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Target markets groceries and consumer goods with fashion-focused ad campaign

Clothing from Roots will be available at Target for a limited time when the retailer comes to Canada this spring. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

NEW YORK, N.Y. – Is Target’s grocery aisle ready for its close up?

Target, which plans to open the first of between 125 and 135 locations in Canada this year, is pushing its food, laundry detergent and other groceries in a national ad campaign south of the border that pokes fun at high-fashion advertising by featuring models interacting with everyday products.

In one ad, a model in a white dress and high heels struts by blueberry muffin and cake mix boxes that explode in different colours. Then she crushes an egg with her hand.

“Dominate that PTA bake sale,” a voiceover whispers. “The Everyday Collection. By Target.”

The campaign is part of a larger move by Target, better known for its cheap-chic clothing and home goods, to focus more on its grocery-store aisle. Discounters such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. have increasingly focused expanding their selections of groceries to lure more customers into stores.

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For its part, Target has been expanding its grocery selection, particularly with investments in its “P-Fresh” fresh-food section. Out of its 1,782 stores, about 1100 have an expanded fresh food layout and more than 250 have a full grocery store.

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With that push complete, Target decided the time was right to put the focus on its groceries, but in a way that still plays on Target’s fashion know how, said chief marketing officer Jeff Jones.

Target, with ad agency Mono in Minneapolis, created the tongue-in-cheek campaign that treats groceries and home products like fashion accessories in a photo shoot. Spending is undisclosed on the ad campaign, but it will include eight TV ads that will run throughout 2013. In addition to TV spots and newspaper inserts, it will include eight TV spots, three radio ads, and digital short films that will run as banner ads online.

One TV ad shows an $11.99 bottle of Tide laundry detergent and a model in a white dress dancing fancifully.

“We all yearn for something,” says a voiceover as bubbles float by the model. “And that something is the other sock.

The campaign “creates a foil for what people are used to seeing for grocery advertising,” said Jones. “It combines the design ethos and fashion credibility that Target has with the idea that it also has great grocery items at a great price.”

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Target’s ad campaign comes as the retailer faces some challenges.

On Thursday, Target reported that revenue at stores open at least one year was flat in December – a key holiday sales period. The company, based in Minneapolis, blamed the decline in part on weakness in sales of merchandise such as furniture and electronics.

Target, which also has become known for pairing up with upscale designers who create lines that it can sell for a limited time, was also recently dinged by bad publicity for its collaboration with posh retailer Neiman Marcus. The line debuted Dec. 1 and included 50 products from 24 designers, including a $70 Marc Jacobs scarf and a $500 Alice + Olivia bike.

But the line was criticized for being too expensive, among other things, and all remaining items in that collaboration were marked down 70 per cent off on Jan. 1 online and in stores. That’s quite a reversal from its Missoni collection a year ago, which was so popular demand caused Target’s Web site to crash.

– With files by The Canadian Press

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