Advertisement

Mattel Could Face Hurdle in Selling a Rival to LeapPad

Share
From Bloomberg News

Mattel Inc., the world’s largest toy maker, is making a big leap into the electronic educational toy market, one of the toy industry’s fastest-growing segments.

On Sunday, the El Segundo-based company officially unveiled the PowerTouch Learning System for preschoolers at the 100th annual American International Toy Fair in New York.

Yet the new product line from Mattel’s Fisher-Price division may have a hard time taking sales from LeapFrog Enterprises Inc., whose LeapPad interactive book and other products dominate the preschool electronic-learning market.

Advertisement

Though Mattel may be playing catch-up with Leapfrog in some categories, the toy maker is known for educational products of its own, such as Fisher-Price’s See ‘n Say line. Demand for Kasey the Kinderbot has exceeded Mattel’s expectations since the company introduced the learning robot last year. It was the top-selling new learning toy last year, said Mattel, maker of Barbie dolls and Matchbox cars.

Unlike LeapPad, which requires the use of a stylus, PowerTouch lets preschoolers navigate by touching words and pictures displayed on the screen. It will sell for $49.99, about the same as LeapPad.

PowerTouch took 2 1/2 years to develop and represents one of the largest investments in a product in Fisher-Price’s 73-year history, said Jerry Perez, executive vice president of marketing and design at Fisher-Price.

LeapFrog plans to introduce its TogetherTime LeapPad for 6-to-36-month-olds that features finger touch, Chief Executive Michael Wood said.

Mattel and LeapFrog may both gain share in the electronic-learning market at the expense of smaller competitors, analysts said.

“They are going directly after each other,” said Jim Silver, publisher of ToyBook, a trade publication. “It’s going to be a battle.”

Advertisement

On Friday, shares of Mattel rose 36 cents to close at $20.86. Shares of LeapFrog, whose stock has risen 52% since the company went public in July, fell 26 cents to close at $19.74. Both trade on the New York Stock Exchange.

Advertisement