No offense, but I would rather the questions be answered by Mattel since none of us really know anything, and those that do can't say. Speculation might be fun, and make us feel important, but means very little. Its kind of the point of asking Mattel, even if you don't get a straight answer, at least the point has been addressed.
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No offense, but I would rather the questions be answered by Mattel since none of us really know anything, and those that do can't say. Speculation might be fun, and make us feel important, but means very little. Its kind of the point of asking Mattel, even if you don't get a straight answer, at least the point has been addressed.
Though... getting a straight answer from Mattel is a roll of the dice, with 1 in 5 odds, at best. Each month I read a dozen or more of their mass-released Q&A's collected on one site, and their answers range from informative to stating the obvious to a complete waste of time. With Green Lantern, Cars 2 movies out and MOTU, Barbie and Hot Wheels their top-priority, I doubt any more than two retro questions (in total) would even be considered worthy of their time to answer. IMHO.
Regards,
GeoffLast edited by geoffdude; Jun 2, '11, 10:10 PM.Comment
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There seems to be many questions based on the same issue... why stay with TRU only for a brick & mortar sales retailer?
The answer is... these were offered up to any store who wanted them at Toy Fair '09, or '10... or, whenever. The toy "buyers" for those stores did NOT want them. Pure and simple. That's the basic reason they will not be in Target/Walmart. TRU's buyers however did come to some agreement with Mattel to sell these, and since no other stores wanted them, they made 'em an "exclusive" item.
I wish I had the time to respond to all your posts point-by-point, but that would take up more of my time than I'm willing to spend. So, I'm just going to take on the biggest one and by the time I'm finished, your credibility will have been completely eradicated and therefore obviate the need for further response.
Here's why they'll never be at Walmart or Target:
Marty Abrams brokered the deal on our part between his longtime friend Neil Friedman, the head of Mattel Brands, and Toys R Us. It was an exclusive from the beginning, Target and Walmart were never even a factor, and they were never presented at Toy Fair for consideration. It was always a Mattel/Toys-R-Us partnership as part of Mattel's at-the-time recent collector strategy. Period.
Marty's pal Neil is now the new CEO of Toys R Us.
Those are the levels we deal with here. Not "team leaders" or store managers.
And just because you've been buying toys for 30 years doesn't even give you the slightest insight at what goes on at these levels. Pretending that it does not only destroys your credibility when inevitably called out by someone who can, but it insults the rest of this community who rely on such information.Comment
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^^^^ Thank you so much for that post.You must try to generate happiness within yourself. If you aren't happy in one place, chances are you won't be happy anyplace. -Ernie BanksComment
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I've just read all your posts, and I'm stunned not only at the total fiction you present but at the assertiveness with which you present it.
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What fiction? I claimed they would never be at Walmart or Target. You validate that, so I'm right. I did assume it was a deal made at Toy Fair, but particulars aside, and that hardly matters, my overall point is indeed true.
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I wish I had the time to respond to all your posts point-by-point, but that would take up more of my time than I'm willing to spend. So, I'm just going to take on the biggest one and by the time I'm finished, your credibility will have been completely eradicated and therefore obviate the need for further response.
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You already claimed previously you were not going to respond to post/threads towards the lines availability, or similar subject matter, awhile back. That obviously didn't hold true, so I'll just assume you'll continue to respond.
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Here's why they'll never be at Walmart or Target:
Marty Abrams brokered the deal on our part between his longtime friend Neil Friedman, the head of Mattel Brands, and Toys R Us. It was an exclusive from the beginning, Target and Walmart were never even a factor, and they were never presented at Toy Fair for consideration. It was always a Mattel/Toys-R-Us partnership as part of Mattel's at-the-time recent collector strategy. Period.
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OK, that's a cool factoid and I'll never forget it. Thanks. Doesn't make my MAIN point of these never being at Target or Walmart any less valid, or that my contention to that point is "fiction".
You seem to take issue with the history of how they became a TRU exclusive... that for me was never an issue, or point of interest at all. Who cares? It was only a ball-park guess how it transpired due to the line being shown at Toy Fair, thus one would assume you were shopping the line out. If the line was not being shopped out as you say... then why go to Toy Fair? Seems a waste of time.
BTW and IMHO, if you had tried to shop these out to Walmart or Target they would not have taken them. Walmart and Target need a very large number of units and at low wholesale pricing to make them interested. This line just doesn't fit that criteria. Again though, the whole "why" issue is moot and doesn't pertain to the end results.
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Marty's pal Neil is now the new CEO of Toys R Us.
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So?
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Those are the levels we deal with here. Not "team leaders" or store managers.
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Never said "you" do. I said I have known people, in those positions, who at times gave information on how "their" stores work on stocking and ordering. Throttle back a bit, you're pedal to the metal in attack mode for really NO reason.
