The Mercury News

Small toy stores worried they won’t remain in business after this year

- By Nathaniel Meyersohn CNN

The winter holidays are typically the busiest, and most successful, time of the year for Erin Blanton, the owner of Pufferbell­ies toy store in Staunton, Virginia.

Around a quarter of Pufferbell­ies’ annual sales come between Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas, when shoppers, she said, “come out of the woodwork” to buy Legos, snow globes, puzzles, playing cards, stuffed animals and other gifts for their family and friends.

But Blanton, who runs the store with her mother and has five employees, is more concerned about this holiday season than she has ever been in Pufferbell­ies’ 15 years in business.

Sales are constraine­d by restrictio­ns on the number of customers allowed inside her 1,900 squarefoot shop at a time in the pandemic — Blanton puts a pink flamingo outside the store when it’s at full capacity. Pufferbell­ies can’t hold holiday events in the store this year, a key sales driver, and some of her suppliers tell her they are running on delays because they can’t staff their own warehouses to usual levels. Before the pandemic, Pufferbell­ies had play tables and toys set out for kids to try, but those are now tucked away.

Pandemic restrictio­ns have taken a toll on small toy retailers because “they just don’t have the room to have people in [stores] with six-foot social distancing,”

said Sue Warfield, interim president of the American Specialty Toy Retailing Associatio­n, which represents more than 1,800 independen­t retailers and manufactur­ers in the toy industry.

Pufferbell­ies has also had to handle rising costs related to the coronaviru­s, including installing plexiglass barriers at cash registers, buying extra hand sanitizer and hiring an employee to enforce customer limits in the store.

And then there is rising competitio­n from Amazon and big box chains such as Walmart, Target, Costco. These companies have stayed open throughout the pandemic, even as small toy stores were forced to shut down in the spring.

“I don’t have the technology resources that big stores do or Amazon,” said Blanton. “I don’t have ability to make a super easyto-use app. We don’t have an IT department. We don’t have a delivery company. Our website is a little clunky.”

While small toy stores like Pufferbell­ies are struggling to stay afloat in the pandemic, Amazon and big box chains’ sales have surged as shoppers head online and consolidat­e their visits to stores. Analysts predict a bumper holiday season for these companies.

In contrast, the situation is particular­ly dire for independen­t toy retailers. Sales at toy, hobby and game stores dipped 26% between mid-March, when shutdowns first began, and late October compared with the same time last year, according to data from Womply, a company that provides software platforms for small businesses and tracks sales through credit and debit card transactio­ns.

Small toy stores’ struggles have come even as toy sales grew 19% through September, according to market research firm NPD Group. Toys and puzzles have been in high demand as parents and kids spend more time at home and look for ways to entertain themselves during the pandemic. But the benefits are going to Amazon and bigbox chains.

Stephanie Wissink, a retail analyst who covers the toy industry at Jefferies, point out that young parents today buying toys for their kids “have grown up in a world where everything is available to them” on Amazon.

Additional­ly, the Toys ‘R’ Us bankruptcy filing in 2017 and FAO Schwarz’s closing pushed Amazon and big box chains to build up their toy inventorie­s to try to take those companies’ market share.

“It was like confetti in the air,” said Wissink.

This holiday season is likely to widen the gap between large chains and small toy stores, say retail experts.

Nearly half of 1,800 independen­t toy store and gift boutique owners surveyed between September 19 and October 27 by Alignable, a small business social networking company, say they worried that they may not make enough this holiday season to stay in business past this year. Another 36% of respondent­s said that they will make just enough this holiday season to get by.

Elle Dare, who runs Genuine Toy Company, a toy store in Plymouth, Michigan that has a retro vibe and plays theme songs from old television shows like “Leave it to Beaver” and “Saved by the Bell,” is hoping to bring in enough cash this holiday to pay her suppliers and keep up on rent.

“If we can just pay the bills, I think that we can get through this,” she said. But Dare is worried about ordering too many toys this holiday and holding leftover inventory. She is also bracing for new restrictio­ns on retailers from the recent spike in coronaviru­s cases, which would hurt sales and make it impossible to pay her vendors.

She is holding out hope that the struggles of independen­t stores like Genuine Toy Company in the pandemic will galvanize shoppers to buy local this holiday.

 ?? PHOTO BY KYLA DOAK ?? “If we can just pay the bills, I think that we can get through this,” said Elle Dare, owner of Genuine Toy Company in Plymouth, Michigan.
PHOTO BY KYLA DOAK “If we can just pay the bills, I think that we can get through this,” said Elle Dare, owner of Genuine Toy Company in Plymouth, Michigan.
 ?? PHOTO BY SUSAN FELTON ?? Erin Blanton, the owner of Pufferbell­ies toy store in Staunton, Virginia, is struggling to compete against Amazon in the pandemic.
PHOTO BY SUSAN FELTON Erin Blanton, the owner of Pufferbell­ies toy store in Staunton, Virginia, is struggling to compete against Amazon in the pandemic.

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