From Deseret News archives:

Costume Craze is dressed for success

Published: Thursday, Oct. 25, 2007 12:07 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
LINDON — The Maloney family had a great entrepreneurial idea: create a software program to help Internet companies have greater sales success.

Who wouldn't want greater success?

CEO Kate Maloney, her mother, Kathleen, and brother, Matthew, all believed in the software so much they formulated a product test to demonstrate the software's advantages — a small online business that sold costumes.

"It started with two-to-three orders a week," Kate said. "Then we had 22 packages in one day. I was so excited, the car trunk was full."

That was in September 2001.

Today, the Maloney's Lindon-based company, Costume Craze, is the world's second largest Internet retailer of costumes and is on the Inc. 500 list. With a current inventory of more than 8,500 costumes, the company ships to nearly every country in the world.

Costume Craze offers theatrical and movie costumes, period clothing, accessories and, of course, Halloween costumes for all sizes of humans and their pets. Prices range from $10-$1,000.

Story continues below
According to Jeff Wiseman, marketing director, Costume Craze averages about 100 costume orders in a normal day. That amount can be handled by the 15 current warehouse employees. However, Halloween is a whole different matter. The warehouse needs about 90 employees to handle the rush.

"Our biggest time is Halloween, " Wiseman said. "In 2006 our highest day was Oct. 23. We had 3,000 new orders and 5,000 packaged (for delivery) that day. UPS trucks were camped out all over."

The sales couldn't be more welcome.

"Every year we've grown and outdo our projections," Wiseman said.

The buyers start ordering in January for Halloween hoping they have caught on to the latest, newest thing. Hollywood is a huge influence on what will be "the costume" that year. Next year's movies will include "Batman" and "Star Trek."

"What's popular is what is in the movies that year," Wiseman said. This year's costume biggies include TV series star Hannah Montana and "High School Musical" costumes, along with Harry Potter, Shrek, Spider-Man and pirates.

Oddly enough, the most-sold costumes are "Ghostbusters" costumes and accessories. These are group favorites. Dorothy, Toto and the original "The Wizard of Oz" gang are also a perennial favorite.

If your pet is looking for a costume, you'll most likely find just what you need online. Wiseman says the most popular costume is the Superman dog.

After Halloween, the next biggest season for costume sales is Christmas.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

Lee Fluharty and Michelle Alas pack costumes to be shipped to customers at the warehouse in Lindon.

previousnext

Latest comments

Twitterati to BCS: 'We hate you.'

No. Mike is not Playoff. I am. Ref: @playoff at 9:37 The reason that I...

Eh!!! Quinn now that explains why you cannot throw the damn ball, he may be a...

Editorial: Poor welcome for Palin

7:59 The rule is that DEMOCRATS will answer EVERYTHING CONS SPEW. If...

Thunder rolls by Jazz

wow looks like Todd and Houdini are really working miles over...again,it`s...

Thunder rolls by Jazz

When you pull his cold dead fingers off of Millers wallet.

Neo Tokyo, the idea that 10,000 people would all live in Centerville but do...

Ex-legislators call for ethics reform

Hmmm. Now that I'm no longer in public office, it would be a good idea for...

Twitterati to BCS: 'We hate you.'

The argument that the BCS creates a more interesting regular season is...

A "beloved holiday tradition"? OK, that just scares me.

Utes need Wide to run wild

Silly Cougar fans. "I don't see a huge upgrade other than Wynn hits a deep...

Advertisements