Girls looking for a new buddy can now say hello to Lego Friends, a line of Lego blocks aimed at females age 5+. What sets these toys apart from the traditional stackables? Mostly, a color palette
that’s deemed more female-friendly and mini-figs that are more doll-like.
Any direction change by a well-loved brand stirs tensions. But female-focused pitches, often
bungled via mere “pinkifying,” are especially fraught. In fact, bloggers like Daniel Sinker have already started writing posts provocatively questioning Lego's brand direction. That’s one reason Lego spent more than four years researching its Friends initiative, which rolled out at the tail end of 2011 in Europe and is just
now hitting the U.S. Lego’s take on its data? Girls largely value beauty more than boys. And they are more likely to identify with more feminine mini-figures.
Lego can afford to
take risks now. The company’s revenues are up 105% since 2006, and they exceeded $1 billion in U.S. sales for the first time in 2010 — successes built on the blocks’ boy appeal,
according to Businessweek.com. We have even noted Lego's work to partner with retailers as something marketers can learn from.
The brand implications: For decades, the Lego brand has existed under a
feel-good halo that has made it a parental favorite, while also pleasing kids. That halo, though, is now informed more by nostalgia than in-aisle perceptions, as parents still recall the
gender-neutral creativity fostered by the bricks of their youth. More recently, Lego has leaned heavily on licensing deals (“Star Wars,” “Harry Potter”) and is now increasing
its gender-specific offerings. Those strategies translate into immediate gains for Lego. What they cost is a chunk-by-chunk chipping away at the healthy-like-vitamins halo that Lego has enjoyed with
all parents for decades, regardless of how sensitive they might be to gender politics.
In the longer term, an erosion of that feel-good halo means less brand differentiation for Lego,
opening it up to coming years of increased block-buck battles with store brands and other competitors. For now, that’s a trade the company seems willing to make.
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