The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Changing landscape

Mastermind Toys ramps up expansion even as Toys “R” Us flounders

- BY ARMINA LIGAYA

Jon Levy’s favourite playthings as a Toronto child growing up in the 1960s and 1970s included Lego blocks and fortbuildi­ng kits - classics that still fly off the shelves of his Mastermind Toy stores today.

“My true innovation in this business is being able to get inside my inner kid and determine whether it is something truly fun to play with,” said Levy, the chain’s co-founder, CEO and chief toy merchant.

“Being able to explore that as an adult every day is quite an amazing occupation. And 90 per cent of the things I look at and interact with weren’t around when I was a kid.”

Indeed, much about the toy retail landscape has changed since Levy and his brother Andy co-founded Mastermind Toys back in 1984.

The latest evidence is the bankruptcy filing this week of big-box chain Toys “R” Us, and parallel proceeding­s by its Canadian subsidiary. It’s the latest brick-and-mortar retailer to struggle amid the rise of e-commerce and changing consumer preference­s.

And yet, Mastermind Toys is expanding its footprint across the country at the fastest pace in its history - aiming to grow from 56 stores to 60 by the end of the year, and 90 by the end of 2020.

After that, the retailer will hone in on Quebec, where it has identified 18 to 20 potential stores.

The chain’s focus on educationa­l and specialty offerings that are harder to find at its bigger competitor­s - including Walmart, Amazon and Toys “R” US - has created a devoted following of Canadian parents.

Mastermind Toys has carved out a nice, profitable niche within the toy business, according to retail analyst Bruce Winder, the co-founder and partner of Retail Advisors Network.

“They differenti­ate by getting exclusive toys. And you can charge higher margins.”

However, he added, Mastermind Toys may be moving too fast for a boutique toy store that is a small segment of the overall toy market in Canada - which topped $2 billion in 2016, according to the NPD Group.

“There is only so much population in Canada,” Winder said.

Quebec, where consumers prefer local brands and retailers must adhere to a different set of regulation­s, is “always a risk,” he added.

“Having said that, I do think on the surface there is the same kind of niche there as in the rest of Canada.”

The company’s president and chief operating officer Humphrey Kadaner hails from Quebec and says the province has historical­ly been a stronger market for niche businesses and slower to warm up to massmarket or online retailers.

 ?? MASTERMIND TOYS/CP PHOTO ?? Mastermind Toys Inc. CEO and co-founder Jon Levy is shown in a handout photo.
MASTERMIND TOYS/CP PHOTO Mastermind Toys Inc. CEO and co-founder Jon Levy is shown in a handout photo.

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