Business & Tech
Target Stores Removing Gender-Based Signs From Stores
"Boys" and "girls" signs and color indicators will be phased out in some departments, including the toy section.

G.I. Joe, meet Barbie. Barbie, meet G.I. Joe.
A change in labeling β and thinking β by Target stores means that Joe and Barbie can at last share the same shelves after years of βboysβ and βgirlsβ departments kept them separated.
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The retail giant announced that it will be removing gender-based signage from certain sections of the store, including kidsβ bedding and toys.
βSome guests have brought up some valid questions along the way ofβwas the level of signage that we had necessary? Did they actually help or was it something we should reconsider?β Molly Snyder, a Target spokeswoman, told Patch.
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βThere wasnβt really a defining moment necessarily, but we got to a point where we said, you know what, there are a few areas of the store where it just doesnβt make sense, where we just wanted to have a more gender-neutral approach.β
The changes will be especially apparent in kids sections, where monster trucks and makeup kits have traditionally been labeled for boys or girls.
Childrenβs bedding will now be under one label, too, with football- and princess-themed spreads in the same section.
Also out the door will be color labels. Target used pink and yellow for girlsβ toys and blue and green for boysβ toys.
The changes are being made to encourage children to choose on their own what they want to play with, instead of having a sign do it for them.
βCertainly we want to make sure that our stores and company in general are places where people feel included and also like theyβre able to shop and feel like theyβre a part of the experience,β Snyder said.
βSo thatβs really what this is about.β
Arguably the most outspoken complaint came from Abi Bechtel on Twitter, who noted toy signage that separated βBuilding Setsβ from βGirlsβ Building Sets.β It was retweeted nearly 3,000 times.
βThose are now just βbuilding sets,ββ Snyder said.
What wonβt be changing are gender tags and categories online.
βOne of the top ways that people search dot-com when theyβre searching for toys for a child is to sort by gender,β Snyder said. βSo thatβs going to stay there.β
The Girl Scouts applauded the move on Twitter, congratulating Target βfor taking a step towards gender equality,β with many others praising the decision.
And, like in most any major change, there was some backlash, too.
Users wrote in the Facebook comments underneath the Target announcement that the company was just βpandering to the liberal idealogs [sic]β and βwonβt be spending 1 dime in Target anymore.β
Still, Snyder said the response has been βoverwhelmingly positive.β
βWe certainly recognize that by making these changes that people would have a variety of opinions about that, and we certainly respect those,β she said.
βBut the changes weβve made we feel good about, and weβve heard a really positive response from our guests.β
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