Declines in sales at both companies are unrelated to "boycotts". They are instead reflective of changing consumer tastes and rising costs. Target's merchandise mix was losing appeal, and it had not fully exploited technology to streamline operations. Online sales at Target are growing, consistent with broader trends in the industry, where brick and mortar stores of all kinds have been losing business to virtual competitors. The Post has been dealing with a subscriber base unwilling to pay for physical newspapers which have become increasingly expensive to produce, and of course has lost advertising revenue to competing online platforms. Those factors have affected all newspapers. Noticing a company has seen declining sales, and crowing that it must be because of a trivial consumer boycott is to draw an incorrect conclusion from a false premise. Correlation is not causation; actual market forces clearly account for those sales declines, not politically driven behavior by a handful of low-spending consumers. |
BS, they know exactly how they lost customers. |
Nice spin. But no. Target's decline was absolutely due to their bending the knee to Trump and his whining about "DEI." Even the company knows this. While the Post-like all hard copy news outlets- have struggled in recent years, the Post has lost subscribers AND decorated journalists due to Bezos interference and departure from norms. |
| I'm unsubscribing to every corporate email that comes into my gmail account. I feel I'm taking a small step to save democracy. |