May 7, 2004
Moms’ Magic Touch Takes Taggies to
the Top
Taggies, Inc. Named iParenting Media
Award-Winner “Hottest Products
for 2004”
Taggies,
Inc. has been named a double winner in the iParenting Media Awards “Hottest
Products for 2004” competition.
The Spencer, Massachusetts company’s Little TAGGIES™ and
Take-A-Long Taggies were each honored with an award.
“The products that won the title of Hottest Products for
2004 truly are the hottest products for families in today’s
marketplace,” says Alvin All, CEO of iParenting Media. “The
award winners endured rigorous testing and intensive review and
demonstrated excellence in their product categories, making them
smart purchases. Whether they are safe, educational, or just plain
fun, they are all hot products.”
Hundreds of juvenile product companies submitted entries to the “Hottest
Products for 2004” iParenting Media Awards competition. Each
company submitted four identical samples of products entered for
preliminary judging by a network of reviewers using iParenting’s
proprietary technology. Experts, licensed childcare facilities/schools,
and parents then reviewed the products and submitted a thorough
evaluation of each item. Results were submitted to the iParenting
Media Executive Committee for final approval
Julie Dix and Danielle Ayotte are the young moms behind Taggies – colorful
fleece blankets edged all around with the small, satiny tags that
little ones love to rub.
Dix, an early-childhood educator by training, noticed after the
birth of one of her children that the smooth tags or labels attached
to baby blankets often held more tactile fascination than the blankets
themselves. A deft seamstress, Dix improved on a soft
baby-size blanket by sewing brightly colored 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 a kindergartener, so one is in a morning class and the other
goes afternoons. That way we get the 'mommy time' our kids
need, as well as 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 two years
the program has reached out to needy children through 20 different
hospitals, charitable organizations, and philanthropic foundations.
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."
Less than five years after their creation, Taggies have topped
2 million in annual sales while providing countless hours of comfort
for children. The Taggies product line has expanded to include
plush toys, travel toys, pillows, and several sizes of blankets.
And the runaway success of Scholastic Publications’ soft-cover "My
First Taggies Book: Sweet Dreams" led Scholastic to follow
up with a new soft-cover sensation, “My First Taggies Book:
I Love You,” to be released in September 2004.
All Taggies products meet or exceed all voluntary standards and
mandatory regulations set by the Consumer Product Safety Commission
and American Society for Testing and Materials for children's blankets
and toys, in addition to meeting Canadian and European standards.
Taggies products are sold at more than 4,000 independent
specialty shops nationwide and in Canada, and expansion into the
United Kingdom and Ireland began in spring 2004. Taggies are also
available through a dozen catalogs, including Red Envelope and
Lillian Vernon. “My
First Taggies Book: Sweet Dreams” is 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, please
contact:
Elizabeth
Waldman Frazier
WALDMANIA! Public Relations
Telephone: (415) 334-2787
waldmania@comcast.net
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