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After performing its latest research, MarketWatch stated that the “Global Toy market size was valued at USD 65530.35 million in 2022 and is expected to expand at a CAGR of 7.5% during the forecast period, reaching USD 101159.97 million by 2028.”
This data primarily includes all of the major toy companies, brands, and manufacturers while accounting for current modern toys. With that high of a positive forecast, how then could a toy-focused company like Toys R Us have failed?
Unfortunately for the brand, Toys R US declared bankruptcy in 2017 and was forced to close all of its stores shortly after poor sales performance over the holiday season of that time. According to Business Insider, in March of 2018, Toys R Us explained how Amazon, Walmart, and Target cut prices on toys so steeply during the holidays the year before at “low-margins or as loss-leaders” that Toys R Us “could not compete.”
At its peak, Toys R Us operated 739 stores in the U.S. and over 750 abroad. Even though the retailer has made a comeback by opening up branded sections inside Macy’s department stores across the U.S., its future remains uncertain. This strategy is the same for brands like schleich, a character toy brand that houses its flagship stores inside other retailers’ locations.
At the height of competition between Toys R Us and other retail giants, each store would feature exclusive and limited-edition toys to try and level the playing field. Currently, Toys R Us offers only a limited selection of general toy merchandise that consumers can easily find at any retailer that offers an inventory of toys.
Toys R Us is also attempting to use its brand to its advantage by opening up stores inside airports and holding a traveling sweepstakes dubbed Geoffrey’s Tour Across America from July 20-29, 2023. The tour is limited to the East Coast and parts of the South without further plans to travel westward.
But is that enough to keep Geoffrey and company afloat? After all, Toys R Us does not offer its own original products, unlike Lego, which can operate its own stores.
An important factor to consider is how the toy industry has evolved and diversified from its top-performing segments of educational products and dolls for kids all the way to pricey action figures and art collectibles for adults.
This leads to other segments that professionals like MarketWatch might not have even considered: vintage used toys, independent toy makers, and art toys through specialty retailers.
According to CNBC, adults “are responsible for one-fourth of all toy sales annually,” and they “tend to spend more on toys,” and “have a great fondness for cartoons, superheroes and collectibles that remind them of their childhood.”
One example of a toy store that appeals to adults as well as kids is The Toy Department, an Ohio store that specializes in these nostalgia-style toys and is becoming one of the largest, if not the largest, dedicated toy retailers in the country.
After opening up five years ago as a reseller of vintage pre-owned toys, the business now carries a wide range of indie toys and relocated to a nearly 20,000-square-foot brick-and-mortar store. A building this large is unheard of for a modern toy store, but it still has a ways to go to match the previous 110,000-square-foot flagship store of Toys R Us. And this comes at a time when eBay has been seen as the dominating force when it comes to reselling vintage toys.
The loss of Toys R Us left others in the industry weary of their futures, and many have decided to adapt by modifying their toy stores to become experiential. According to Medium, a new store named Camp integrates toys into themed, interactive decorations and sets, and it “also hosts workshops and features a dance hall and a theater. Paying members enjoy extended hours and the average family of customers in New York spends about an hour to an hour and a half at a time in the store.”
Camp now has nine stores across the country, and they average between 6,000 to 7,000 square feet in size.
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