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Experimenting with New Markets: Science Toys Bubble Over with Teachers, Parents
By Pennie Hoover
May 1, 2003

 


Specialty Stores Strive to Survive


This submarine style sea monkey habitat available from Educational Insights
retails for $23.50

Atamian believes the market is contracting with the rise of discount stores, combined with several high profile bankruptcies and smaller retailers being unable to weather the recession.

“Actually for every retailer we have lost, two more retailers have found us,” said Elenco’s Coda, confirming a growing demand for educational play kits even in a tight market.

Major discounters tend to carry established sellers and proven brands, but higher-end, more specialized products need an outlet as well. Zany Brainy, which tries to keep a foot in both markets, describes its customer base as children from preschool age to Tweens. The store’s clientele is mostly white-collar professionals with young children.

Science on the Web is Hot

The largest retailer of science toys on the Web, einsteins-emporium.com, stocks a variety of products that appeal to all ages. “95% of what we sell is not available in retail stores,” claimed owner Marvin Broyhill. Broyhill’s experience before this web-based business was in advertising, and he compares e-stores with mail order. “When you have a large market on a national and international scale--but it’s too diluted to support a local retail location-- that is when mail order and web commerce work.”

With this strategy, Broyhill finds the largest market is in more advanced products that appeal to high school and college students, and even professionals. While the business has seen more focus on price in the last year, Broyhill still finds that parents care about quality. “Where we used to sell telescopes in the $500 to $1000 range, we now sell more in the $100 to $200 range,” Broyhill said. “But people don’t want the $39.95 special that they know won’t work or last.”

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Writer's Bio: Pennie, a graduate of Indiana University School of Journalism, is a freelance writer and lives with her husband and three children in Visalia, CA.


 
 

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