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ABC Kids Expo Lets Toy Companies Expand Reaching Down Into the Infant Market Can Bring RewardsExhibitors at last month's ABC Kids Expo in Las Vegas said that the show allowed them to evaluate their sales and marketing strategies and push product development into new arenas. Grasping for Infants "The infant market is a segment we've started to pursue," Sam Armstrong of Rhino Toys told TDmonthly Magazine and Playzak. It was their second time at ABC and he said that this year's show was more "productive" for the company and a definite improvement over 2009. "We've done a lot of product development toward the infant. The new packaging [that features an infant] helped." Rhino's focus for infants is on the Oball, which has the "graspability" that buyers for wee ones are looking for, continued Armstrong. This year Rhino came out with an Oball rattle and 2011 will bring active kids the Oball Roller push toy. Also for 2011, Rhino has developed higher priced items such as a large Oball and an Oball Rainstick (each approxmiately $20 retail), which can carry them into the gift and holiday categories and, Armstrong hopes, into store catalogs as well. Barking Overseas Noodle Head, which showcased its Pawparazzi and Travel Buddies lines at ABC, is looking to expand into mid-range markets such as Barnes & Noble and Indigos, plus hopes to reach customers across the Atlantic. "We always do pretty well at ABC," said Chris Ryan. "It's a chance for us to hit the younger age range that we don't always see at Toy Fair. [At ABC], we get balanced sales on travel buddies and our top-selling Pawparazzi line." New Pawparazzi pets had been on hiatus for a while as the economy slowed, but the company has '"finally launched the new style," said Ryan. Noodle Head plans to bring out new pets every few months in 2011. Learning Lessons New exhibitor Leah Kalish, owner of "Move With Me Action Adventures," found her first ABC experience to be valuable, but not in the way she'd anticipated. "It was disappointing saleswise. ... I don't have a baby product," she said. She did make a number of valuable connections, but is now investigating more online and smaller niche opportunities to help build her brand of educational fitness DVDs. "I may have to look into more educational venues and conferences," she realized. She's also developing different marketing strategies to sell to teachers as well as to parents. Tom Sebazco, owner of ENI Puzzles, realized at the outset that the ABC show did not match his demographic. "We had limited expectations as the age for ABC is 0-6. we are 5 and up... So, we exceeded all expectations and gained valuable experience." Time to Be Premature Redmon for Kids had another great show, according to President Peter Redmon. Building on the success of last year's Fun & Fitness exercise equipment for children, the company launched four new items to keep kids in shape: trampoline, rowing machine, rider, and twister. Redmon appreciates that children are allowed on the floor at ABC. "It's nice to watch the kids come in," he commented. "They just go from one unit to the next. We had one famous model this year: Anna Nicole Smith's daughter was playing on our equipment at the show." For 2011, Redmon is debuting an infant scale that measures in half-ounce increments, "which is crucial for preemies," he noted. But the hit of the show was Rock On, a rocking platform for car seats that provides 300 plus hours of automated rocking on battery power alone. It can be slipped in a diaper bag for easy portability. The unit is only appropriate for the floor and should not be used in a car, he said. The Rock On is also ideal for doctor's offices and hospitals that cater to preemie babies, Redmon told TDmonthly. Instead of using space-hogging infant-seat swings to soothe babies on long waits, the Rock On can be stored in a closet and taken out as needed. 'We had requests from 10 or 12 different countries for that item for distribution," he said. It's A Small World Advertising the show in international trade publications might have accounted for that large amount of interest from overseas. Larry Schur, of ABC Kids, told TDmonthly that retailers from 64 different countries attended ABC — "an all-time record." The new Maternity Square pavilion was a big hit, he said, and paid off with both increased vendor and retailer attendance. "Our overall attendance increased by 7.8% over last year with exhibitor attendance increasing 10.9%, retail attendance by 4.9% and media by 34.1%," said Schur. "This was the largest ABC show ever, with 1,003 exhibitors renting 3,670 booths." The overseas traffic didn't help Lea Culliton, president of HABA USA, however. "The ABC Show was definitely down from last year, " she told TDmonthly. Most of her international booth visitors were from South or Central America. "I didn't get accounts from them because they're covered by different export divisions." Nevertheless, the show was better than she'd anticipated. "I knew being a month later would impact us," she explained. "Not as many retailers could go at that time of year." Rolling on the River Next year's show is exciting interest already, especially because it entails a venue change to Louisville, Kentucky. Vegas lovers may miss the glare of that town's neon lights, but "there's riverboat gambling in Louisville," pointed out Redmon, who lives nearby. "With certain city-wide biennial and triennial shows all converging on Las Vegas at once during those years, there was simply not enough space and viable dates available to produce a million square foot show," Schurr told TDmonthly about the decision. "Louisville offers a non-union modern facility with 1.5 million contiguous square feet on one level. So, exhibitors can expect considerable cost savings with the move to Louisville." Rhino Toys is raring to go: "We already registered," said Armstrong. Culliton is also looking forward to the venue change, which she learned of at the Spring show. "Louisville is giving them a good facility," she said. "It's super convenient; right next to the airport." Heading Toward the Future Schur has other changes in the works for 2011, too: "Enhancements to our interactive floor plan and mobile apps as well as the successful launch of free wifi will enhance our attendees' show experience. We will continue to promote the growth of the Maternity Square pavilion that we successfully launched this year and plan to expand our popular New Product Showcase, which has been sold out the past few years." To find out more about ABC 2011, all 210-691-4848 or visit www.theabckidshow.com. To view videos of the 2010 and 2011 products at this year's show, click here. For other products from the companies discussed, please see below: Scooter and Me 3-DVD MIND series by MOVE WITH ME ACTION ADVENTURES
Writer's Bio: ALISON MAREK is an award-winning writer, director and cartoonist whose work has been published by Fairchild Publications and DC Comics (Piranha Press), broadcast on Showtime and other cable networks, and viewed worldwide in film festivals. See her short films and print work on www.alisonmarek.com. Watch her nefarious villains in the web series www.MuggsMovers.com. Get inspired by her cartoons "Daily ARFFirmations to Unleash Your Inner Fido" at www.ARFFirmations.com. Phew! And then ... Read more articles by this author
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