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Kmart launches multicultural doll project

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From the Associated Press

Toy store aisles are getting a multicultural makeover.

Bolstered by the success of Nickelodeon’s popular bilingual children’s character Dora the Explorer and the spending power of the nation’s growing minority population, toy retailers across the country are filling their shelves with dolls whose skin colors and facial features reflect the girls and boys who play with them.

Although black and Latino dolls have been around for decades, the newer incarnations try harder at authenticity, rather than simply tinting the hair and skin on toys made from “white” doll molds.

Now, discount retailer Kmart hopes to cash in on a growing appetite for ethnic toys among minority consumers. It’s launching its own initiative this month, putting dozens of multicultural dolls on shelves in each of its 1,400 stores.

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Although other retailers are stocking more multicultural dolls -- often in predominantly minority neighborhoods -- Kmart says it is the first mass-market retailer to have such a wide selection available in every store.

When the rollout is completed next week, Kmart stores will sell nearly four dozen types of ethnic dolls -- a nearly fourfold increase from what’s currently available. The dolls are flanked by an advertising campaign in the store’s circulars and are designed to appeal to black, Latino and Asian parents.

“We needed to be relevant to them,” said Philipp Elliott, a toy merchandise manager at Kmart, a subsidiary of Hoffman Estates, Ill.-based Sears Holdings Corp.

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Becoming relevant to minority shoppers can reap big benefits. About 1 in 3 Americans is a minority, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Between 2006 and 2011, the spending power of the country’s blacks, Asians, Native Americans and multiracial shoppers is expected to grow 38%, to $1.9 trillion.

Meanwhile, Latino buying power is projected to grow a formidable 48%, to almost $1.2 trillion, according to data from the University of Georgia’s Selig Center for Economic Growth.

By 2050, minorities will account for half of U.S. residents, the Census Bureau projects.

Kmart executives hope the doll campaign will bring renewed foot traffic to their stores, which saw revenue fall 2.3% last year. Last month, Sears warned that second-quarter earnings would probably fall well below expectations because of more disappointing sales at Kmart and its sister Sears stores.

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Kmart executives declined to release figures showing how much the chain has invested in the doll project, which includes brands such as Baby Abuelita and Mattel Inc.’s Rebelde dolls, as well as the newly designed proprietary Just Girlz collection.

But the retailer probably faces an uphill battle as it tries to woo shoppers away from heavyweight competitors Wal-Mart and Toys R Us, whose large selections of the popular Barbie and Bratz dolls give them an advantage in appealing to minority shoppers.

“I think they’re going down a very tough road,” said toy analyst Jim Silver, editor of Toy Wishes magazine. “Why would I buy a generic ethnic doll over this major brand that has all these accessories?”

Popular dolls need more than pretty looks. Instead, it’s a combination of brand names and cool accessories -- including dollhouses and roller skates -- that attract children to dolls.

Just ask 27-year-old Marie Jones, whose daughters eyed the new dolls inside a Kmart store in Chicago’s south suburbs last week.

“If they’re pretty, they’re pretty,” Jones said after watching Jade Lynch, 8, and Imani Simmons, 6, play with the new dolls. “They picked up the black ones, they picked up the white ones. They look at the things that they come with. If they can comb their hair, that’s the doll they want.”

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There are no solid data on the size of the nation’s ethnic doll selection, but experts say the category is booming after a series of flops that received tepid enthusiasm from shoppers.

“People want a doll and a story that reflects who they are,” said Julie Parks, a spokeswoman for Mattel’s American Girl, which includes Native American, Latino and black historical dolls, as well as dolls with myriad skin, eye and hair color combinations. “There is something about seeing a reflection of themselves in that character and in that doll that they can relate to.”

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. spokeswoman Melissa O’Brien said the chain’s Latino doll selection had more than tripled in the last year and the total assortment of black baby dolls had more than doubled.

Wayne, N.J.-based Toys R Us Inc., which follows a similar approach when stocking its more than 100 types of multicultural dolls, said its Latino selection had soared in the last two years along with smaller increases in the more established black doll products.

“Dora was really the key driver,” spokeswoman Kathleen Waugh said.

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