Make centurylink.net Your Homepage!Get the CenturyLink Toolbar
  • New: Location-Based Advertising

    Location-Based Advertising

    CenturyLink is launching location-based advertising to improve your Internet experience. Click here to learn more.

  • Log In
  • centurylink.com
    • Residential
    • Small Business
    • Large Business
    • Wholesale
Mostly Cloudy
5-day forecast
76 °F | °C

Ashburn, VA

Edit
Cancel

Centurylink

  • Web
  • eBay
  • Amazon
Top searches: Xbox One MasterChef Kellie Pickler Eva Longoria Nicki Minaj
  • News
  • Watch TV
  • Games
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Local
  • More
    • Autos
    • Business
    • Careers
    • Family
    • Finance
    • Music
    • PC Safety & Security
    • Phone Book
    • Premiums
    • Shopping
    • Toolbar
    • Travel
    • Weather
    • In Theaters
  •  
    My Account
    • My CenturyLink Bill
    • View / Pay Bill Online
    • Add / Remove Services
    •  
    • Billing Help
    • Special Offers
    • Settings
    • Create Account
    • Username Management
    • Access Management
    • Email Settings
    • Online Transactions
    • Add / Delete Mailbox
    • Parental Controls
    • About Our Ads
    • Forgot Password
    • Change Email Secret Question & Answer
    • Customize My Homepage
  •  
    Help
    • Support
    • Internet Support
    • Email & Homepage Support
    • Prism Customer Support
    • Chat Now
    • Email us
    • Call 800.366.8201
    • Tours
    • Site Tour
    • Email Tour
    • Send Feedback
  •  
    Email

Business Resources

More Resources

  • Accounting & Reporting
  • Blogger
  • Construction
  • Economy
  • Human Resources
  • Legal
  • Marketing & Advertising
  • Operations
  • Retail
  • Sales & Customer Service
  • Starting a Business
  • Technology

How to Market a Product Kids Will Love and Parents Will Buy

By: AllBusiness.com

When it comes to products for kids, marketing is a delicate balance between what the youngsters want and what parents determine is appropriate. By appealing to both and by using creative innovation, whatever your product, your small business will be more likely to find success.

If a company that produces products for children can maintain the equilibrium between the product user, the kid, and the product purchaser, often the parent, it can gain a stronger market presence than a competitor who ignores either side of the equation. By addressing the weaker quotient, you can gain better footing in the marketplace.

One California lifestyle company that launched a new all-natural skin-care company for kids has done a remarkable job attaining this critical balance, winning national awards with parenting forums within its first year and making a splash with the kids who use the products. Exploring what the company did can provide some ammo for how to market your own kid-oriented products and services.

This business has a good niche product geared to a relatively new market with few competitors. And to give its product greater appeal, the company put the product's dual market, both the kids and the parents, at the centerpiece of its marketing efforts.

For the youngsters, the company chose a kidcentric approach. It created inviting, kid-friendly names for the products that children could relate to, a wise direction for kid-oriented companies to follow. The company speaks on a kid-appropriate level by using "fun" adjectives such as "friendly," "sunny," "happy," and "funny" to describe the products, another important trait for attracting kids and one worth incorporating into your specific product development and marketing campaigns. The company further appeals to kids' sensibilities by packaging the products in bright colors and kid-attracting designs, using iconic symbols, colors, and patterns to identify their usage. The company also seeks feedback from kid testers by asking them to complete comment cards, ultimately ditching some products or tweaking them until the kids are satisfied. Finally, the company decided to add entertainment value to the product line and created a CD with silly rhymes and songs to serve as mnemonic devices for developing good skin-care habits.

But the company didn't by any means ignore the parents, the ultimate purchasers of the product and the dollar-spending decision makers. For example, the product is priced at a relatively affordable rate because price is often a top parental concern. Additionally, the company seeks opinions from parents on comment cards, incorporating their recommendations into product development and marketing decisions. The company further legitimizes its product by affixing a quality-assurance label and backing it up by listing the ingredients in easy-to-understand words rather than confusing technical jargon. To appeal more to today's health-conscious consumer, the company plays up the natural and chemical-free components of the skin-care products.

To further distinguish the product, an active Web component was added, providing parents' a forum for learning more about the ingredients, including the "toxic bad guys" found in everyday products. The Web site also promotes the company's mission and philosophy and contains information related to skin care, including printable checklists for kids to earn stars for performing their skin-care regimen.

While this Web site approach is elaborate, small businesses can learn from this company's impulse, particularly when it comes to adding a learning or educational component to kids' products. More importantly, what this company cleverly managed to do is to create an online marketing means that dovetails nicely with its product, a smart tactic worth imitating, even if to a lesser degree.

But the real lesson to remember here is that both parents and kids are crucial in youth marketing, so for a stronger share of the market, smart businesses can't ignore either one and can win points by keeping both in mind.

AllBusiness.com operates one of the Web's premier business sites, providing practical information and services for business professionals and growing businesses. See more at www.allbusiness.com.

Related Articles
Marketing: The Rules Have Changed for Automated Phone Calls The Five Basic Methods of Market Research
Ad Choices

Business News

AP Top Business News At 10:34 a.m. EDT
The Associated Press13 minutes ago
US home sales tick up to highest in 3 ½ yearsUS home sales rise slightly to 4.97 million in April, highest in 3 ½ years; inventories rise
The Associated Press29 minutes ago
AAA: 31.2M drivers to take Memorial Day road tripAAA estimates 31.2 million Americans will drive for their Memorial Day getaway this weekend
The Associated Press36 minutes ago
Several dozen tea party activists and other concerned citizens, wave signs and small American flags as they march outside the main Internal Revenue Service office on Tuesday, May 21, 2013, in Phoenix.  The rally was one of many around the country after IRS officials acknowledged that some conservative groups received inappropriate attention and questioning. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
IRS official Lerner: I did nothing wrongIRS official in center of targeting probe says she did nothing wrong, won't answer questions
The Associated Press13 minutes ago
Stocks edge higher as investors watch the FedStocks open slightly higher on Wall Street as investors watch the Federal Reserve
The Associated Press59 minutes ago
More Business News

Explore

  • News
  • Watch TV
  • Games
  • Sports
  • Local
  • In Theaters
  • PC Safety & Security
  • Autos
  • Business
  • Careers
  • Family
  • Finance
  • Music
  • Shopping
  • Travel
  • Weather

My Account

  • Check Email
  • My CenturyLink Bill
  • Create Account
  • Forgot Password
  • Customize My Homepage
  • Add/Delete Mailbox
  • Username Management
  • Email Settings
  • Change Email Secret Question & Answer
  • Parental Controls
  • Access Management
  • Online Transactions
  • Block 3rd Party Charges on your Bill

Products & Services

  • Phone Book
  • Voicemail
  • CenturyLink Online Security
  • CenturyLink Toolbar
  • Games Pack
  • Learning Pack
  • Rdio Unlimited Music
  • Variety Pack
  • Broadband Home Security
  • Downloads

Help

  • Site Tour
  • Email Tour
  • Internet Support
  • Email & Homepage Support
  • Prism Customer Support
  • Chat Now
  • Email Us
  • Call 800.366.8201
  • Send Feedback
Ad Choices
Privacy Policy | Internet Terms & Conditions | Acceptable Use | Copyright Notices | Advertise with Us | AdChoices | About CenturyLink™

© 2013 CenturyLink, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The name CenturyLink and the pathways logo are trademarks of CenturyLink, Inc.