Buenos Aires thinks pink with Barbie store

Jason Salzenstein READ TIME: 2 MIN.

BUENOS AIRES -- The idea came to Tito Loizeau in a Buenos Aires shopping mall three years ago: Build a Barbie-themed store and little girls and their parents' money will follow.

Loizeau's marketing company had set up a small "House of Barbie" promotion for Mattel Inc. inside the mall. He was astounded by the reaction: Girls waited for hours to get in, and mothers made offers on clothes he'd hung up for decoration -- never mind that they didn't have anything to do with Barbie.

"It would be a pink shirt you could buy anywhere in the mall," Loizeau said, "but they'd want the shirt because it was associated with Barbie."

So he set out to open the world's first Barbie "fashion-tainment" store, where girls can get glittery hairdos and makeup at the Barbie beauty parlor or try on gowns and play with dolls in the Barbie playroom, all while their parents nibble pink-frosted desserts in the Barbie caf?.

Loizeau, 37, spent a year persuading El Segundo, Calif.-based Mattel to license the idea. Then he and two associates put up $500,000 of their own money to open the Barbie Store.

The store opened in September and now Buenos Aires' chic Palermo neighborhood, home to swank restaurants, boutiques and tony townhouses, is all abuzz with Barbie.

While some parents may bemoan Barbie's conspicuous consumption and her particular image of womanhood, she appears to have plenty of adoring fans in the Argentine capital.

"There are girls who come every single day," Loizeau said. "No one understands it."

The $7-an-hour playroom inside the store has toys and dolls, costumes, makeup and jewelry, and a small catwalk for girls to parade on under disco lights. The store also includes a beauty salon, where girls can get everything from a glamorous hairstyle to a painted butterfly on a cheek, plus a coffee shop. And the Barbie playroom is available for parties, starting at around $650.

A few Barbies are for sale, but selling dolls isn't the retail focus. Instead, there are T-shirts, skirts, pants and handbags -- most in shades of pink -- that are designed and made in Argentina and available only at the Barbie Store. The items sell for 10% more than similar clothes at other stores without the Barbie logo, Loizeau said.

While Loizeau's original idea was to sell glamorous Barbie outfits in kid sizes, focus groups showed mothers were not so keen -- even if the girls themselves might have loved the idea. Instead, he commissioned a line of basic kids clothing that comes with matching items for dolls.

"It's OK for them to dress up like Barbie for a couple of hours," Loizeau said, "but when they go home, they're still little girls."

Independent toy analyst Chris Byrne of Byrne Communications Inc., said a Barbie Store is unlikely to take off in the United States. "You might see a Barbie boutique within a department store, but you're probably not going to see a stand-alone store."


by Jason Salzenstein

Twitter :: JasonSalz

Jason Salzenstein is a writer and editor; design, image, and marketing consultant; and professional shopper. His work has appeared in numerous national and international publications and he has clients around the world. For more information :: www.JasonSalzenstein.com

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