By Paul Ziobro 

Target Corp. is trying to win skeptical shoppers back by giving them a year to return purchases of private-label brands such as Merona shirts, Threshold book shelves and Room Essentials towels.

The move is meant to show confidence in the brands, which make up about a third of Target's $72 billion in annual sales, after the retailer cut back on quality during the recession to get prices low enough to appeal to an increasingly frugal shopper. Previously the return period was 90 days.

Target made the move quietly last week in stores and on its website with a small change in the "excluded items" part of its standard return policy. A few conditions: Receipts must be provided; clothing or bathmats can show some wear; and packages of diapers, paper towels and other consumables can be returned even if opened.

Competitors offer shorter return windows. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has a 90-day limit, except for some items like electronics. Gap Inc.'s main brands have a 45-day window. Amazon.com allows returns for 30 days after the shipment was received. Best Buy Inc. gives shoppers 15 days to bring items back.

Target's new chief executive, Brian Cornell, is trying to shake up the retailer, which swung too far in focusing on lower prices during the recession and lost its edge. In his turnaround plan, Mr. Cornell is leaning on Target's own roster of brands as a means to offset some of the costly investments planned over the next few years in areas such as e-commerce, where profit margins are tighter. Ten of Target's private-label brands each generate more than $1 billion a year in sales.

Though he came from a brand powerhouse in PepsiCo Inc., Mr. Cornell has an affinity for private-label products, which typically are more profitable for retailers than outside and national brands. During a stint as chief marketing officer at the Safeway Inc., Mr. Cornell led a revamp and broad expansion of the grocery chain's private-label brands. At Wal-Mart's Sam's Club division, he similarly spruced up the warehouse chain's private-label line.

Like Dollar General Corp., Wal-Mart and a number of other retailers, Target is spending heavily as it fights for shoppers who are just emerging from a multiyear slump to try to lure them back into stores. After years of competing on discounts, retailers are looking to improve their stores by paying workers more, better stocking shelves and refreshing their offerings such as more fresh food in grocery.

Target has started seeing the beginnings of a rebound. Its fourth-quarter sales rose 3.8%, the fastest rate in nearly three years. The amount of customers shopping Target rose, too, after eight straight quarters of tumbling.

A Target spokesman declined to say how much the new return policy will cost and said the benefits will far outweigh any costs associated with the updated return policy.

Private label was one of the main areas where Target made a name for itself by selling items that were once exclusive to department stores, like Mossimo clothing, and tailoring them to the masses at affordable prices. Those brands helped elevate Target over other discounters but then the recession hit and the company became more focused on value.

"We were really focused on offering low prices to our guests," said Julie Guggemos, senior vice president of Target's product development and design team. "Our quality did suffer."

Target turned to lower-cost materials, packaging and ingredients to keep prices low enough for consumers enduring a historic economic downturn that sharply cut into nondiscretionary purchases. Furniture was shipped entirely disassembled, and sometimes took hours to put together for larger pieces. White ceramic dishes would soon start to scratch after a year of regular use. Gift bag handles would start to tear if the contents weighed more than 20 pounds.

In recent years, the company has been trying to make improvements, like shipping some furniture pre-assembled. Some dining chairs now come in just two pieces. Ms. Guggemos said both returns and complaints related to quality have declined in recent years.

But the company is making a bigger push on quality later this year. It has identified 100 items to be revamped, including more durable glazes on dishes and stronger yarn in T-shirts that hold the shape better.

The changes cost more, and the company is searching to cut costs in other areas of the production process. It all supports the company's new objective for its own brands. "Before it was to deliver real great quality at great prices, now we want to be the best of the best," Ms. Guggemos said.

The shift also represents a change in Target's merchandise team priorities. In the past, the group's compensation was tied to gross-margin rate, a metric that can force compromises to maximize profits on each product sold, Target's chief merchant, Kathee Tesija, said recently at an investor event. The new mandate focuses on gross profit dollars, which emphasize selling more of a particular product.

The new return policy may not be enough to win over skeptics. Nicole Lewis, a mental health therapist from Philadelphia, said she has noticed inconsistencies in quality and now mostly avoids Target's private-label brands. Among her complaints: Room Essentials bed sheets that shrunk and pilled after the first wash; picture frames that separated at the joints soon after being hung; and Merona shirts that lasted for only a few wears.

"They shrunk terribly and faded after washing," said Ms. Lewis, who said she shops at Target less frequently because of issues with quality. A longer return period won't win her back unless she is convinced quality has improved. "I don't care that I can return for up to a year. I want to believe their products will actually last for that year."

Write to Paul Ziobro at Paul.Ziobro@wsj.com

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