Lego CEO wants to combine apps with blocks
THE MAN running Lego A/S wants to merge the toy maker鈥檚 iconic building blocks with digital gadgets to help revive a slump in sales.
鈥淲e see this as a way of keeping children interested for a longer time, also for later age groups,鈥 Chief Executive Officer Niels B. Christiansen said in an interview. 鈥淲e are doing a lot in this area and we want to do more.鈥
Christiansen, who became CEO in October, is trying to keep Lego relevant to a generation of children whose obsession with screens has left physical toys less popular. Lego has so far had mixed results with its digital forays. While the 2014 The Lego Movie and some of the company鈥檚 video games were successful, its big 2010 bet on an online multiplayer computer game, Lego Universe, was a flop.
Christiansen says the basic building block will still be the focus as Lego designs new products. He pointed to 鈥淟ego Boost鈥 (allows children to build their own toys and then program them to move using a smartphone app) as an example of what he wants to see more of.
鈥淲e need to get Lego focused on the right things,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e must have strong and innovative products.鈥
Christiansen took over just as Europe鈥檚 biggest toy maker hit a wall, ending a decade-long streak of surging revenue and profits. From 2010 to 2015 alone, sales more than doubled as then-CEO Jorgen Vig Knudstorp returned record profits to the owners, the billionaire Kirk Kristiansen family.
But growth took place at what the Danish company has called a 鈥渟upernatural鈥 pace and the organization simply got too big. In 2017, sales and profit slumped as Lego had to reduce inventories that were based on excessively optimistic forecasts. It cut 1,400 jobs, about 8% of its work force.
Christiansen says the cleanup is now over, with sales expected to start growing again next year.
鈥淩ight now we鈥檙e focusing on a few priorities and using our new organizational structure to move more decisions out closer to consumers and to the market,鈥 the CEO said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 obvious that we win in the long run by being the most creative.鈥 — Bloomberg


