backup item” capability for pickup service. If first-choice products aren’t available, click-and-collect customers will have a broader assortment of categories — ranging from beauty care to household staples — from which to designate second backup items for Drive Up and in-store Order Pickup orders.

Starbucks cafe inside Target store.png

With the new functionality, Drive Up customers on their way to the store would get the option to order from the Starbucks menu and pick it up along with their full Target order.

“Our guests continue to tell us they love the ease and convenience of Drive Up, and they have been asking us to add even more of the Target experience to the service,” Mark Schindele, chief stores officer at Target, said in a statement. “Adding a Starbucks order and easy returns, while expanding our backup-item options, will give guests even more of what they love about shopping at Target, quickly and easily. Ongoing investments in our same-day services have built trust and relevance with our guests while meeting their needs, no matter how they choose to shop.”

Related:Target’s Kamau Witherspoon to become Shipt CEO

Plans call for the Starbucks, returns and expanded backup-item services to become available at Target stores in selected markets by this fall. Target said that the ability to place a Drive Up order for Starbucks was a top request in a customer survey. Also, in the months since backup-item functionality launched for food and beverage orders, Target associates have successfully substituted secondary product choices 98% of the time, including high-demand items.

Other same-day service enhancements by Target since last year include adult beverage pickup, a “Shopping Partner” feature that enables customers to send someone else to retrieve their Drive Up or Order Pickup order, a “Forgot Something” tool that allows customers to add forgotten items after a Drive Up or Order Pickup order has been placed, and additional personalization for Shipt delivery shopping.

When reporting fiscal 2021 third-quarter results in November, Target said digital sales through same-day services Order Pickup (in-store pickup), Drive Up (curbside pickup) and Shipt (home delivery) climbed nearly 60%, building on growth of 217% a year earlier. Curbside pickup led the way, as Drive Up sales surged more than 80% in the quarter atop a 500% increase in the year-ago period. Order Pick Up and Shipt sales each grew over 30%.

Related:Target cites omnichannel synergies for nearly 13% Q3 comp-sales gain

Target said Wednesday its e-commerce business — fueled by its “stores as hubs” fulfillment strategy — has more than doubled over the last two years, with Order Pickup, Drive Up and Shipt same-day services accounting for over half of the sales increase. As of the end of the third quarter, Target operated 1,924 stores overall.

About the Author

Russell Redman

Senior Editor
Supermarket News

Russell Redman has served as senior editor at Supermarket News since April 2018, his second tour with the publication. In his current role, he handles daily news coverage for the SN website and contributes news and features for the print magazine, as well as participates in special projects, podcasts and webinars and attends industry events. Russ joined SN from Racher Press Inc.’s Chain Drug Review and Mass Market Retailers magazines, where he served as desk/online editor for more than nine years, covering the food/drug/mass retail sector. 

Russell Redman’s more than 30 years of experience in journalism span a range of editorial manager, editor, reporter/writer and digital roles at a variety of publications and websites covering a breadth of industries, including retailing, pharmacy/health care, IT, digital home, financial technology, financial services, real estate/commercial property, pro audio/video and film. He started his career in 1989 as a local news reporter and editor, covering community news and politics in Long Island, N.Y. His background also includes an earlier stint at Supermarket News as center store editor and then financial editor in the mid-1990s. Russ holds a B.A. in journalism (minor in political science) from Hofstra University, where he also earned a certificate in digital/social media marketing in November 2016.

Russell Redman’s experience:

Supermarket News - Informa
Senior Editor 
April 2018 - present

Chain Drug Review/Mass Market Retailers - Racher Press
Desk/Online Editor 
Sept. 2008 - March 2018

CRN magazine - CMP Media
Managing Editor
May 2000 - June 2007

Bank Systems & Technology - Miller Freeman
Executive Editor/Managing Editor
Dec. 1996 - May 2000

Supermarket News - Fairchild Publications
Financial Editor/Associate Editor
April 1995 - Dec. 1996 

Shopping Centers Today Magazine - ICSC 
Desk Editor/Assistant Editor
Dec. 1992 - April 1995

Testa Communications
Assistant Editor/Contributing Editor (Music & Sound Retailer, Post, Producer, Sound & Communications and DJ Times magazines)
Jan. 1991 - Dec. 1992 

American Banker/Bond Buyer
Copy Editor
Oct. 1990 - Jan. 1991 

This Week newspaper - Chanry Communications
Reporter/Editor
May 1989 - July 1990

Stay up-to-date on the latest food retail news and trends
Subscribe to free eNewsletters from Supermarket News

You May Also Like