Killaloeโs Thinking Toys has walked away with the leadership prize from the 2022 Lean Business awards.
The prestigious award show, which took place in Croke Park last month, gave a prize to Thinking Toys for an overall organisational change in their business. The award is a recognition of Thinking Toysโ 18 years in the business of sensory specific products.
The company began in 2004 after its founder รine Conacur realised how few toys were available for her daughter Ailis and other children with special needs. โAilis was born in London with a condition called Sturge-Weber syndrome. Essentially, she had very bad epilepsy and devlopemental delay. Then we moved back to Ireland, and Iโd be buying things from England, America, Europe because I wasnโt able to source things in Ireland for her,โ explained รine.
โWhen she was eight or nine and in school, I was looking for a part time job around school hours and Michael, my husband, whoโs an accountant, said youโre always giving out about lack of resources why donโt you do something about it. I thought thatโs a great idea so thatโs where it started, just as a little number for me and within two years Michael had joined me because we were just flat out,โ she said.
Almost two decades later the business has turned into one of Killaloeโs most successful enterprises with nine people employed in the business including Ailis, now 26, who works part-time with them.
Despite all the time that has passed รine says mainstream toy retailers still donโt cater well for those with special needs. โI donโt think [mainstream retailers] quite grasp it but I suppose itโs two fold really, as a parent starting out youโre bewildered and youโre suddenly hit with a lot of language, โfine motor skillsโ, โgrowth motor skills, โvisual perceptionโ, โsensory perceptionโ, you name it youโre hit with it and it kind of takes you a while to get your head around what that actually means for your child. So, thatโs what I try to do with my website, Iโve tried to set it up so that the parent can easily find out what the child needs. Then the other thing weโve done is getting the pitch right for your child, a lot of kids with special needs will have poor fine motor skills and an OT will continuously tell you to do threading activities. So, you might go into a regular toy shop and find threading activities but they tend to be at the higher end of ability, so what I do is start off at the easiest level of threading and work it step by step so you can move your child along. Thatโs what I think is one of the biggest problems, for our kids you need to break the activity down into easily achievable steps and itโs about having those all in one placeโ.
For รine the most important thing is to meet your child at their pace, โone thing I always say to parents is that you follow your childโs lead, you canโt force your child to do a jigsaw especially if theyโre visual perception skills are weak. What you have to do is make the jigsaw interesting to them, it doesnโt matter if you do all the pieces and they do one piece, thatโs success. Like with Alis when we began with connect four, she was just posting the pieces in, but I was happy because she was having to pick them up and grasp them and then post them. Then I moved her on to doing little patterns like three red, two yellow, three red, two yellow, and see if she could copy that and now youโre sequencing. Then when she was nine or ten because she loved that game and was very comfortable with it I thought her the rules and now sheโs 26 and we call her the connect 4 queen because she will beat you hands down, so with our activities if you can pull them into it you can get longevity out of themโ.
Despite the business growing extensively since its beginnings of selling toys from a physical shop to now supplying parents, schools, and HSE therapists throughout the country online, รine has no plans to take the business out of her native Killaloe, โItโs great [being in Killaloe], I can walk to work everyday thereโs no travel time. After Ailisโ surgery and diagnosis, my family were all back here and I remember I was awake one night, I couldnโt sleep, and then the next morning I said โMick I want to go home but I want to go home to my home, Killaloeโ, he had no say in itโ.