
February 17-20! Presidential Savings! 20% off a purchase of $40 or more. Enter code 97372 at checkout.
Squaredy Cats – 2 for $20 or $12 each! Enter code 97359 at checkout. (While quantities last.)
Build-A-Bear is the perfect way to forever have the cuddly friend you want and helped design. No need to buy something at the store when for the same price you can get exactly what you want. Great discounts for the Month of February and extra savings on Presidents Day Weekend Sales with Extra Promo Codes and Discounts.
More about Build-A-Bear:
Our Goal
At the headquarters of Build-A-Bear Workshop®, our mission is to have the Teddy Bear come to life. An American icon, the Teddy Bear brings to mind happy thoughts about our childhood, about friendship, about trust and desires, and also about love. Build-A-Bear Workshop emcapsulates those thoughts in how we run our business everyday.
With a track record that combines keen intuition and business savvy, Maxine Clark founded build a bear with the desire to let people have the bear of their dreams.
Bearemy®, our lovable mascot, was born on August 21st, 1998 in St. Louis, Missouri. When he came to us we knew he was a beary special friend. Now you can have your very own special friend too.
Awards
Build-A-Bear Workshop®! has been recognized and honored with many awards.
The Good Housekeeping Seal, introduced in 1909 is earned by products that pass Good Housekeeping Institute review and is America’s most trusted consumer icon. It is the foremost symbol of quality assurance and consumer protection in America. Seal-backed products are covered by Good Housekeeping’s two-year money-back warranty. More…
Our Books:
The Bear Necessities of Business: Building a Company with Heart
Ever say “why didn’t I think of that” or “how do I have that much fun at work?” In her first ever business book, Maxine Clark, Founder and Chief Executive Bear reveals how she built this furbulously successful business from the ground up! Filled with lots of insights and practical advice, The Bear Necessities of Business shows you how to run a great company with heart and profits, no matter what your business. Maxine will donate 100 percent of her proceeds from the sale of this book to the Build-A-Bear Workshop Bear Hugs Foundation to help worthy causes important to Build-A-Bear Workshop Guests..
Build-A-Bear is a nine-year old company with annual revenues of $360 million, and a market capitalization of $570 million. Their business model seems simple enough: have retail outlets where kids (of all ages) can go and build their own stuffed animals. They’re not the first company to do this, but they’re certainly the most successful. Ms. Clark attempts to explain the reasons for this success and her philosophy of business in her new book, The Bear Necessities of Business, Building a Company with Heart, cowritten with Amy Joyner.
The Bear Necessities of Business by Maxine Clark and Amy JoynerI will suggest that if you’re interested in books that are strictly related to outsourcing or offshoring, you should look elsewhere. Ms. Clark briefly mentions using outside experts for part of her business by explaining her purpose for doing so in the context of “Know what you don’t know.” If you don’t know the details of some facet of business, ask an expert. And if your business is too small to have such an expert on staff, hire an outsider to help.
Even when your company gets to scale that might make having the experts on staff, it may still make sense to contract the work out to others. Doing so allows you to focus on your company’s core competencies and not get distracted by issues only tangentially related to your core business.
In one example at Build-A-Bear, they need find store locations suitable for their market, and with over 200 stores currently, they certainly have the scale where having such expertise on staff could make sense. Instead, they continue to rely on the firm that helped them find locations currently in use. That firm can remain focused on real estate, and Build-A-Bear can remain focused on delighting its customers.
If it’s not an outsourcing book, then what can you (whether you’re in a client organization or with a service provider) hope to learn from the experiences of a company that convinces 10-year old girls, their friends and their families to spend money for the right to perform the final assembly phase of a stuffed bear manufacturing business? Actually, quite a bit.
Granted, unless you’re a university, you’re not going to get many people to pay you for the privilege of writing computer programs for you. The business model is not the only reason Build-A-Bear has been successful. If it were, then I would be reviewing a book by the founder of the business that tried this before Maxine Clark.
Instead, I’m reviewing her inspirational/aspirational book on business, with examples coming from her experiences in the retail industry, including 20 years at The May Company and as President at Payless ShoeSource before starting Build-A-Bear.
At times, it seems a bit too cute for a business book, but it helps explain why she is so successful at connecting with her core market of young girls. Ms. Clark even sees treating customers like kids as an important trait any business should follow. “But being a kid also means having few responsibilities, not needing to worry about things, and knowing someone else is around to take care of you. Aren’t those the same traits that customers demand of the companies they frequent?”
She covers the full cycle of starting a business, from thinking about what sort of business you want to create, to getting funding, building a team, finding and keeping customers and growing your business. The examples come from her own business, and from those of companies she admires.
In keeping with the inspirational nature of the book, she drops little sayings throughout to summarize the points covered in each section:
Tending to the little (big) things that others may overlook will help you to soar above the competition.
You can’t expect someone else to do a job well unless you’re willing to do it yourself.
Current customers are your number-one source of potential new products.
Take time to paws for thought.
Maxine Clark didn’t spend years as an executive just to learn that she could make customers happy by giving away free stickers. She also learned that a business has less glittery aspects that must be tended to in order to succeed. She talks about getting business interruption insurance, keeping inventory in check, thinking about packaging, marketing and the appropriate use of technology.
As a consultant, I found the chapters on finding, impressing and keeping customers to be good reminders of what it takes to remain successful in any enterprise where non-objective factors may help determine who gets the business. If your company makes it enjoyable for customers to use you, they will do so, and often pay more for the privilege.
You may not be as fortunate as Tom Sawyer in getting customers to pay for the chance to paint your fence. And who would have thought that kids would pay to work in a factory? Maxine Clark did, so it may do you some good to read her book.