As someone who's had some experience in marketing (for a publicly traded company), they study and know their demographics very well. I won't pretend to know why they took this route but it's possible it was a trade off in some way. The last time I was in a Ulta store in a Dallas suburb (2 yrs ago), I noticed at least half of their custom…
As someone who's had some experience in marketing (for a publicly traded company), they study and know their demographics very well. I won't pretend to know why they took this route but it's possible it was a trade off in some way. The last time I was in a Ulta store in a Dallas suburb (2 yrs ago), I noticed at least half of their customer service people were men. Men wearing makeup & nail polish. I have a feeling their male customers have grown exponentially. Most Ulta locations are in or near big cities where there's a large population of trans/gay people so I imagine that's the customer base they're targeting.
LuAnne, you make a good point and may be right. This is nothing new and maybe that demographic has been growing in places like Dallas, but I hope that means they’ve misread the tea leaves and they’ll be closing stores in smaller cities across the country. I’m in Amarillo and I don’t see it being successful around here. Even though there is a sizable number of trans in this area, not enough to keep that store open. IF, and this is the big IF…women will stand together against this nonsense.
Yea, I don't think it will fly either but apparently, they're doubling down on the woke nonsense. I stopped shopping there a while back. I've actually stopped shopping at most big box stores. We've since moved out of Dallas to a few hours east to a rural town/county. It's quiet, peaceful, and the people are down to earth.
I returned a mail order item to Nordstrom's recently. They used to be a very conservative, upscale type store and would never have hired the kind of people they hire today. The person I dealt with in my return process was one of these made up tranny types with big plugs in his ears (I won't refer to him as a "her"). I was actually shocked because it was such a departure from how Nordstrom used to require their employees to be. It's hard to get away from this sick stuff.
Yes, and when I go into a store looking for advice, that's not who I want to get it from. The last time I took my daughter in there it made me a little nauseous. Won't be doing that again!
As someone who's had some experience in marketing (for a publicly traded company), they study and know their demographics very well. I won't pretend to know why they took this route but it's possible it was a trade off in some way. The last time I was in a Ulta store in a Dallas suburb (2 yrs ago), I noticed at least half of their customer service people were men. Men wearing makeup & nail polish. I have a feeling their male customers have grown exponentially. Most Ulta locations are in or near big cities where there's a large population of trans/gay people so I imagine that's the customer base they're targeting.
Yes I have seen an employee (male) in full makeup here in Boca Raton which is still quite family oriented.
I believe it is part of the great perverse demonic agenda thrust on young people from every angle.
Purely demonic. God only knows what will be next.
They already have started legitimizing threesomes.
LuAnne, you make a good point and may be right. This is nothing new and maybe that demographic has been growing in places like Dallas, but I hope that means they’ve misread the tea leaves and they’ll be closing stores in smaller cities across the country. I’m in Amarillo and I don’t see it being successful around here. Even though there is a sizable number of trans in this area, not enough to keep that store open. IF, and this is the big IF…women will stand together against this nonsense.
Yea, I don't think it will fly either but apparently, they're doubling down on the woke nonsense. I stopped shopping there a while back. I've actually stopped shopping at most big box stores. We've since moved out of Dallas to a few hours east to a rural town/county. It's quiet, peaceful, and the people are down to earth.
I returned a mail order item to Nordstrom's recently. They used to be a very conservative, upscale type store and would never have hired the kind of people they hire today. The person I dealt with in my return process was one of these made up tranny types with big plugs in his ears (I won't refer to him as a "her"). I was actually shocked because it was such a departure from how Nordstrom used to require their employees to be. It's hard to get away from this sick stuff.
Yes, and when I go into a store looking for advice, that's not who I want to get it from. The last time I took my daughter in there it made me a little nauseous. Won't be doing that again!