Target expanded its third-party marketplace in 2025 by adding Forever 21 apparel, Clarks footwear, and select beauty brands, according to Retail Dive. The retailer also launched a home goods capsule with Parachute, bringing bedding and bath products into the Target ecosystem. All inventory ships directly from the brand partners — Target never takes title to the goods, absorbs no holding cost, and carries no obsolescence risk.
The mechanism is straightforward. Target curates the brand roster and lists products on Target.com under a "sold and shipped by" attribution. The partner brand owns inventory, handles fulfillment, manages returns. Target collects a transaction fee on each sale and routes customer demand to established names that already run their own logistics. The retailer gains category breadth — particularly in apparel and home — without the capital outlay or markdown exposure of a traditional wholesale buy.
This works because Target solves distribution for mid-tier brands while reducing its own working capital burden. Forever 21 and Clarks get access to Target's 100 million monthly site visitors and the halo of the Target brand without negotiating shelf space or minimum order quantities. Target fills white space in its assortment — categories where it historically underindexed or where trend cycles move faster than a wholesale buyer can react — and monetizes traffic it already owns. The marketplace model turns the website into a platform: more SKUs, more reasons to visit, no inventory carrying cost.
The Parachute collaboration follows the same template but adds a layer of co-merchandising. Parachute designs a Target-exclusive capsule — simplified SKU count, accessible price points — and fulfills orders from its own warehouse. Target positions the line as a curated discovery, not a commodity play. The brand gets a mass-market test without diluting its direct channel. Target gets a premium home goods story without stocking premium home goods.
A small physical-product brand can run the same play by treating any high-traffic retailer or content platform as a potential marketplace partner rather than a wholesale account. Approach the buyer with a proposal to list your catalog under a third-party seller program — Amazon, Faire, or niche platforms like The Grommet — where you retain inventory ownership and fulfillment responsibility. Price your products to cover the platform's commission (typically 15-25%) and your own pick-pack-ship cost (budget $4-8 per unit for small parcel). Write the pitch deck around risk transfer: the platform earns a margin with zero capital, you access their audience without the wholesale terms that crush cash flow.
Build the operational backbone before you pitch. Set up a Shopify or WooCommerce instance that can receive API orders from the platform, confirm a third-party logistics provider (ShipBob, Cahoot) with two-day delivery capability, and define a return policy that mirrors the platform's standard. Then identify platforms where your product fills a category gap — a home goods retailer with weak outdoor categories, a fashion site missing technical apparel — and present your line as the solution to their assortment hole. The platform wants traffic and conversion. You want distribution without the inventory risk of a wholesale commitment. The deal closes when both parties see it as a revenue share, not a product sale.
The broader shift is toward asset-light retail: platforms own the traffic, brands own the inventory, both monetize the transaction. Target proves the model scales at mass-market volume. A one-person brand proves it works at the margin.