Interesting. So he was with Olmec? Olmec was one of the earliest "black-owned doll manufacturers in the US to provide ethnic variety in a fashion/glamour doll (circa 1991-1994). Hamilton Toys was another one at the time. Olmec was a toy company that was founded, also, by an African American mother (like Helena ), her name was Yla Eason, who had a hard time finding "positive-image" toys for her son, named Menelik. I didn't know Olmec had operations out of Richmond. According to an 1993 Dolls magazine article, offices were located in the toy district of Manhattan (of course, there can be a difference in location for operations and corporate offices). Some of you may remember the names of the Olmec dolls and the ethnicities they represented were Lisa/Consuelo, Naomi, Ellisse, Imani and Menelik, the Hip Hop Kids anda line of action figures called the Brown Bombers.
Thanks, Robin for getting that Dun & Bradstreet info. Regards, Pat Brown
----- Original Message ----- From: Robin To: candichat@dolls.de Sent: Monday, January 28, 2002 12:19 PM Subject: Re: Integrity playline in stores - reply
Hi all, just some extra, probably pointless, info.
Integrity, according to the D&B Database, is not a public company: There database reports the following: Company Name(s): Integrity Toys, Inc Street Address: 39 Jewett Ave 2 City: Jersey City State/Province: NJ ZIP Code: 07304 County: Hudson Phone Number: (201) 434-3760 Sales: $1,000,000 U.S Employees Here: 7 Location Type: Single Location Line Of Business: MFG TOYS, DOLLS, EXCEPT STUFFED TOY ANIMALS CEO: Mr Percy Newsum, President Executive Biographies: PERCY NEWSUM YEAR OF BIRTH: 1957 |BUSINESS OWNERSHIP: Started this business 1995 INDUSTRY EXPERIENCE: Empoyed with Olmeck Toys Inc, Richmond, VA as Vice President of Operations OCCUPATIONAL BACKGROUND: Plant Manager of Berbice Mining Co, Guyana.
Robin
Pat Brown nqsqurtz@staffnet.com wrote:
I don't think Integrity is public, either. It's just as well it's not because then there are all the headaches of catering to stockholders.
It appears to me that Integrity is the like the Little Toy Company That Could...could give Mattel a run for its shelf space. It'll take awhile, but I'm so one hundred percent positive of the artistic vision that Jason provides the fashion doll line, that I would put money on the upcoming lines attracting interest beyond independent dealers. As long as Integrity sticks with its steady-as-you-go approach to marketing its fashion doll line and supporting Jason's creativity, I think that within 7 years Integrity's higher-end fashion dolls will be readily available at all TRUs. I'm not sure Walmart will ever get with Integrity because Walmart affiliates itself with companies that can sell in gargantuan volume. Mattel can do that. I wouldn't know or splls > consistently sell out that the numbers the buyers order will increase. Of > course, I'm sure that economic factors effect the money the chains may budget > towards a certain manufacturer. I'm not privy to the inside information a > buyer for a large chain is working with. > > Perhaps talking to a manager of a store you frequent in your area with a > small representation of the dolls requesting more variety would be > appropriate. This could be followed up with a letter to corporate > headquarters with the same request. If enough requests are received, the > company may respond with increased selection. I'm sure Integrity would be > happy to increase their sales, LOL! >
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