Target expanded its third-party marketplace by adding apparel brand Forever 21 and footwear maker Clarks, according to Retail Dive. The retailer now carries more than 400,000 third-party items across categories that extend well beyond its owned inventory, including fashion, home, and beauty. Target's marketplace has grown roughly 40% since it launched in 2023, with the company adding partners in segments where it historically carried limited assortment or faced supply constraints.
The move works because Target is using marketplace partners to test demand and fill category gaps without committing capital to inventory or warehouse space. Forever 21 brings fast-fashion apparel at price points Target doesn't stock in owned goods. Clarks adds premium footwear styles the retailer can't justify stocking in every store. Both brands get distribution in front of Target's 100 million active digital shoppers without negotiating traditional wholesale terms or minimum order quantities. Target collects a commission on each sale, carries zero inventory risk, and extends its assortment into segments where owned brands would cannibalize margin or require SKU proliferation it can't support operationally.
The underlying mechanism is margin arbitrage through platform economics. Target's owned-brand apparel and home goods operate on wholesale margins in the 40-50% range, but require upfront buy commitments, warehousing, and markdown risk. Marketplace partnerships flip the model: the third party holds inventory, fulfills orders, and absorbs returns, while Target takes a commission estimated in the 15-20% range on gross merchandise value. That's lower margin per unit, but zero working capital and no obsolescence exposure. For a retailer managing tight inventory turns and rising fulfillment costs, marketplace revenue is pure incremental gross profit with minimal operational lift.
The steal for a small physical-product brand is to position your line as a category filler on a retailer's existing marketplace, not as a wholesale SKU. Identify a regional or specialty retailer that already operates a third-party platform—chains like Kohl's, Macy's, and Nordstrom all run marketplace programs now. Look for product categories where the retailer's owned assortment is thin: niche apparel sizes, specialty outdoor gear, artisan home goods, or consumables with short shelf life. Reach out to the marketplace team (usually a separate contact from wholesale buying) with a one-page pitch: your category, your bestselling SKUs, your average order value, and proof of fulfillment capacity (even if that's just you and a 3PL partner). Offer to start with 10-20 SKUs and handle all logistics. The retailer gets expanded assortment with zero inventory commitment. You get access to their traffic and checkout infrastructure without paying slotting fees or minimum buys.
Set your retail price to leave room for the platform's commission—typically 15-25% of GMV depending on category—and still hit your target margin. If your landed cost is $12 and you need $18 after fulfillment to break even, price the item at $24-$27 to absorb the commission and leave you with workable unit economics. Build fulfillment assumptions into your cash flow: most marketplace agreements require shipping within 1-2 business days, so you need either safety stock or a 3PL that can pick and pack on demand. Start with your bestsellers and proven SKUs. Once you're live, monitor sell-through weekly and adjust assortment based on what moves. If a retailer's marketplace works for your brand, you've effectively bought distribution without paying for it upfront.
The broader pattern is that retail distribution is bifurcating into owned inventory and commissioned partnerships, and the door for small brands is the latter. Wholesale shelf space is shrinking. Marketplace slots are expanding.
The takeaway
Pitch your line as a marketplace SKU, not a wholesale buy, and the retailer takes zero inventory risk while you access their traffic.
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