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May 9, 2006
Moms’ Magic Touch Takes TAGGIES™ to
the Top
Where ‘Happily Ever After’ Means
Millions in Annual Sales
Fairy tales can come true
It can happen to you
If you’re young at heart … (J.
Richards & C.
Leigh, 1953)
SPENCER, Mass. (May 9) Here’s the fairy tale many a mom
dreams of: Quit the job, invent a kid-friendly product that sells
like mad, and enjoy the children while reaping astonishing
material and psychological success.
Every now and then, the fairy tale comes true. Just ask Julie
Dix and Danielle Ayotte, the young
moms behind TAGGIES® – colorful blankets
edged all around with the small, satiny tags that little ones
love to rub – and winners of a 2006 Oppenheim Toy Portfolio
Gold Seal award; Dr. Toy’s Smart Play/Smart Toys Product
of Excellence awards for 2005 and 2006; 2004 and 2005 Parent
to Parent Adding Wisdom awards; four 2005 Creative Child Magazine “Top
Creative Toy” awards; a 2005 Family Review Center Seal
of Approval Award; and 2004, 2005, and 2006 iParenting Media
Awards.
Six years after their creation, Taggies’ earnings have dramatically
grown every year while providing countless hours of comfort for
children. The patented Taggies core and licensed product line has
expanded to include soft- and hard-cover books, chime balls, educational,
travel, and plush toys, booties, crib sets, and several blanket
types and sizes, created by Taggies, Inc. and by its licensing
partners: Scholastic Publications, Mary Meyer, Inc., International
Playthings, and Rashti & Rashti.
All of which leaves Dix and Ayotte giddily grateful at their luck
in meeting – which, as this fairy tale would have it, happened
at their children’s playgroup.
Dix, an early-childhood educator
by training, noticed after the birth of one of her children that
the smooth tags or labels attached to toys or clothing often held
more tactile fascination than the items themselves. A deft seamstress,
Dix improved on a soft baby-size blanket by sewing brightly colored
and textured loops of ribbon all around its edges. Her toddler
loved her blanket’s new "Taggies" – and
when the mothers in her playgroup saw her creation, they loved
it, too.
"I was making Taggies late into the night when Danielle joined
the playgroup – thank heaven!" Dix recalls, laughing.
Ayotte, who before motherhood had worked in banking and healthcare
administration, brought an entrepreneurial bent to Dix’s
concept. She immediately saw the potential in Taggies – and
thus was born the Taggies partnership.
"We got along so well, right from the start," Ayotte
says. "We have complementary expertise, but just as important,
we really like each other and so do our families."
In classic entrepreneurial fashion, the pair worked from their
homes, stacking boxes of product in their garages and praying the
babies wouldn't cry during an important conference call. Today,
with six children between them and a Taggies staff of 23 working
from a real office, Ayotte and Dix still stagger their work hours
to make sure they're available when the children need
their moms.
"We've always been clear about arranging the work
around our families, and because there are two of us, we can do
it," Ayotte says. "Right now, for example, we each
have three grade school children, and that means arranging for
after-school care and juggling their extra-curricular activities
and homework. Having the flexibility to work from home enables
us to continue being moms while still keeping up with the business."
Their children were still in arms when the manufacturing demands
of the Taggies enterprise outgrew Dix’s sewing machine. Keeping
operations close to home, the partners contracted with Massachusetts
factories that continue to produce much of the product line. Today,
even after some expansion to overseas plants, Dix says firmly, "we’re
absolutely fanatical about quality control, especially anything
that affects safety. You’ve never seen such well-sewn fabric
products. Increasing sales and growing our product line are nowhere
near as important to us as keeping standards high."
"These are products for babies and young children," Ayotte
adds, "and there’s no bigger responsibility than that."
Like all small-business owners, the Taggies partners have encountered
their share of bumps. There was their first big order of ribbons,
which arrived COD. "We had no idea how much we’d ordered," Dix
confesses, "and we had to call our husbands at work and ask
them to pull together $500 right away to pay the UPS guy. They
hadn’t really realized what we were getting into – well,
neither did we! But they were incredibly supportive, then and now,
and they came up with the cash without a moment’s hesitation.”
Then there was the night of Dix’s hospital epiphany. "Julie
took her son to the emergency room, and there were so many sick,
crying children,"Ayotte recalls. "Her little boy was
OK, but she felt so bad for all those other children that she went
out to her car, brought inall the Taggies she had, and gave them
out to the kids. It was so touching – but it was also our
entire stock of Taggies!"
The inventory recovered, and the incident led to
the company’s
Random Acts of Kindness program, which invites customers to contribute
to a fund designated for donating Taggies to ill or impoverished
children. Taggies matches every donation, and in the past four
years the program has reached out to needy children through more
than 35 different hospitals, charitable organizations, and philanthropic
foundations. In 2005 Taggies expanded its charitable activities
through a partnership with The Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial
Fund, as the only baby products manufacturer presently licensed
by the Fund in the U.S.
Today, as the Taggies partners oversee expansion
into the European market, the fairy-tale feeling abides. "To
tell the truth, we’re still pinching ourselves over all this," Dix
says. "We
call it 'tag-mania' because there's something magical about the
simplicity and lovability of Taggies. Kids can't resist them, and
parents appreciate their comforting, sleep-inducing qualities."
All Taggies® products are completely safety tested and meet
or exceed all applicable safety standards as set forth by the regulatory
bodies in the United States,Canada, Australia, and New Zealand
and in the parts of Europe and other territories where Taggies
are sold.
The patented Taggies licensed and core product line includes small
and large blankets, plush items, activity toys, soft balls, rattles,
baby booties, crib sets, and the Scholastic soft-cover “My
First Taggies® Book” series and hard-cover “My
First Taggies® Book” nursery rhyme series. The company’s
Random Acts of Kindness program brings Taggies blankets to ill
or in need children. Taggies products are sold at more than 4,500
independent specialty shops nationwide and in Canada, the United
Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand. Taggies are also
available through more than a dozen catalogs, including RedEnvelope
and Lillian Vernon. Scholastic “My First Taggies®” books
are sold at Wal-Mart, Target, Toys R Us, Borders, Barnes & Noble
and other mass marketers. Taggies products may be ordered online
at www.taggies.com and by
phone at 1-877-4-TAGGIE.
For more information about TAGGIES,
or to schedule an interview with Julie Dix and Danielle
Ayotte, please contact
Elizabeth Waldman Frazier at WALDMANIA! Public Relations, 415.334.2787 or waldmania@comcast.net
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