Baltimore Sun

In its first print toy catalog, Amazon bets on the classics

- By Taylor Telford

Amazon.com is gambling on glossiness and nostalgia to draw in shoppers with its first toy catalog, in yet another brickand-mortar strategy to snag its share of the holiday toy sales.

The company released its “Holiday of Play” catalog Wednesday. It features 70 pages of delighted, cozily-clad kids surrounded by toys, and will soon be mailed to millions of customers this month. It showcases the breadth of holiday toy inventory, from classics like action figures, board games and Barbies to highend items like Bose audio gear and PlayStatio­ns.

When former juggernaut Toys R Us shuttered its last stores earlier this year, it kicked off a scramble among brick-and-mortar giants such as Walmart, Target and Kohl’s, along with online powerhouse­s such as Amazon, as all clamored for a piece of the nation’s $3.3 billion toy market.

“Amazon is excited to offer a new way for customers to shop for toys this holiday season,” the company said in a statement.

“Holiday of Play” echoes of the familiar style of the Toys R Us holiday catalogs, but with certain modern flourishes. You won’t find any prices on its pages; shoppers have to go online to find out how much the products cost. Instead, a scan of a QR code places the item in the shopper’s online cart, taking them from page to purchase in seconds. Digital versions of the catalog are available on Kindle and in PDF format online.

The catalog is just one weapon in Amazon’s holiday arsenal, along with its free shipping for all customers during the holidays with no minimum purchase required. The lack of explicit prices in the cata- Amazon’s “Holiday of Play” catalog features 70 pages of kids surrounded by toys. It will be mailed out this month. log is intentiona­l, leaving Amazon open to shifting its pricing to stay competitiv­e as the season heats up, said Linda Bolton Weiser, an analyst with D.A. Davidson.

“At the holidays retailers try to be nimble with pricing,” Bolton Weiser said. “This is allowing them flexibilit­y to be strategic if they want, in which case you don’t want to print the price up in the catalog.”

Bolton Weiser noted that the products in the catalog are culled primarily from the year’s hot toy lists and from stalwart toy brands like Barbie, Fischer Price and Lego. There are no risky, unknown items featured.

“If you’re going for a market share grab, you do it with classic brands that are going to be highly purchased at the holidays,” Bolton Weiser said. “It benefits the large toymakers that have these big, classic brands and disadvanta­ges the smaller toy companies.”

Although they might seem antiquated, catalogs are still a surprising­ly successful marketing tool, according to studies from the Data & Marketing associatio­n, which found that more than 100 million American adults made a purchase from a catalog in 2016. They’re especially popular with millennial­s, who now wield some of the greatest buying power in retail.

Other retailers are boasting big changes to show their commitment to holiday toy sales. Walmart beefed up its “Top Rated By Kids” program and is collaborat­ing with a group of 25 “kidinfluen­cers” to create a list of the season’s hottest toys. The company is boosting its in-store toy merchandis­e by 30 percent and online toy merchandis­e by 40 percent. And it’s also hosting 2,000- odd events to promote the new products. Target is expanding, too, nearly doubling its new and exclusive toy lineup compared with last year. It has expanded its toy sections and made remodels in 100 stores.

Meanwhile, Toys R Us is still limping along, even past the grave. Last week, the Kroger supermarke­t chain announced that it would host mini pop-up toy shops, called “Geoffrey’s Toy Box” at nearly 600 Kroger stores in a partnershi­p with Toys R Us during the holidays. Geoffrey the giraffe is the Toys R Us mascot.

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