SB'24 is happening this week! Can’t join the full event? — grab a One-Day or Activation Hub Pass!

New Target Collection Answers Increased Consumer Demand for Products That Reduce Waste

The ‘Target Zero’ collection features products and packaging designed to be refillable, reusable or compostable; made from recycled content; or made from materials that reduce the use of plastic.

Today, Target Corporation launches Target Zero — a new initiative that responds to growing guest interest in products that help reduce waste.

Guests will now see a Target Zero icon in stores and online that will signal products and packaging designed to be refillable, reusable or compostable; made from recycled content; or made from materials that reduce the use of plastic. Hundreds of new and existing products from guest-favorite brands across Target’s Beauty, Personal Care and Household Essentials categories will be among the first in the Target Zero collection, with plans to expand the assortment in the future.

Target Zero advances key commitments made through Target Forward — Target’s sustainability strategy that aims to co-create an equitable and sustainable future with its guests, partners and communities — and includes ambitions to design and elevate purpose-driven brands and innovate to eliminate waste. The initiative uses Target’s size, scale and resources to curate a one-of-a-kind assortment that drives innovation and progress to reduce waste.

The Target Zero initiative is part of new wave of engagement efforts by brands and retailers, aimed at both satisfying growing demand for better products and nudging ambivalent consumers toward more sustainable shopping habits.

“Target Zero unlocks important progress toward our Target Forward ambitions, each of which require collaboration from our partners and action from our guests to be realized,” said Amanda Nusz, Target’s SVP of corporate responsibility and president of the Target Foundation. “By making it easier for our guests to identify which products are designed to reduce waste, Target Zero helps them make informed decisions about what they purchase and advances a collective impact across our brand partners, our product shelves, and within our homes and communities.”

In-store and digital experience

With Target Zero, Target is further honing its offering to appeal to the growing segment of discerning consumers that shop with their values — and joins fellow retailers including Amazon and Thrive Market in allowing shoppers to filter their product searches with a range of environmental and social criteria; and Loop, which appeals specifically to shoppers seeking alternatives to product.

The Target Zero icon will be seen by guests on shelves in-store, and in a dedicated section of target.com. Hundreds of products from brands including Burt’s Bees, PLUS, Pacifica and more are among the first to be featured. Select products from Grove Co. and Target’s owned brand, Everspring, will join the collection beginning in April.

“We can’t wait to introduce our guests to Target Zero because we recognize their growing calls to find products that fit within their lifestyle, designed with sustainability in mind,” said EVP and chief merchandising officer Jill Sando. “Our aim with Target Zero is to keep delivering on their needs through our ever-evolving product assortment, as well as to give brands investing in reduced waste products and packaging an opportunity to have those products highlighted by Target.”

The Target Zero assortment highlights leading brands and innovations driving progress toward zero-waste solutions. Example innovations from the first cohort of Target Zero products include a new, exclusive-to-Target packaging from Burt’s Bees that uses plastic-free, recyclable metal tins for its lip balms; and products from PLUS such as a first-of-its-kind body wash that eliminates excess water and waste in the form of a dehydrated, dissolvable square that transforms when you add water.

Target Forward in action

Target hopes Target Zero will help drive progress toward its overarching sustainability goals — including being the market leader for creating and curating inclusive, sustainable brands and experiences by 2030; and to have 100 percent of its owned-brand plastic packaging be recyclable, compostable or reusable by 2025.

Target Zero also marks one of the first initiatives engaging Target brand partners in Target Forward. The retailer worked with existing national brand partners and owned brands to identify products that meet specific requirements to be a part of the program’s first cohort. Target says it will continue to work with its partners to expand the assortment with additional products meeting the Target Zero criteria.

Upcoming Events

December 11-12, 2024
SB Member Network: Shifting Customer Behavior and Demand December Member Meeting
Member Event
More Information

March 18-19, 2025
SB'25 Tokyo Marunouchi
More Information

Related Stories

Zillow to Offer Climate-Risk Data on For-Sale Listings Across the US MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Zillow to Offer Climate-Risk Data on For-Sale Listings Across the US
Monitoring Media: Reining in the Broader Impacts of Brand Communications MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Monitoring Media: Reining in the Broader Impacts of Brand Communications
More Travel Offerings Highlighting Interinfluence of Climate Change and Tourism CONSUMER BEHAVIOR CHANGE
More Travel Offerings Highlighting Interinfluence of Climate Change and Tourism
2 Truths and a Lie About Corporate Sustainability MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
2 Truths and a Lie About Corporate Sustainability
Ecolabels Ensure Chemical Sustainability in Beauty, Household Products MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Ecolabels Ensure Chemical Sustainability in Beauty, Household Products
Climate Uneducation in the US, Part 3: Colleges, Universities Need Academic Advisors MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Climate Uneducation in the US, Part 3: Colleges, Universities Need Academic Advisors