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Subject: 
Toyland expands its boundaries
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.mediawatch
Date: 
Sun, 16 Feb 2003 21:15:48 GMT
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1069 times
  
Toyland Expands Its Boundaries

http://stacks.msnbc.com/news/873033.asp?0cv=CB20&cp1=1#BODY

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Feb. 15 2003

photo caption:  The next hot toy may not be sold in a toy store.  CNBC’s Mike
Hegedus reports on what could be the next must-have toy: a remote control
flying saucer.

quote: ‘The search is on to put the toys where consumers are, instead of trying
to attract (consumers) to toy stores or another mass merchant.’
— CHRIS BYRNE  independent toy consultant


These days, it’s hard to predict where the next hot toy will turn up. This past
holiday season, one of the must-haves came from consumer electronics chain
RadioShack Corp., which latched onto a micro radio-controlled car called
ZipZaps that can be recharged in 45 seconds.

PARENTS CLEARED the $20 toys off store shelves, or, if they shopped too late in
the season, settled for one of several competing knockoffs.
“It was our most successful product launch in history ever,” said Don Carroll,
senior vice president and general manager of the Fort Worth, Texas-based chain.

RadioShack’s newfound status in toyland is an example of how the $20.3 billion
toy industry is expanding beyond traditional retailers such as discounters and
Toys “R” Us. The growing sophistication of children and toys themselves is
partly behind the trend, but so are changes in the retailing industry,
including the financial problems of retailers such as Kmart Corp. and FAO Inc.
that have led to hundreds of store closings.

The shift in toy retailing is expected to be one of the concerns of
manufacturers and storeowners at the 100th American International Toy Fair, the
toy industry product expo that officially begins Sunday.

In another example of the change, traditional toy stores like Toys “R” Us and
K-B Toys are selling toys to grocery and drugstore chains to compete with
discounters. And manufacturers like Lego are making deals with apparel stores.

FOLLOWING THE CONSUMERS
At Starbucks coffee stores, customers can sip cafe latte while purchasing board
games like Hear Me Out! which the company sells exclusively. Cranium,
Starbucks’ first splash in the game business in 1998, was named the best game
of the year by the Toy Industry Association last year.

Shoppers will now find toys year-round at RadioShack, which is creating new
versions of the 2 1/2-inch-long ZipZaps and working with suppliers to develop
other toys. RadioShack was previously known for larger radio-controlled trucks
and cars, but never had an exclusive gotta-have toy until ZipZaps.

“The search is on to put the toys where consumers are, instead of trying to
attract (consumers) to toy stores or another mass merchant,” said Chris Byrne,
an independent toy consultant. “Companies have to keep growing somehow.”

Byrne estimates that a typical parent goes to the toy store once a month, but
visits a grocery chain at least once a week. Meanwhile, retailers like
RadioShack are using toys to draw parents who hopefully will also pick up some
electronics items while they’re at the store.

Theresa Massa, of Middletown, N.J., is the kind of shopper the toy industry is
targeting. A mother of four children ranging from ages 1 1/2 to 17, Massa has
time to go to the toy store only once every three months. But she shops at the
local grocery chain several times a week.

“Now and then I go the toy store. I like to make fewer trips,” said Massa. But
she said she would buy more toys if “they were in front of me and I liked
them.”

WHERE THE TOYS ARE
She’ll also go wherever the hot toy is. Massa tried to find ZipZaps at
RadioShack this past holiday season, but was unsuccessful. She ended up buying
another version online, she said.

Massa hasn’t seen a lot of toys at nontraditional outlets, but as the trend
accelerates, she should expect to see more. Here’s how the trend is picking up
pace:
Toys “R” Us, which started supplying toys to grocery chains a year and a half
ago, now sells to 31 grocery stores including Giant stores in the Washington,
D.C. area.
K-B Toys Inc. supplied toys to Sears, Roebuck and Co. last holiday season in 77
locations, up from 29 a year ago. Last fall, it became the wholesaler of toys
to drugstore chain CVS Corp.
Lego Systems Inc. has tripled its business selling toys to supermarkets such as
Food Lion and Stop & Shop and the Rite-Aid drug chain in the past three years.
It’s also expanding into crafts stores for the first time, with a line called
Clikits, an arts and crafts kit for teens.
Home shopping channel QVC, which attracts 80 million viewers per week, has
doubled its toy sales from three years ago.

Selling board games and other items to chains outside the traditional toy
industry requires different strategies.

Toys “R” Us ran tests at grocery chains to see which toys sold best, and found
that products priced $10 to $15 that are also portable have the most success,
according to Francesca Brockett, executive vice president.
“We’re trying to meet a different occasion” rather than focusing on holiday
sales, she said. Toys “R” Us is aiming its supermarket sales at parents who are
buying gifts as small rewards for their children or purchasing birthday gifts.

Lego set up a special sales force to pursue selling to alternative outlets.
“We want shoppers to bump into the Lego brand in every relevant location,” said
Andrew Black, the company’s president.

With Clikits, the company will also be selling to teen clothing chain Limited
Too. Clikits allows teens to create handbags and other accessories by snapping
plastic pieces together.

Meanwhile, Lego will be making an exclusive version of a radio-controlled car
for RadioShack, marking its debut at the consumer electronics chain. The goal,
Black said, is to double Lego’s market share in this country to 6 percent.
“It’s only a matter of time,” he said.



Message has 1 Reply:
  Fun and games turn up wherever shoppers are
 
Fun and games turn up wherever shoppers are (URL) Anne D'Innocenzio The Associated Press These days, it's hard to predict where the next hot toy will turn up. This past holiday season, one of the must-haves came from consumer electronics chain (...) (22 years ago, 16-Feb-03, to lugnet.mediawatch)

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