| The boys have worn their trains to the
park, the beach, the grocery store, even the hospital.
|
Anthony was celebrating his fourth birthday; his mom, Hope Monkewicz,
could draw; his dad, Martin, was sales manager of a corrugated box
company. Three unrelated facts resulted in the birth of Box
Train Express (ToyShow),
a pretend-play toy
company.
When Hope decided to create trains for her son’s party she went to
Martin. “I just asked him to bring home a few boxes, but you can’t
believe the detail even in those first trains.”
Hope was expecting just a few spare boxes
but, knowing what she had planned, Martin decided to make them more
“train-like” by using cutting equipment at work. “He brought them
home arched in the front, with wheels cut out. They were very detailed.”
Each box featured an engine, railroad car or caboose hand-drawn by
Hope. Without a top or bottom, the boxes could be “worn” by a child
holding it at his or her waist. Parents pleaded to take trains home but
after three weeks of drawing, Hope wasn’t ready to part with them —
neither were Anthony and little brother Spencer.
Monkewicz, who had worked in banking for 14 years before becoming a
stay-at-home mom, couldn’t forget everyone’s enthusiasm. In July she
began designing 11 different train cars, including a steam engine, two
boxcars and a caboose. In October, her new company, Box Train
Express, released its first Creative Playset,
which included a blue steam engine, two box cars and a caboose kit,
available in blue, and the Coloring Playset, a black
and white version, that allows children to color, decorate and
personalize their own train. Each kit includes four corrugated boxes,
18” x 12” x 8” tall. The entire kit, including its carrying case, weighs
only 4 lbs. and each car folds flat after play, making them easy to
“store in the box under a bed at Grandma’s house or tuck under your arm
when the kids get tired at the park,” said Monkewicz.

The Monkewicz family can speak from experience about the portability
of Box Train Express cars. The boys have worn their trains to the park,
the beach, the grocery store, even the hospital during Anthony’s
treatment for recent medical problems. Box Train Express is truly a
family business: Hope designed the various steam engines to each
resemble a different member of her family. The Monkewicz boys help with
the word-of-mouth marketing. “We didn’t think they actually understood
the idea of the business until we realized that when someone comments on
their train the boys answer, ‘www.boxtrainexpress.com.’”

When designing her trains, Monkewicz used fellow parents and their
children as her critics. Luckily, when it came to business planning she
could turn to Jakki Liberman, a neighbor and founder of Bumkins
Finer Baby Products. “I didn’t have any guidance and just
bumped along, which is why I have a soft spot for mom-entrepreneurs,”
said Liberman. “One good product can’t necessarily support a whole
company, so product expansion potential is important.”
Monkewicz seems to agree. In Spring of 2006 the company will be
releasing two new Creative Playsets: a green
Steam Engine and a pink Princess Train
with black-and-white versions for coloring. Future train cars include a
red steam engine, two yellow coach cars, two Princess Trains in
purple and blue, and black-and-white
versions. They won’t be limiting themselves strictly to trains
either; other vehicles such as school buses, dump trucks and fire trucks
are also in development.
The following is more information on products offered by Box Train
Express: