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Toys Selling Out, Mom Blogs Might Be The Reason

MAE ANDERSON   12/20/11 05:45 PM ET  AP

Emily Vanek is not buying up a bunch of LeapPad Explorers herself, but she may be at least partly to blame for some stores selling out of the $99 children's tablet this holiday season.

"The LeapPad is incredible," the Denver mother of three boys wrote to the 6,000 readers of her ColoradoMoms.com blog. "Not only do kids get to have a toy resembling their parents' tablet, it's durable and my favorite part?! It's not just mindless games they are playing."

These days, mommy bloggers don't just gab about spilled milk and poopy diapers. In fact, they've become so influential in the $22 billion toy market that toy makers go to great lengths to get their seal of approval. Their thumbs-up is particularly important during the holiday shopping season when toy makers hope to create the next hit toy.

It's a major shift for toy companies, which have always given out samples of new dolls, games and other playthings to drive sales. Five years ago, they handed out 98 percent of those products to TV stations, newspapers and magazines. But today, as much as 70 percent go to bloggers.

Mattel Inc., the world's largest toy company, has a database of about 400 mommy bloggers and their location, interests and the children's ages. Canadian toy maker Spin Master, which makes the trading card game Redakai, hired a dedicated staffer whose only job is to reach out to mommy bloggers. And small toy maker Cepia Inc., which makes robotic Zhu Zhu pets, gets feedback from mommy bloggers before its toys hit shelves.

It's hard for toy makers to ignore the monstrous number of mommy bloggers. Nationwide, there are about 4 million or so mommy bloggers who influence millions of other parents around the world.

"Mommy bloggers started because they wanted to share things about a new baby, but the most influential ones got into social media and realized they could make a difference," says Maria Bailey, whose BSM Media firm helps companies pick mommy bloggers with the most reach on the Twitter and Facebook social media websites. "Sometimes that difference is as simple as directing a mom to a toy that will save money."

That's why when LeapFrog Enterprises wanted to roll out its LeapPad Explorer kid-size tablet, it reached out to 200 of the top mommy bloggers. The goal? To get them to generate buzz for the tablet by throwing "mommy parties."

The Emeryville, Calif.-based company sent each blogger a kit that included a LeapPad, a game for it and coupons. LeapFrog also sent tips on how many people to invite (about 5 adults and 15 kids) and suggested recipes (ice cream sundaes).

For bloggers like Vanek, the Denver mom who bills herself as the "go-to answer for all things mom and kids in Colorado," it was a chance to be a hero of sorts to other parents and their kids.

"It not only lets my own children get to try out the newest/hottest toys, it allows them to share them with their friends," she says. "It allows me to get to have my own friends over for something better than a Tupperware party where I'm doing a hard sales pitch."

But for LeapFrog, it was an opportunity to get word-of-mouth going early.

It was the first time the company had hosted "mommy parties," but it seems to have paid off. The company declined to give sales numbers, but the LeapPad has been selling out online and in stores across the country this holiday season.

Earlier this year, SpinMaster also used mommy bloggers to get the word out about its reformulated Moon Dough, a non-sticky PlayDoh-like moldable substance. Within weeks of the company sending samples to more than 500 bloggers, there were thousands of postings about the new product online.

"After playing with our other Moon Dough set just a few days before, I could immediately tell that this Moon Dough was much less flaky," blogged ohsosavvymom.com, a mom in San Antonio, Texas with more than 3,600 Twitter followers.

Harold Chizick, vice president of global communications at Spin Master, says in part because of reviews like that, the product had a double-digit increase in sales, though he declined to give details. If the company had used traditional ways to get the word out, Chizick says, the roll out would have taken several months or longer.

"It was much faster than expected," he says.

Sometimes, buzz from bloggers can backfire.

"If they like something word gets around very quickly, if they don't like something, word will also get around quickly," says Timetoplaymag.com's Jim Silver, a long time toy expert who works with mom bloggers to review products on his website.

In 2009, after Mattel released a silhouette of its new "tween" Dora the Explorer that seemed to deviate from the tomboy-esque look of the original doll, a number of bloggers complained. A Cafemom.com blogger wrote: "Can't they leave anything to the imagination these days?"

Mattel, which had hoped the silhouette would generate excitement ahead of the launch of the new doll, decided to release the full image of the Dora early to reassure moms that the doll wasn't too fancied up.

