Looking forward
During the coming year, CandyRific expects to continue its strategies of lowering its price points and adding different platforms. Many of the company’s newer items will hit price points below $5 that it hasn’t typically offered in the past, Cameron states.
“That’s the strategy and what we have planned to do for the next 12 months,” he says. “You have Target and Walmart and Five Below, who all have $1, $3, $5 front-end type of stuff. Looking to play in all those price points is a strategy we’re implementing. We’re halfway through that implementation.”
During the fourth quarter of 2024, CandyRific will launch a Stitch Paw Patrol “sticker stamper” that includes a hand-held stamper, a roll of stickers, and candy in the handle, Cameron notes. The company also has picked up the license for Gabby of “Gabby’s Dollhouse” and will be rolling out a mini-backpack, bracelet and fan in Q4.
Gummi Pop Surprise believes that current trends around interactivity, creating your own flavors, social media influencing and modest price points will continue, Elliott says. “With all of these things, it seems like we were correct in our assumptions,” he says. “We’re putting additional interactive elements inside the packages now. We’re going to double down and say, ‘Let’s give them more.’”
The price points in the toy aisle itself have dramatically increased over the past five years, Elliott notes. “You cannot walk into the toy aisle and buy a small, collectible toy for under $5 these days—$5 is entry-level,” he observes. “A lot of those things are $7.99, or $10. As toy retail prices have gone up, the candy-plus-toy collectibles are becoming more attractive. … [Consumers] can’t get that same value in the toy aisle anymore. It helps consumers, and it’s a good thing for novelty candy if you can stay in that price range.”