Mattel Toys Recall Case Study
Mattel Toys Recall Case Study
Mattel Toys Recall Case Study
recall:
On
August
14,
2007,
the
U.S.
Consumer
Product
Safety
Commission
(CPSC)
in
cooperation
with
Mattel
announced
five
different
recalls
of
Mattel's
toys.
On
September
4,
Mattel
announced
three
more
recalls.
Some
were
due
to
the
use
of
lead
paint,
while
others
were
due
to
small
magnets
coming
loose.
On
August
2,
2007,
Mattel's
Fisher-Price
subsidiary
recalled
almost
one
million
Chinese-made
toys,
including
the
famous
cartoon
brands
amongst
kids:Dora
the
Explorer
and
Sesame
Street
toys,
because
of
potential
hazards
from
parts
of
the
toys
which
were
colored
using
lead-based
paint
that
may
have
exceeded
the
US
Federal
limit
of
600
parts
per
million.
Q1.
What
should
the
country
do
to
polish
its
image?
-First,
the
central
government
must
ensure
that
manufacturing
quality
standards
and
health
and
safety
laws
are
tightened
and
enforced
nationwide.
Western
multinationals
have
a
role
to
play
in
ensuring
their
Chinese
subcontractors
deliver
on
quality,
but
Beijing
must
push
provincial
governments
to
upgrade
and
enforce
existing
laws.
-Second,
China
must
move
towards
an
economy
based
on
invention
rather
than
imitation.
Japan
and
Korea
have
made
the
transition.
Brands
like
Sony
and
Samsung
are
now
respected
worldwide.
The
global
aspirations
of
cutting-edge
Chinese
brands
like
Lenovo
and
Haier
suffer
when
the
misbehaviors
of
corrupt
Chinese
businessmen
and
government
officials
drag
China's
image
down.
Pretty
soon,
China
will
be
exporting
cars.
Cars
are
a
benchmark
product
that
consumers
worldwide
will
use
to
assess
Chinese
production
quality
across
the
board.
The
cars
China
exports
better
be
as
good
as
Hyundais
and
Toyotas.
-Mattels
response:
A
series
of
recent
setbacks
threaten
China's
new
and
improving
image.
As
a
result,
China
looks
like
a
country
that
loves
the
world's
markets
but
does
not
play
by
the
world's
rules.
China
is
hardly
alone
in
these
behaviors,
but
its
size
as
the
third
largest
economy
in
the
world
now
commands
attentionand
the
expectation
of
better
behavior.
Not
until
recently
has
China's
government
given
serious
attention
to
the
country's
international
image.
Though
the
number
of
tourists
and
foreign
investors
grows
apace,
there
is
just
not
enough
preexisting
brand
equity
among
the
world's
consumers
to
inoculate
Brand
China
against
the
current
tide
of
negative
publicity.
-Reverse
marketing:
Mattel
has
been
criticized
heavily
for
having
to
recall
not
once
but
twice
in
as
many
weeks
20
million
toys
manufactured
in
China
with
lead
paint
and/or
loose,
potentially
dangerous
magnets.
Clearly
Mattel
did
not
have
sufficiently
tight
quality
control
procedures
in
its
supply
chain
to
compensate
for
the
extra
risks
of
outsourcing
to
relatively
new
Chinese
subcontractors.
Clearly
there
were
design
flaws
in
the
toys
with
the
magnets
that
could
come
loose.
But
Mattel
deserves
praise
for
now
stepping
up
to
its
responsibilities
as
the
leading
brand
in
the
toy
industry.
of the affected products and drive them to the Mattel Web site for more recall information. With this approach, consumers are being empowered to handle the problem themselves rather than clog customer service desks at Mattel's retail outlets, which would strain Mattel's dealer relations and cost the company extra dollars in processing fees. Mattel's recall Web site is a model of excellence. All the affected products are depicted and clear instructions are provided on how to return recalled products (including downloadable application forms and shipping mailers), which suggests strong contingency planning. Where Mattel has fallen short so far is in compensation. Mattel is offering equivalent value coupons good for other Mattel products in exchange for recalled products. Given the inconvenience caused to consumers and the need to motivate them to return the affected products, this offer may not be sufficient. Ultimately, the success of the recall will be determined by the percentage of affected products that are returned. Anything less than 90 percent within 3 months for a child safety hazard will represent failure. As long as the 2 recalls to date are the whole of the problem and not the tip of an iceberg, Mattel's brand reputation should survive. The CEO knows that Mattel's brand trust built up over 62 yearsis at stake, just ahead of the holiday selling season. And with 80 percent of U.S. toys sourced from China, other U.S. toy marketers are under equal scrutiny; if similar problems surface at other companies, Mattel may earn some credit for getting out ahead of the problem. By doing this, may be China will succeed in its effort to rehabilitate its brand.
from opportunistic behavior. So it's a combination of everyone working in a cost-pressure market and others committing acts of fraud. [Actions] are not as well policed as they would be in a more mature economy that is growing at something less than a breakneck pace.