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						Toys "R" Us plans new playdate with U.S. shoppers
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		 [December 21, 2017] 
		 By Jessica DiNapoli and Melissa Fares 
 WALLKILL, NEW YORK (Reuters) - Joshua and 
		Amy Hightower drive 40 minutes to a Toys "R" Us Inc store in a blue 
		collar neighborhood in Wallkill, one of the farthest reaches of the New 
		York City suburbs, so their children can try toys at an amusement area 
		dubbed the "play lab."
 
 "We were actually here last night and last week," said Amy Hightower, a 
		30-year-old stay-at-home mom as her daughter played house and her two 
		sons raced cars in the play lab, which Toys "R" Us launched in 42 of its 
		stores this year.
 
 "It is hard to get them away from this area," she said.
 
 The Hightowers may be ideal Toys "R" Us customers, but so far there has 
		not been enough of them. Many shoppers now make their toy purchases 
		online. Foot traffic at Toys "R" Us, the largest U.S. toy retailer, has 
		declined, as consumers turn to e-commerce sites such as Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>, 
		mass discount chains, like Wal-Mart Stores Inc <WMT.N>, and some small 
		independent toy stores.
 
 For a graphic on the changing toy retailer landscape, click 
		http://tmsnrt.rs/2BuQGMW
 
		
		 
		As Toys "R" Us aims to exit bankruptcy in 2018 after defaulting on its 
		debt last September, its efforts to reinvent its stores with play labs 
		will shape how other retailers look to experiential shopping to tackle 
		e-commerce.
 The holiday shopping season, when 75 percent of all toy sales are made, 
		is a key test of this strategy.
 
 Toys "R" Us has set aside more than $400 million out of its
 
 $3.1 billion in bankruptcy loans for sprucing up its approximately 900 
		stores over the next three years with more experiences and better-paid 
		staff.
 
 The company's creditors are wary of these plans, according to sources 
		close to the situation who requested anonymity to discuss confidential 
		deliberations. Creditors can ask the bankruptcy judge to stop Toys "R" 
		Us from spending on play labs or other experiential aspects, if they 
		view the costs as excessive.
 
 In bankruptcy court papers, Toys "R" Us has argued it cannot wait until 
		it emerges from bankruptcy to invest in its stores. The retailer also 
		plans to close unprofitable locations and improve its website and 
		loyalty programs.
 
 Dave Brandon, who became Toys "R" Us chief executive in 2015 after 
		spearheading a turnaround at Domino's Pizza Inc <DPZ.N>, defended the 
		strategy in an interview, saying that bricks-and-mortar stores and 
		experiential shopping were important to the retailer's brand.
 
 "We think our scale is a huge advantage, because we have a brand that's 
		nationally and globally known," Brandon said.
 
 Toys "R" Us aims to offer shopping experiences like those found at 
		Dick's Sporting Goods Inc <DKS.N>, Best Buy Co Inc <BBY.N> and Ulta 
		Beauty Inc <ULTA.O>, Brandon added.
 
 To be sure, Toys "R" Us may end up with little to show for its 
		investment, industry experts said. Experiential shopping is expensive to 
		scale up for big box retailers that rely heavily on seasonal hiring, 
		they said.
 
		
		 
		
		 
		
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			The "play lab", an amusement area, is seen inside the Toys "R" Us 
			Inc store in Wallkill, New York, U.S. December 5, 2017. Photo taken 
			December 5, 2017. REUTERS/Melissa Fares 
            
			 
"There is a chance that Toys "R" Us could be out of business in the next two 
years entirely in the United States," said Stephanie Wissink, a consumer 
products analyst at investment bank Jefferies LLC. "My fear is that they are not 
selling goods to a consumer that values that experience." 
Other toy retailers offering shopping experiences, such as stuffed animal shop 
Build-A-Bear Workshop Inc <BBW.N> and The Lego Group have also posted sales 
declines. Sales at Build-A-Bear declined 7 percent to $364 million last year 
from $392 million two years prior.
 INDEPENDENT TOY STORES
 
 Regional independent toy retailers have also been taking market share away from 
Toys "R" Us, thanks to merchandise that extends beyond mass-market toys, strong 
customer service and products that accompany school lessons.
 
 Those chains also seek to cater to local tastes in a way Toys "R" Us has not. 
"Stores in Texas buy cheerleading stuff a lot, there's a big football 
community," said Sharon DiMinico, chief executive of Learning Express Inc, a 
U.S. toy store franchiser with about 120 independently-owned stores.
 
Steven Aarons, the owner of four-store chain Barstons Child's Play in the 
Washington, D.C. area, said he is able to offer entry-level wages of $15 per 
hour and health insurance to full-time workers because he has cheaper rent and 
does not have to answer to investors.
 In Wallkill, Toys "R" Us hired new employees like Nora Hanlon to oversee the 
store's Play Lab, which is a cordoned off foam mat, scattered with toys and a 
picnic table nearby where parents can sit. Boxes marked for layaway surround it.
 
 
"I get minimum wage, but it's a really fun job," said Hanlon, a high school 
student and part-time Play Lab Coach, sporting a reindeer headpiece.
 Toys "R" Us also plans to hire more skilled workers. About $72 million of the 
$400 million the retailer will use for its redevelopment will go toward wage 
increases.
 
The chain's efforts to emulate features of independent stores underscores the 
dramatic reversal of its fortunes. As the chain grew its national footprint, it 
wiped out mom-and-pop shops decades ago. But its glitzy Fao Schwarz store and 
flagship Times Square location featuring a Ferris Wheel were too pricey.
 Earlier efforts with experiential stores called "Geoffrey," named after its 
giraffe mascot, failed. Its $6.6 billion leveraged buyout in 2005 led to 
expensive interest payments that ate up cash Toys "R" Us could have used to 
improve stores.
 
 "Can they somehow turn their stores from a warehouse into a play area?" said 
retail consultant Howard Davidowitz. "That is a big jump."
 
 (Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli and Melissa Fares in Wallkill, New York; Editing 
by Greg Roumeliotis and Edward Tobin)
 
				 
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