Minneapolis retailer sees strong gains in comp store sales, digital sales, and profits.
Tourism
The latest business phenomenon to go under the millennial knife? The club.
Two young entrepreneurs open Hotel Pikku, a three-suite boutique hotel.
Mike Lindell, CEO of the Chaska-based bedding product manufacturing company, says the layoffs are needed to restructure facility operations for his new venture.
Eight mission-driven companies have begun their cohort of Target's latest program, the Target Incubator, while nine are set to begin the Metro Target Retail Accelerator, recently renamed and revamped from what was Target + Techstars.
The new product line includes wipes, soaps, detergents, and more, that are all made of ingredients strictly from plants, renewable materials, or recycled paper.
Under his second owner post-Carlson, Radisson's CEO explains the game plan to return to "player" status in the global hotel biz.
The handheld device from Tyto Care makes it possible to get a medical exam from home, which fits Best Buy’s growing focus on health tech.
As the country's biggest museums abandon weekly closings, the Twin Cities stands pat.
The experience driven concept that was a hit in New York launches today at 36 stores nationwide including Ridgedale Center.
After 37 years, the homegrown company is closing all six remaining Twin Cities stores.
Great Lakes Northern Outfitters’ New Swimsuit Line is Made of One Ingredient: Recycled Water Bottles
The Minneapolis-based apparel company has launched a new line of swimsuits made 100 percent from post-consumer recycled water bottles.
The brand, which sells clothing for a wide range of body types, will hit the mall as an 1,800-square-foot pop-up shop later this spring.
Improving on greenhouse gas emission reduction goals established in 2017, Target plans to change store lightbulbs to LED and add rooftop solar panels to 500 stores by 2020, among other efforts.
Shoppers will start seeing the label in early spring, as Target strives towards transparency in chemical usage.
National brands are replacing some locals at MOA retail incubator Fourpost.
Months after shutting down manufacturing in St. Paul, the century-old leather goods company is redefining its hometown presence.
The new invite-only program will partner the retailer with third-party vendors in an attempt to create “thoughtfully selected” assortments of its more popular shopping categories.