Monday, January 20, 2020
LEGO and the Market for Childrenââ¬â¢s Building Blocks Essay -- Children T
â⬠¢ Background  There exists in some human beings an insatiable draw towards the unique and the  unusual, as much a statement of individuality as the clothes a person wears. This attraction  sometimes leads towards the hobby of collecting a set of objects. Each person has their own  niche of memorabilia, often a set that reminds them of childhood fantasies or other happy times.  Because these consumers have specialized needs, wanting with varying fierceness to obtain  specific, rare items to complete their sets, the collectibles market makes for intriguing study,  especially that dominated by LEGOââ¬âthe market for a collectible childrenââ¬â¢s toy distinguished by  its interlocking bricks.  The LEGO Company has made itself a giant in the market for childrenââ¬â¢s toys during its  existence and has used that leverage to propel itself successfully into the collectibles market. The  firm began as a manufacturer of wooden toys in Denmark seventy years ago. Sales allowed the  Danish company to survive, but not to thrive until it introduced in 1949 miniature plastic blocks  with divots and bumps that were aligned such that they could fit into one another, and were  designed for building structures. With these plastic blocks the company was able to market to all  first-world countries, from North America to Western Europe, Australia, and Japan. Visualizing  something and then constructing it, its creators believed, was and is an educational experience  that encourages ââ¬Å"lifelong creativity, imagination and learning,â⬠ according to their press release.  Perhaps the very reason that many people now collect LEGOs is that they were indeed captivated  as children with the infinite capacity of the blocks.  LEGO expanded its product line in the late 1980ââ¬â¢s by...              ...th. By having examined its  competitors and their successes, one now sees by contrast what LEGO is and is not. To continue  setting the market standard it must maintain its current corporate direction, including repeated  product updates and retirements, that was critically scrutinized here and proven to work. Indeed,  ask history itself.  - 10 -  Works Cited  ââ¬Å"Annual Average Exchange Rates: 2001.â⬠ Spreadsheet. Bank of England. 29 Oct. 2002  .  Annual Report: LEGO Company. ââ¬Å"Annual Accounts 2001.â⬠ 2001. .  Annual Report: MegaBloks Inc. ââ¬Å"MegaBloks Quarterly Report 2002. 2002.  .  ââ¬Å"The Ultimate LEGO book.â⬠ New York: DK Publishing. 1999.  Heller, Richard. ââ¬Å"(Re) Building Blocks.â⬠ Forbes. 168.13 (2001): 154.  Mand, Adrienne. ââ¬Å"Bionicle Web Chronicle.â⬠ Advertising Age. 72.33 (2001): 21.                    LEGO and the Market for Childrenââ¬â¢s Building Blocks Essay --  Children T  â⬠¢ Background  There exists in some human beings an insatiable draw towards the unique and the  unusual, as much a statement of individuality as the clothes a person wears. This attraction  sometimes leads towards the hobby of collecting a set of objects. Each person has their own  niche of memorabilia, often a set that reminds them of childhood fantasies or other happy times.  Because these consumers have specialized needs, wanting with varying fierceness to obtain  specific, rare items to complete their sets, the collectibles market makes for intriguing study,  especially that dominated by LEGOââ¬âthe market for a collectible childrenââ¬â¢s toy distinguished by  its interlocking bricks.  The LEGO Company has made itself a giant in the market for childrenââ¬â¢s toys during its  existence and has used that leverage to propel itself successfully into the collectibles market. The  firm began as a manufacturer of wooden toys in Denmark seventy years ago. Sales allowed the  Danish company to survive, but not to thrive until it introduced in 1949 miniature plastic blocks  with divots and bumps that were aligned such that they could fit into one another, and were  designed for building structures. With these plastic blocks the company was able to market to all  first-world countries, from North America to Western Europe, Australia, and Japan. Visualizing  something and then constructing it, its creators believed, was and is an educational experience  that encourages ââ¬Å"lifelong creativity, imagination and learning,â⬠ according to their press release.  Perhaps the very reason that many people now collect LEGOs is that they were indeed captivated  as children with the infinite capacity of the blocks.  LEGO expanded its product line in the late 1980ââ¬â¢s by...              ...th. By having examined its  competitors and their successes, one now sees by contrast what LEGO is and is not. To continue  setting the market standard it must maintain its current corporate direction, including repeated  product updates and retirements, that was critically scrutinized here and proven to work. Indeed,  ask history itself.  - 10 -  Works Cited  ââ¬Å"Annual Average Exchange Rates: 2001.â⬠ Spreadsheet. Bank of England. 29 Oct. 2002  .  Annual Report: LEGO Company. ââ¬Å"Annual Accounts 2001.â⬠ 2001. .  Annual Report: MegaBloks Inc. ââ¬Å"MegaBloks Quarterly Report 2002. 2002.  .  ââ¬Å"The Ultimate LEGO book.â⬠ New York: DK Publishing. 1999.  Heller, Richard. ââ¬Å"(Re) Building Blocks.â⬠ Forbes. 168.13 (2001): 154.  Mand, Adrienne. ââ¬Å"Bionicle Web Chronicle.â⬠ Advertising Age. 72.33 (2001): 21.                      
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