Crayola also faced scrutiny from mom bloggers this year when its Crayola Colored Bubbles, a product with a wand that kids can blow colored soap bubbles through, caused stains. After bloggers gave it negative reviews, Crayola made some changes, including updating the packaging and adding a warning about the possibility of stains.

"It's just like handing kids a bunch of fabric dye and telling them to throw it around," a blogger on Mommybrunchtales.com wrote.

Still, most toy makers find the risk is worth the reward.

Cepia LLC was relatively unknown until mommy bloggers made its Zhu Zhu pets a hit in 2009. Laura Kurzu, Cepia's senior vice president of marketing, works with bloggers every step of the way to develop toys, including a Zhu Zhu building set that it tweaked due to blogger comments.

"Bloggers can be really great evangelists for the brand, but you have to be invested in listening to what they say to you," she says. "You can't just throw something out there and expect gratuitous support."

_____

Mae Anderson reported from New York.

Follow AP retail coverage at and Mae Anderson at .

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dancerctry
I love Gardening and Decorating
03:31 PM on 12/22/2011
My Mom started the Grandma Chronicles blog when I was pregnant but most of it is product reviews. She goes with the Mommy Bloggers to toy fairs like Hasbro in NYC nearby. I have a Mommy blog but if I mention something it's something I payed for (not got free like with my Mom it's like nothing but ads over there). I also include direct links to the web page you can get them from but it's usually things like a skirt from Victorias Secrets that I got that my diet is helping me get into. Here's my non-ads blog. As a SAHM this is about me and my family. It reconnects what Mommy blogs were about. Frankly, if we can't get it for christmas my 2 1/2 year old son's birthday is in June. If it's that great for now and is still great then, then it'll be worth the money.

http://homewithmommy-fran.blogspot.com/
01:31 PM on 12/22/2011
Sad to see all toys are imported. Why can't some Billioners start toy manufacturing and save billions of dollars going out of the country. It will help reduce unemployment in millions. Anybody there to start a multi-billion toy manufacturing business. May be ask Ms Martha Stewart for guidance. I am sorry, I don't have cash to invest.
Joseph
11:28 AM on 12/22/2011
Corporate shills. Tried to look up info on a toy last week, and all i could find was about a dozen mommy blogs giving glowing "unbiased" reviews. Now maybe it's a great toy truck- but you'd have thought it was magical, and it's just a plastic toy truck. Best part was most of the bloggers seemed to have only had the toy in-house for a week or two before giving their glowing reviews. Nothing but shills for corporations willing togive out some free samples.
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dede4007
11:16 AM on 12/22/2011
I have been toy shopping this Christmas because of my first grandchild, but I have to say that there are a lot of CRAPPY toys out this year. They are cheap, have dozens of pieces that will get lost the first day, and are basically just stupid, plus, board games are making a real comeback, so what's the deal? Most of EVERYTHING is made in China, and it is poorly made. I wouldn't mind paying more for a couple of well made, really GOOD toys, instead of having a whole BUNCH of crap toys that will break in an hour. Let's bring industry home to this country.
12:36 PM on 12/22/2011
I was just going to say the same. Toys today are AWFUL! I remember growing up.. we had much better toys and board games were popular too. I'm still young, I was a 90's kid.. but I still have my Monopoly and a few others that I'd gotten over a few Christmases. I decided not to buy toys for the kids in my family this year.. it's all puzzles and board games. They might not WANT 'em.. but they're sure gonna get 'em! lol
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randinoel
God is the only way to ever-lasting life.
11:48 PM on 12/21/2011
heh? toy shortage? yeah right. how about giving the kid a good old fashioned book? they generally last a while. you drop a leap pad, kindle, etc, and it's gone for good
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ArchStanton400
There are two kinds of spurs, my friend.
04:39 PM on 12/20/2011
How much you want to bet that the so-called 'mom sites' who drive public opinion on which toys to buy have connections to the toy manufacturer's themselves?
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08:11 PM on 12/21/2011
I don't know, I've read a number of mom blogs and the reason they get so popular is because they are just like every other mom, however that's not to say that some aren't being "bought.". I think a lot of mom bloggers give positive reviews because they get a free "it" item, and usually a few to give away to their readers.