Disney moves into home goods

crazy4wdw

Moderator - Restaurant Board
Moderator
Joined
Jan 3, 2001
Messages
9,168
Disney Co. moves into home goods

Targeting adults, it will expand into the furniture, linen and wine markets.

Angela Pruitt | Dow Jones Newswires June 26, 2007

NEW YORK - Walt Disney Co., aiming to be more than a Mickey Mouse operation, is branching out into furniture, linens and even wine.

Starting this fall, Burbank, Calif.-based Disney will unveil a line of home goods including lighting products made by the Minka Group. Disney also plans to market a fashion bath-and-bedding collection with Dan River, and outdoor tabletops and entertaining products with Zak Designs next year.

Next up: Disney is launching a wine label through Costco Wholesale Corp., based in Issaquah, Wash., that is based on its upcoming animated film Ratatouille, the tale of a rat who wants to become a French chef. The chardonnay, from the Burgundy region in France and bearing the Ratatouille name and likeness, will sell for $12.99.

The licensed products, targeted at adults and devoid of mouse ears, underscores Disney's push to gain a deeper foothold on more-sophisticated consumer products. Last fall, the company partnered with Drexel Heritage on an upscale furniture line based on the decor of Walt Disney's home and office during the 1930s and 1940s.

Marketing items based on Disney characters "is the biggest part of our business because that's our heritage. But the noncharacter [segment] is growing very, very quickly," said Jim Fielding, executive vice president of global retail sales and marketing for Disney's consumer products.

He said the company projects that its noncharacter branding will be 10 percent to 15 percent of Disney's licensed business during the next five years.

Disney's consumer-products division also said last week that it expects retail sales by the company and its licensees to rise 13 percent to $26 billion in fiscal 2007, double the level of five years ago.

"If we truly want to double the business again . . . which is what our goal is in the next five years, we need to branch into different parts of the market that we're currently not . . . in, and that's where noncharacter" comes into play, Fielding said.

In the apparel arena, Disney recently launched a line of bridal gowns designed by Kirstie Kelly, and the company is in final negotiations with a major retailer to launch Disney Jeans in the United States, probably by fall 2008.

Disney Jeans was first launched in 2005 in France, Italy, Spain and Eastern Europe. The line, designed for kids and teens, also is sold in Mexico, Japan and China.

"I think that the private-label arena in denim wasn't as developed overseas as it was here in the United States," Fielding said. "So the market for Disney noncharacter jeans was just more apparent in the European market than it has been in the United States."

Fielding said the company also is looking to launch a sporting line in 2008 in Europe for kids, which will have a combination of character and noncharacter branding.

"When you look at the corporate structure, it's a natural extension for Disney to look to other avenues of growth beyond characters," said Tony Lisanti, editor-and-chief of License! Global magazine.

"Their character business has been so strong for so many years. As their consumers . . . continue to get older, this creates pockets of new markets" for the company, he said.
 
Didn't the "camel" get in trouble for marketing to kids. The "Rat' wine, IMHO, is not a very smart idea for a fa,mily oriented company.
 
Didn't the "camel" get in trouble for marketing to kids. The "Rat' wine, IMHO, is not a very smart idea for a fa,mily oriented company.

interesting perspective. Not being a parent I didn't think about that. I couldn't get past the cold reference to "the non character segment."

This is how it read to me:

"If we truly want to double the business again

ZZZZZ :surfweb: ZZZZ. . . which is what our goal is in the next five years, we need to branch into different parts of the market that we're currently not . . . in, and that's w ZZZZZZ :coffee: ZZZZZ here noncharacter" comes into play, Fielding said. ZZZz "cheep cheep cheep" *snore*


Stupid corporate speak.

Thanks to Jimmy Norton for the hacked off bit...
 
My mom has children(duh) she says:


"Yes, but the camel had nothing else to offer except cigarettes. Mickey's wine is just a drop-in-the-pail of all the other products offered - and most of them ARE for children.

Now, if they print a wine bottle on a t-shirt in children's sizes, I'd change my opinion."
 

Hmm...not sure of my opinion on this. I guess as long as it's not really advertised as Disney wine or Ratatouille (sp) wine, it shouldn't really matter.


On a side note, I had no idea that Disney had Drexel Heritage furniture. I just looked at it & it's really nice. But, is there anything that really says "Disney" on it? Any hidden Mickey's or stuff that makes it clearly Disney furniture? If not, and the wine is marketed in a similar way, then I don't think anyone would necessarily know it's Disney unless they are crazy Dis obsessed (yes, I'm talking about you!:rotfl: ) people.
 













Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE














DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Back
Top