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May 5, 2014 #151; -- Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel’s resignation today signals an end to six months of corporate navel-gazing since the retailer’s huge data breach and clears the way for some ...
Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel is leaving the company in the wake of a massive data breach that exposed the personal information of up to 110 million customers during the holiday season last year.
Target Corp.'s CEO Gregg Steinhafel on Tuesday, Oct. 16, 2012 told about 80 reporters at a company media conference that the retailers include Amazon.com, Walmart.com, Bestbuy.com, Toysrus.com and ...
The freshly resigned CEO's missteps went well beyond a massive data breach, marring a hard-won corporate reputation.
Gregg Steinhafel, 59, Chairman and CEO of the Target Corporation was ousted by the board of directors of Target yesterday. A very solid, experienced merchant who failed to stem negative reaction ...
While it won't happen overnight, Target is likely to change subtly with Gregg Steinhafel as chairman, with food and consumables becoming more prevalent. Steinhafel adds the chairmanship to his CEO ...
Gregg Steinhafel, the chairman and CEO of Target during the retailer's massive breach of customer data last year, has left the company effective immediately. The company announced that the ...
MINNEAPOLIS - Under fire for its lavish executive pay, Target Corp. said it cut CEO Gregg Steinhafel's pay by 37 percent in 2013 - but still gave him a $15.9 million golden parachute after his ...
Gregg Steinhafel is one of those leaders who never uses the word “I.” In a recent exclusive interview with Fast Company, the CEO of Target Corporation peppered his conversation with “we” ...
NEW YORK -- Former Target CEO Gregg Steinhafel's total pay fell 35 percent to $13 million in his last year at the helm as the company's board revamped compensation plans amid complaints from ...
Target cut the pay of Gregg Steinhafel by more than 37% in his final year as CEO, though he is taking home a severance package valued around $15.8 million.
WSJ's Jerry Seib and Monica Langley discuss how CEO Gregg Steinhafel managed the fallout of the Target hack and how it affected the company's bottom line. Photo: Jenn Ackerman/The Wall Street Journal.
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