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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Why Are Toys Selling Out? Might Be Mommy Blog Buzz

    By Mae Anderson, AP Retail Writer
    LeapFrog's LeapPad Explorer (AP Photo/LeapFrog Enterprises Inc.)Emily Vanek is not buying up a bunch of LeapPad Explorers herself, but she may be at least partly to blame for some stores selling out of the $99 children's tablet this holiday season. "The LeapPad is incredible," the Denver mother of three boys wrote to the 6,000 readers of her ColoradoMoms.com blog. "Not only do kids get to have a toy resembling their parents' tablet, it's durable and my favorite part?! It's not just mindless games they are playing."

    These days, mommy bloggers don't just gab about spilled milk and poopy diapers. In fact, they've become so influential in the $22 billion toy market that toy makers go to great lengths to get their seal of approval. Their thumbs-up is particularly important during the holiday shopping season when toy makers hope to create the next hit toy.

    It's a major shift for toy companies, which have always given out samples of new dolls, games and other playthings to drive sales. Five years ago, they handed out 98 percent of those products to TV stations, newspapers and magazines. But today, as much as 70 percent go to bloggers.

    Mattel Inc., the world's largest toy company, has a database of about 400 mommy bloggers and their location, interests and the children's ages. Canadian toy maker Spin Master, which makes the trading card game Redakai, hired a dedicated staffer whose only job is to reach out to mommy bloggers. And small toy maker Cepia Inc., which makes robotic Zhu Zhu pets, gets feedback from mommy bloggers before its toys hit shelves.

    It's hard for toy makers to ignore the monstrous number of mommy bloggers. Nationwide, there are about 4 million or so mommy bloggers who influence millions of other parents around the world.

    "Mommy bloggers started because they wanted to share things about a new baby, but the most influential ones got into social media and realized they could make a difference," says Maria Bailey, whose BSM Media firm helps companies pick mommy bloggers with the most reach on the Twitter and Facebook social media websites. "Sometimes that difference is as simple as directing a mom to a toy that will save money."

    That's why when LeapFrog Enterprises wanted to roll out its LeapPad Explorer kid-size tablet, it reached out to 200 of the top mommy bloggers. The goal? To get them to generate buzz for the tablet by throwing "mommy parties."

    The Emeryville, Calif.-based company sent each blogger a kit that included a LeapPad, a game for it and coupons. LeapFrog also sent tips on how many people to invite (about 5 adults and 15 kids) and suggested recipes (ice cream sundaes).

    For bloggers like Vanek, the Denver mom who bills herself as the "go-to answer for all things mom and kids in Colorado," it was a chance to be a hero of sorts to other parents and their kids.

    "It not only lets my own children get to try out the newest/hottest toys, it allows them to share them with their friends," she says. "It allows me to get to have my own friends over for something better than a Tupperware party where I'm doing a hard sales pitch."

    But for LeapFrog, it was an opportunity to get word-of-mouth going early.

    It was the first time the company had hosted "mommy parties," but it seems to have paid off. The company declined to give sales numbers, but the LeapPad has been selling out online and in stores across the country this holiday season.

    Earlier this year, SpinMaster also used mommy bloggers to get the word out about its reformulated Moon Dough, a non-sticky PlayDoh-like moldable substance. Within weeks of the company sending samples to more than 500 bloggers, there were thousands of postings about the new product online.

    "After playing with our other Moon Dough set just a few days before, I could immediately tell that this Moon Dough was much less flaky," blogged ohsosavvymom.com, a mom in San Antonio, Texas with more than 3,600 Twitter followers.

    Harold Chizick, vice president of global communications at Spin Master, says in part because of reviews like that, the product had a double-digit increase in sales, though he declined to give details. If the company had used traditional ways to get the word out, Chizick says, the roll out would have taken several months or longer.

    "It was much faster than expected," he says.

    Sometimes, buzz from bloggers can backfire.

    "If they like something word gets around very quickly, if they don't like something, word will also get around quickly," said Timetoplaymag.com's Jim Silver, a long time toy expert who works with mom bloggers to review products on his website.

    In 2009, after Mattel released a silhouette of its new "tween" Dora the Explorer that seemed to deviate from the tomboy-esque look of the original doll, a number of bloggers complained. One on Cafemom.com wrote: "Can't they leave anything to the imagination these days?"

    Mattel, which had hoped the silhouette would generate excitement ahead of the launch of the new doll, decided to release the full image of the Dora early to reassure moms that the doll wasn't too fancied up.

