Last Week, Brian Cornell Resigned From Pepsi. Now He's Target's New CEO.He arrives at a precarious time for the company, which is still recovering from last year's massive data breach.

ByLaura Entis

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

In May, Target gave its former CEO Greg Steinhafelthe axas it worked to recover from the devastatinghack jobthat compromised the personal data from millions of shoppers over the holiday season.

In wake of the firing John Mulligan, Target's chief financial officer, stepped up as interim CEO until a suitable replacement was found.

Three months later, Target thinks it's found its man, not from within the company but from outside it: Brian Cornell, a former Pepsi executive, has just been命名the company's new CEO.

Related:Target's CEO Steps Down. But Why Now?

Cornell resigned from PepsiCo earlier this week, where he served as the chief executive of PepsiCo American Foods (a division that includes Frito-Lay North America, Quaker Foods and PepsiCo's Latin American food and snack businesses) since 2012. Previous executive stints include time at Sam's Club, where he served as president and CEO, Michaels Stores, where he also served as CEO and Safeway, where he was the executive vice president and chief marketing officer.

"I am honored and humbled to join Target as the first CEO hired from outside the company," Cornell said in a statement. "As we create the Target of tomorrow, I will focus on our current business performance in both the U.S. and Canada and on how we accelerate our omnichannel transformation."

Cornell will take the reins of a company that has stumbled recently – store traffic has slumped in the last year, in part because of the holiday data breach but also due to increasing competition from online retailers. In addition, he must decide how to handle the company's mismanaged push into Canada, an expansion that, according toThe Wall Street Journal, has already cost the company $1.6 billion.

Related:Target Falls for the Terrifying 'Thigh Gap' Trend and Totally Gets Busted

Wavy Line
Laura Entis is a reporter for Fortune.com's Venture section.

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