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And just because you've been buying toys for 30 years doesn't even give you the slightest insight at what goes on at these levels.
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Yes it does actually, maybe not at YOUR specific vantage point or level, but I don't need to be a farmer to know the details of how milk is made, packaged, ordered, shipped, etc.
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Pretending that it does not only destroys your credibility when inevitably called out by someone who can, but it insults the rest of this community who rely on such information.
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Rely on what information? No important information was being conveyed by me other than this:
(1) These will not be at Target or Walmart. (T or F ?)
(2) These will not have collect and connect parts (T or F ?)
(3) Mattel has had production and distribution issues. (T or F ?)
I think you place too much importance on the trivial stuff, the above questions I answered are either true or they are not. No pretense or fiction was ever intended or meant when I made those claims. Only what seemed obvious.
I would love to see Walmart get these, but you and I know it will NEVER happen.
Regards,
GeoffLast edited by geoffdude; Jun 8, '11, 10:43 PM.Comment
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"A waste of time"? REALLY? Trade shows are a time efficient and cost effective way for sellers to sell and buyers to buy. It's mass exposure that influences public perception and gives companies a unique opportunity to push current and future product. Look at the impact toy fairs have on this very forum? It allows buyers such as myself to get a unique overview of what is coming out and plan my purchases accordingly. It's an invaluable tool for marketing product and image. In terms of exposure, I would consider toy fairs to be the 'Superbowl' of toys. If you have something in this industry to sell and want as many people to know about it as possible, a toy fair seems like a very smart move.Last edited by MIB41; Jun 8, '11, 11:04 PM.Comment
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"A waste of time"? REALLY? Trade shows are a time efficient and cost effective way for sellers to sell and buyers to buy. It's mass exposure that influences public perception and gives companies a unique opportunity to push current and future product. Look at the impact toy fairs have on this very forum? It allows buyers such as myself to get a unique overview of what is coming out and plan my purchases accordingly. It's an invaluable tool for marketing product and image. In terms of exposure, I would consider toy fairs to be the 'Superbowl' of toys. If you have something to sell and want as many people to know about it as possible, a toy fair seems like a very smart move.
San Diego comic con has moved into that Super Bowl of toys position for exposure IMO.
Regards,
GeoffLast edited by geoffdude; Jun 8, '11, 11:14 PM.Comment
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Over the last few years I've heard rumbling of doing away with it as it's currently conducted, and going to a completely different format for buyers and sellers to do business. Recently McFarlane toys, and select other toy companies have not attended for this very reason (lack of importance).
Regards,
Geoff
The Toy Universe Comes Together in New York!
With over 25,000 attendees, 345,500 square feet of exhibit space, 100,000 products with over 7,000 never before seen in the world, 1,200+ exhibitors, 1,000 global media representatives, the latest updates on Safety legislation and what they mean for your business and four days under one roof to do an entire year’s worth of business, Toy Fair is where the industry gathers.
Whether you are a buyer searching for the hottest trends, an exhibitor ready to showcase your innovative products, a trade professional wanting to discover the next great toy or a member of the media looking for the toy story of the year, Toy Fair has it all!
Toy Fair 2011 – What a Success!
Toy Fair 2011 saw more than 10,000 buyers with a dramatic increase in licensors, entertainment executives and advertising/marketing executives – +35%, +53% and +40% respectively. The total number of attendees increased by 3%, international buyers increased by 9%, international attendees in total were up 13% (more than 10% of trade guests were international), and media attendance increased by 19%!
Food for thought...Comment
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The Toy Industry Association released a recent report on the results of the 2011 Toy Fair. Here are their findings...
The Toy Universe Comes Together in New York!
With over 25,000 attendees, 345,500 square feet of exhibit space, 100,000 products with over 7,000 never before seen in the world, 1,200+ exhibitors, 1,000 global media representatives, the latest updates on Safety legislation and what they mean for your business and four days under one roof to do an entire year’s worth of business, Toy Fair is where the industry gathers.
Whether you are a buyer searching for the hottest trends, an exhibitor ready to showcase your innovative products, a trade professional wanting to discover the next great toy or a member of the media looking for the toy story of the year, Toy Fair has it all!
Toy Fair 2011 – What a Success!
Toy Fair 2011 saw more than 10,000 buyers with a dramatic increase in licensors, entertainment executives and advertising/marketing executives – +35%, +53% and +40% respectively. The total number of attendees increased by 3%, international buyers increased by 9%, international attendees in total were up 13% (more than 10% of trade guests were international), and media attendance increased by 19%!
Food for thought...
Now if I was trying to get multiple stores to order my product, I'm at Toy Fair for sure.
Regards,
GeoffLast edited by geoffdude; Jun 8, '11, 11:47 PM.Comment
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