HISTORY OF TARGET DEPARTMENT STORES

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Issue:

Business

 

Written by:

Monica F

 

Date added:

March 12, 2012

 

Level:

University

 

Grade:

A

 

No of pages / words:

4 / 1037

 

Was viewed:

9857 times

 

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Essay content:

The store was run on strict Presbyterian guidelines: no liquor was sold, the store was closed on Sunday, no business travel or advertising was permitted on the Sabbath, and Dayton Company refused to advertise in a newspaper that sponsored liquor ads. This approach did not stifle business; Dayton Company became extremely successful...
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A multimillion-dollar business by the 1920s, Dayton Company decided it was ready to expand, purchasing J.B. Hudson & Son, a Minneapolis-based jeweler, in 1929, just two months before the historic stock market crash. World War II did not hamper business; rather, Dayton's turned the war into an asset. Consumer goods were so scarce that it was no longer necessary to persuade shoppers to buy what merchandise was available...
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