    Crayola also faced scrutiny from mom bloggers this year when its Crayola Colored Bubbles, a product with a wand that kids can blow colored soap bubbles through, caused stains. After bloggers gave it negative reviews, Crayola made some changes, including updating the packaging and adding a warning about the possibility of stains.

    "It's just like handing kids a bunch of fabric dye and telling them to throw it around," a blogger on Mommybrunchtales.com wrote.

    Still, most toy makers find the risk is worth the reward.

    Cepia LLC was relatively unknown until mommy bloggers made its Zhu Zhu pets a hit in 2009. Laura Kurzu, Cepia's senior vice president of marketing, works with bloggers every step of the way to develop toys, including a Zhu Zhu building set that it tweaked due to blogger comments.

    "Bloggers can be really great evangelists for the brand, but you have to be invested in listening to what they say to you," she says. "You can't just throw something out there and expect gratuitous support."

    _____

    Mae Anderson reported from New York.

    Follow AP retail coverage at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Retail and Mae Anderson at http://www.twitter.com/Maetron.

     
    • Amanda  •  5 months ago
      What happen to the good old days when kids went outside and ride bikes, play hide and sneek, or just go outside to hang with friends? All kids do these days is sit inside behind a tv and play video games or play online! I remember as a child all the kids on my block would be outside playing all day long. The only time we went home was when it was time for dinner or when it got dark! And I am only in my 20's so it wasn't that long ago! It's sad but true!
      • Scythe Falling 5 months ago
        Not only that, but kids seem to get bored more easily.
      • Charlene Lightfoot 5 months ago
        Yep that is so true, I did the same thing I'm twice your age....lol. But those were the good ole days, double Dutch , jacks, bike riding, playing dolls.
      • Dianna 5 months ago
        too bad in some areas you cant let your kids out to play cause they might get shot riding their bike or just playing out front.three days ago two blocks from me a kid (teen) was shot just standing innocently in front of his house.(not to mention the twe sex offenders who live on my block.theese days its necessary for our kids to be occupied indoors.
    • Cmh  •  5 months ago
      Why is it that a child that gets this toy is either spoiled, obese, unimaginative or I'm a lazy parent? My 3 year old is tall, skinny, plays in his kitchen making food, plays outside with the dog, I've taught him some sign language, spanish, he can read (small books but he's still reading), count to 100, spells and writes. I like to reward him with new ways of learning. He and I are none of the horrible things people are saying in these comments. It makes me sad that people think it's okay to just assume everyone is lazy. Yes, he got this as an early Christmas present and we only have (for now) the stuff it came with and he's having a blast, but it's not the only thing he does all day either. It's called moderation.
      • Kevin 5 months ago
        well said.
      • BT 5 months ago
        Wow, play online? More like watch Pom online lolz. Sorry if I offended anyone there, but think about it for a minute as the most basic of game systems have Online access such as the 3DS, Cell-phones, PS3, WII, etc. And just why do these kids need personal/private access to the Internet? Can a child walk into say Tiffany'sPlayHouse and drink beer? So why is it okay for kids to be given so much personal access to the Internet? What is so serious that they are doing - are they taking online Master's classes? Are they paying any bills Online? Are they banking Online? The fact remains that minors are watching uncensored material with some of the most graphic content Online quietly in their rooms when no one is watching or least suspects. Take a look at the school systems and you will find that kids as young as 6 yrs, access forbidden Website on the school servers on a daily basis and they cannot wait until computer class period to do nothing but this.
    • Lily Smart  •  5 months ago
      Ok people i'm not even an adult yet and I want to know where the imagination is anymore. I remember when my parents bought a new appliance and gave us the box. That box was our most treasured toy since we could use it for a million and one things and it only cost our parents the price of something they had no choice in getting anyway. Now we have these crazy 99$ toys for our children and the main outcome of all of them is not making your child smarter, it's teaching your child to grow up even faster which is the last thing kids need anymore. If you want your child to learn more, buy a pack of flash cards not a 99$ pint-sized iPhone.
      • Daminion 5 months ago
        I remember those days lol what fun it was, but I still got my kids a Leappad so he could play with that in his box :)
      • Lily Smart 5 months ago
        Well at least he's using the box.
        *_-BOX POWER-_*
      • Nutters 5 months ago
        Not even an adult and not one word of text talk. Wow.
    • V  •  5 months ago
      I find it just really creepy that companies are so greedy/zealous to makes sales that they'd stalk regular folks online and bribe them to approve of their products. Ick.
      • DieSixDie 5 months ago
        This is nothing new. They used to corral parents and kids into their research labs and do focus groups. They would stick kids in a sealed room bugged with microphones and hidden cameras and one-way mirrors and watch them play with toys, record the whole thing and analyze their interactions, in detail. Blogs are far less invasive and yield better research data.

