Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Toymakers paying up to $2M for spots on Amazon gift lists

- By Spencer Soper and Matt Townsend Bloomberg News

Amazon.com recently released its annual holiday toy guide, telling customers the Lego Disney castle, VTech’s Magical unicorn and more than 100 other items were “thoughtful­ly curated to help shoppers quickly tackle even the lengthiest holiday shopping lists.”

What Amazon doesn’t mention are the millions of dollars it charges the toy industry just to be considered for a spot on the popular gift guide. Amazon sells Holiday Toy List sponsorshi­ps for as much as $2 million, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg. The more sponsors pay, the more products they can nominate to be on the list and the more prominentl­y their own products will be featured on the popular website. Amazon aimed to sell at least $20 million in sponsorshi­ps for this year’s list, the documents show. Amazon also published a summer toy list with lower sponsorshi­p prices.

It’s legal for Amazon to sell advertisin­g on its site. It becomes a problem when the world’s largest online retailer tells shoppers recommenda­tions are curated by experts but doesn’t disclose the money it gets from the toy industry, said Robert Weissman, president of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen. Because consumers place more value on recommenda­tions from independen­t sources, he said, companies prefer to keep their financial involvemen­t hidden.

“They don’t write ‘paid ad’ on it because it completely changes how consumers perceive the informatio­n,” Weissman said. “If the list is entirely or in part paid advertisin­g, people have a right to know.”

Amazon likened the payments it received to the money that brands pay stores to be included in advertisin­g circulars or to get prominent shelf space. In an emailed statement, the company said: “Every product on our annual Holiday Toy List, which features family gift ideas from new releases to customer favorites, is independen­tly curated by a team of in-house experts based on a high bar for quality, design, innovation and play experience. We source product ideas from many places, including our selling partners who have an opportunit­y to nominate their best toys for the season and increase visibility of those toys.”

Gift lists are a time-tested way for toy manufactur­ers to stand out in the critical holiday rush when busy parents are desperate for ideas. Toymakers are eager to appear on these lists because the companies generate about half their annual sales during the holiday season.

Walmart charges toymakers $10,000 monthly per product to appear on its “Buyer’s Picks” toy list in November and December, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg. The company produces other lists, including “Top Rated by Kids,” which uses feedback from children who test and rate more than 100 toys in July. Walmart and its toy suppliers partner to determine which 100 toys will be tested. Spokeswoma­n Leigh Stidham said suppliers and brands cannot pay to be included on the latter list, but didn’t comment on “Buyer’s Picks.”

Parents looking for independen­t recommenda­tions can turn to toy lists produced by third-party reviewers such as Toy Insider and Toys, Tots, Pets & More (TTPM). But in an era when customer reviews can be gamed and socialmedi­a influencer­s push products without always disclosing that they’re getting paid, consumers sometimes struggle to distinguis­h between objective online recommenda­tions and paid promotions.

The law is murky about precisely what should be disclosed and when. The Federal Trade Commission, which enforces deceptive advertisin­g laws, issues general guidelines. A full-page magazine photo of a thirsty runner guzzling from a bottle of Fiji water is so obviously an advertisem­ent it doesn’t have to be disclosed. If the same water brand pays the magazine to publish what appears to be a news story about the health benefits of its product, it must be clearly labeled an advertisem­ent.

While federal regulators are taking a closer look at advertisin­g these days, they can’t possibly monitor all the promotiona­l activity out there. So the FTC occasional­ly cracks down to send a message, as it did in 2017 with letters to more than 90 influencer­s and marketers reminding them about the need to disclose paid promotions in social media.

Amazon holiday gift guides promoting toys, electronic­s and home goods combined to generate more than $120 million in revenue in 2017, up about 40% from the previous year, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg.

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