to open 12-15 international flagships within five years. “They’re becoming a toy tech business, and they have to stay steadfast with that.FAO Schwarz will follow its London store opening with a store opening in Dublin next week. “Their biggest r isks to manage are the commitment to the investment - putting money into innovation and unique SKUs and rebuilding this brand as a destination store,” said Graham. The key risk the retailer faces is maintaining the investment necessary to scale, said digital marketing consultant Judge Graham. Expansion of its private-label brands is a key differentiator that could drive traffic back to its online and physical stores. While FAO’s products are still sold in other stores, Conn said the company will be expanding its FAO-exclusive product assortment available only in its stores and on its online marketplace. In addition, by co-locating alongside newer, upstart brands in airports, FAO is putting a fresh image on a dead brand. “One of the things that doomed Toys “R” Us was the package on the shelf that you couldn’t touch or feel or interact with - they have studied the failings of the toy industry and looked at the vulnerabilities of the Amazon experience,” she said. FAO’s stores, beyond its Rockefeller flagship, are run by partner companies.Īccording to Susan Cantor, CEO of branding agency Red Peak, FAO’s online-offline relaunch is the result of a detailed study of the failures of other toy retailers, particularly Toys “R” Us. The company also plans to expand to China later this year. FAO isn’t using virtual reality now, but Conn said other technology-driven experiential features will roll out soon.įAO is expanding beyond its flagship and is rolling out smaller stores in airports, and through branded sections in larger retailers like Selfridges, which it plans to open in November. Apple’s tech tools are powering these experiences, and payments can be made through iPhones and iPads. Children can use also use touch screens to put together remote-controlled cars. For example, the company has doll-adoption ceremonies, with staff members who pose as nurses and doctors customers are even given birth certificates, adding an element of theater to the experience. To drive traffic, it focused on interactive experiences in stores, supported by participatory events delivered by staff who perform character roles. The company reopened its first large-format store in Rockefeller Center in November of 2018. It also launched an online store around the same time, along with a limited product assortment on Amazon. To test a revival, Conn said ThreeSixty carried out a soft-launch of some of the FAO private-label products through other retailers in December 2017, including Neiman Marcus, Macy’s and the Hudson’s Bay Company in Canada. That’s the way we evaluated it,” he said. “People have a strong emotional connection to the brand it has awareness outside of the U.S. But despite industry pressures, Conn said what FAO had going for it was a strong consumer attachment to the brand - an asset ThreeSixty could use to scale the brand in a new way. But FAO faced challenges prior to that and claimed for bankruptcy twice before being acquired by Zany Brainy owner The Right Start in 2002. FAO Schwarz’s closure coincided with pressures its previous parent company was facing at the time, which pegged the closure on rising rents. In 2001, FAO Schwarz had 41 stores it’s since gone through several owners in recent years, including a magazine publisher, a hedge fund, and from 2009 until its closing, Toys”R” Us. “We always believed it had a story to tell and authenticity we always felt it could be much bigger than toys.” “We thought that FAO Schwarz can be a global kids lifestyle brand,” said David Conn, CEO of FAO Schwarz’s parent company ThreeSixty Brands, which acquired the brand in 2016.
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