        You would likely find the entire process of toy development to be rather creepy if you knew all the details. That's what it takes to make a toy, though. Would you prefer them to develop stuff blindly, possibly marketing dangerous or destructive products, or at least, expensive products that parents spend real money for that their children won't enjoy?

        Precise marketing requires accurate research.
    • OK, Now What!  •  Boonville, New York  •  5 months ago
      I looked at the #$%$ that toys r us is selling, war toys, action figures, guns with nerf. I am buying for a 2 year old. What I got because he has most everything else like TRUCKS, cars, train sets. I got Tinker Toys and a box of Lincoln Logs. I think I will just put the rest of the cash into a life INS policy for him. These are the toys I had 50 years ago. They stand the test of time.
      • Lily Smart 5 months ago
        Make sure to find him a nice big cardboard box too! Lol I miss Lincoln Logs. My cousin and I built a fort big enough for us both to fit in when we were younger... Good times....
      • Eric 5 months ago
        Maybe you can buy him a 529 or an IRA first. I doubt he needs a life policy unless you have a ton of money you're sitting on.
      • Julecat 5 months ago
        My little ones are playing still with the Lincoln Logs my now 18yr received years ago. They've been "passed down" and I'm pretty sure that my teen wants them back for his own someday as they meant so much to him :) Can't say that about a mindless electronic 2yrs down the road, huh? Many many years of wonderful building. I think many parents buy non electronics as society guilt gifts. As if to show that everything isn't about electronics. I know a few parents that wouldn't hesitate to buy their 2nd graders laptops or ipads (sadly) but haven't because of how it would make them look-like idiots mostly.....The pressure to buy this stuff has hit my house. MY 8yr old requested a lap top, tv for her room (that will NEVER happen) and a cell phone. When I asked her why she thought she needed such things, she honestly couldn't give me anything beyond "I don't know, other kids have them..." That'll never be enough for me, and I have no intention of addressing this again until she becomes a teen. I don't care what everyone else does, I'm not them, never will be.
    • Karleen  •  5 months ago
      see all the people run trying to keep up with the joneses...thanx to articles like this!!!
    • Renea  •  Pyeongtaek-Si, South Korea  •  5 months ago
      when i was a kid my leap pad was a book inside a plastic case that read the words to you out loud. now it's a tablet apparently.
    • Emily  •  Laramie, Wyoming  •  5 months ago
      no one needs a tablet just get outside adn play hang out with friends unless you want to get fat is really sad when people are over weight and you fell bad your self if you are over weight
    • suzyq  •  Hemet, California  •  5 months ago
      For FREE you can get wonderful books at your local public childrens library, sit with your child's full attention & imagination in gear -- and then you could go with your child to buy $100 worth of healthy food to feed a hungry child in your community. That again would teach your child love and compassion, more VIP then how to work a tablet to a preschooler. Tonight, millions of American children will go to bed without any dinner. According to the National Center on Family Homelessness, 1.6 million American children "were living on the street, in homeless shelters or motels, or doubled up with other families last year".
    • Timothy  •  5 months ago
      I agree with Terri of Colorado-Has the REAL meaning of Christmas been reduced to the amount you spend- on each child: each present or person? Doesn't anything have LIMITS anymore? This is NOT what I/we taught our daughter-Windy..nor what we try to teach the grandkids-Patience*7 and Kash*5. At their ages, is it real important to teach how to "keep up w/ Jones"? That is the problem with the economy-I believe-is that working for a living has been mixed up with "What I Want"-Not-"What we Need".. PAYING for it escapes the-WHEN? I think BACK toBASICS needs a 2nd look when we're "Role-Modeling" for those cut lil' tots. What WILL become of those given it all- WHEN they can't/have to go without for the first time in their lives? "THROWAWAY GENERATION" is what my husband-Tim, calls them. OLD or RECYCLE is certainly TABU in today's fast paced world. Think I'm NUTS? Have you looked in your trash can lately? or better yet- your neighboors? SO MUCH WASTE!!! With all of the children hungry-all the homeless..AND you don't have to be poor to be (on the brink of being homeless or hungry) either!! Losing your home IS the biggest blow a family can be dealt..OH!! YES!! IT CAN HAPPEN TO YOU TOO!! & if you survive it YOU ARE MY NEW HERO!! Is this what we are "GIVING" to our young..by spending $99 a present (how nuch is your $$budget for X-mas?) one the kid will leave everywhere but where it should be. Probably didn't want it as much as WE wanted ?? to know it was a 99$ toy. I decided to make the bulk of presents this year- the grandkids have far too many from years past they still don't really play with. They will remember the things we shared with them more than playing by themselves with a "thing". They, already re-tell US some of their favorite times/things we do together-here on our ranch-we rarely GO elsewhere. Treasure Hunts..Battery-operated car races..sliding down the dirt hill...raking leaves-then jumping in them (it was cold-they did this to stay warm..) We loved every one of these precious moments probaly more than they....yet we catch wind of them telling friends of the fun at Popop's & Gamma's and eventually the friends come to see and play with us all.. They have hand-held & computer games here & at home--they'd rather play on the dirt slide hill...if it's not raining that is! *** My christmas wish for ya'll is to:*** Make some-create some fabulous memories*** that don't cost more than a few bucks*not a hundred a pop!"** be creative*have some good dumb fun**Love,laugh,play* PAM
    • Owt_Raged  •  5 months ago
      Good luck finding one, except on eBay for 3 times the price. I'll wait till after the holidays...
    • Steve  •  5 months ago
      "Not only do kids get to have a toy resembling their parents' tablet..." Since when do kids need something that mommy and daddy have? That's what wrong with kids (that become adults) today. Give them what mommy and daddy have!!! Seriously? Give them a dang Tonka toy, Lincoln Logs, Legos, Playdoh, Hide and Seek, Cowboys and Indians, Swimming, Running, Football, Baseball...get their little buttts OUT OF THE HOUSE and away from stoopid brain melting video games and TV!!
    • snackz  •  5 months ago
      I'm amazed at all the negative comments about a toy few admittedly have. I got this for my child before it became popular, so it was a little less. It is a GREAT learning tool. It also is an e-reader. He is a kindergartner with geography knowledge on a 4th grade level now thanks to some of the games. Is it what he does all day? No. But the educational games are great, the make a book program inspires creativity and I love how it charts their progress. I'm willing to bet these will be in classrooms within a year or two.The part that disturbs me is them thinking they need to pimp out the system. On its own its great...no "marketing push" needed
    • DJ  •  Kaneohe, Hawaii  •  5 months ago
      who has a computer (laptop/Ipad/pc tablet) in there home raise your hand? who has a flat screen t.v with dish network or direct t.v in there home raise your hand? who has a dvd/blu-ray system and dvds in there home, raise your hand? who has a cell phone with the works, raise your hand? who has a PS-3/WII system/ XBOX-360 raise your hand? I rest my case. if we had none of these, then we would go outside and play? market for electronics is on the rise and it wont get any better. the real Amish people are laughing at our faces and they live in P.A go figure!
    • Anonymous  •  5 months ago
      Mommy-Blogger-Pimps ... what next?
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 months ago
      NOBODY needs a tablet, especially babies. Book, on the hand, everybody should love.
    • Harold  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  5 months ago
      When I was growing up a tablet was something that had a lot of paper in it. It was used for drawing, tracing, and making paper airplanes just to name a few. Some of the other things I remember were Lego's, lincoln logs, erector sets, and chemistry sets. Most of the toys made you think, plan and be creative. Through these toys you learned from mistakes and the instructions didn't take a genius to figure out. Using these toys let your imagination loose and you could have a new toy everyday buy just building something different. An electronic toy becomes obsolete as a child gets older, but you could give a kid a set of lincoln logs, lego's or an erector set every Christmas and it was like getting it for the first time because you could now expand to new and bigger projects.

      Why do kids end up playing with the box the present came in? Because in their mind it is what ever they want it to be.
    • terry  •  La Junta, Colorado  •  5 months ago
      Must be nice to buy $99.00 christmas gifts.....
    • wepman  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  5 months ago
      When technology changes these are the sort of toys our children can benefit from. They can play and learn at the same time just to keep up with the future way of communicating as well as expressing themselves
    • Angela  •  5 months ago
      ....and next year they will have some other big deal toy that will be impossible to get and this one will become irrelevant.