- Joined
- Apr 7, 2026
- Messages
- 6
I know Target isn’t a corner store and that there’s strict guidelines on merchandising stuff, but I’m at my wits end with the Needoh endcap
It’s permanently empty and looks like a FEMA shelf with bald spots and empty needoh shippers, we don’t get even a hundredth of the supply to satisfy the children’s craving for that product. We carry similar fidget toys (like crazy Aaron’s putty). I really think those should be shuffled so they’re adjacent to the bald Needoh endcap, in fact we have multiple squishy toys (like magnetic sand in the STEM kid aisle) that could go near the Needoh ISM too
I know it’s not what the kids are looking for (the iPad baby generation of kiddies are very tuned into popular content creators and extremely brand conscious), but it would at least help out some parents with kids that aren’t completely fixated on the trend. “They didn’t have needohs, but saw this magnetic sand” and they both agree it’s a way cooler toy
is this something stores can do, or are planograms set at a level higher than the store and inviolable
It’s permanently empty and looks like a FEMA shelf with bald spots and empty needoh shippers, we don’t get even a hundredth of the supply to satisfy the children’s craving for that product. We carry similar fidget toys (like crazy Aaron’s putty). I really think those should be shuffled so they’re adjacent to the bald Needoh endcap, in fact we have multiple squishy toys (like magnetic sand in the STEM kid aisle) that could go near the Needoh ISM too
I know it’s not what the kids are looking for (the iPad baby generation of kiddies are very tuned into popular content creators and extremely brand conscious), but it would at least help out some parents with kids that aren’t completely fixated on the trend. “They didn’t have needohs, but saw this magnetic sand” and they both agree it’s a way cooler toy
is this something stores can do, or are planograms set at a level higher than the store and inviolable