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Retailing Tips: TDmonthly's Top Tips How to Keep Your Store Tip-Top
Find Outrageous Toys... Greg Bonner, 20-year owner of Little Rock, Ark.’s Heights Toy Center, got fed up with Toy Fair fare: “Forget the industry! I'm going to find something different.” He snatched up kid-sized luggage and luxurious room décor that gets tweens swooning and their parents buying. ![]() Get Involved With the Community... Valerie Pontbriand, owner of Four Eyes Joke Shop in Southbridge, Mass., awarded prizes for town-improvement plans. The Build-A-Bear Workshop retail chain offers an online kit for kids who want to use their products to raise money for charity. Get the Community Involved With You... Trish Garlock, owner of The Treasured Child in La Grange, Ky., lets customers borrow before buying. Find out what educators need, then show them the right toy, advised Susie Waterstreet, director of marketing for Tree Top Kids Inc. The Wooden Horse in Los Gatos, Calif., gave gift certificates to students who didn’t watch TV for a week. ![]() But Let the People Play... Studies show that the longer customers stay in a store, the more likely they are to buy.… Also consider creating “Demo Days,” when customers can purchase display pieces at a discount. Become Your Competitor’s “Best Friend”... Sign up for a membership on competitors’ Web sites, so you’ll be alerted to special promotions, sales and events. “You’ll know what they’re doing,” advised customer diversity expert Rich Kizer. Make Events Eventful... Hire a celebrity. ... Local heroes can be big draws, too. At the Playhouse Toy Store in Durham, N.C., Donna Fredrick gets reps to send her samples, stickers, posters and promotional items. At the Children’s Store in Boise, Idaho, owner Jeanne McCullough turned kids into archaeologists-for-the-day by bringing in 55-million-year-old fish fossils encased in stones from a local riverbed. And Employees Indispensable... Sharon DiMinico, founder of Learning Express, gave all employees buying responsibilities: “They felt more included in the business.” Toni Pohle, co-owner of The Wizard’s Chest in Denver, Colo., hires workers who are already involved in her business: “the kids who’ve been hanging out in the store for years.” ![]() Michael Gorey, a Los Angeles-based creative director/consultant and professor at Art Center College of Design, recommends direct mail, newsletters for existing customers, and tracking customer purchases. Charitable and community events are another way to build buzz (see above). Sharing information and building a community strengthens the specialty toy industry for all. If you have a tip that doesn’t appear here, feel free to share it on our Forums, where retailers can get together to vent, warn, advise and learn. ![]() |
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