Target reported third-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street expectations and raised its full-year sales guidance, citing a 22% increase in average basket size and stabilizing store traffic, according to CNBC. The retailer's comparable sales rose 3.1%, reversing five consecutive quarters of decline. CEO Brian Cornell attributed the recovery to shoppers resuming discretionary purchases in apparel, home goods, and beauty — categories they had abandoned during inflation.
The mechanics were straightforward. Target leaned into multi-category bundling at the front of stores, elevated its owned brands (Good & Gather, Cat & Jack) in high-traffic zones, and tightened inventory on fast-turn SKUs to reduce markdowns. It also expanded same-day delivery partnerships and added 1,500 new SKUs in consumables to capture fill-in trips. The result: customers who came for groceries left with towels, candles, and kids' clothes.
This works because basket growth in mass retail correlates directly with placement discipline and perceived value density. When a shopper enters for milk and sees a curated endcap of $12 throw pillows next to a $6 candle — both from owned brands with healthy margins — the cognitive cost of adding items drops. Target's owned-brand penetration now sits above 30% of total sales, giving it pricing flexibility competitors lack. The retailer also benefits from a demographic skew: its core customer has a median household income 15% higher than Walmart's, making discretionary add-ons easier to justify as macroeconomic pressure eases.
A small physical-product brand can steal this play without Target's scale. First, identify your hero SKU — the item that drives initial purchase intent — and bundle it with two complementary products at a price that feels like a discovery, not a discount. If you sell stainless-steel water bottles, pair it with a cleaning tablet set and a carabiner clip. Price the bundle at $38 when the components retail separately for $48. Second, control placement. If you sell on Amazon, use Vine or early-reviewer programs to create bundle-specific reviews that highlight convenience. If you sell DTC, feature the bundle as the default product-page option and bury the single SKU two clicks deep. Third, track add-to-cart rate and average order value weekly. If AOV climbs but conversion drops, your bundle price is too high. If conversion holds but AOV is flat, your pairing is not intuitive. Target runs this analysis at the category level every seventy-two hours; you can do it in a spreadsheet with Shopify exports.
The broader pattern is this: basket expansion beats traffic acquisition when retention is your growth constraint. Target did not spend materially more on ads this quarter. It rearranged what customers already saw and made the next purchase feel obvious. For a one-person brand, that means treating your product page like an endcap and your email like a store reset — pair, price, and position so the second item sells itself.