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Lego Play Book Waterstones

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In stock & available to buy nowRelaxation For Dummies (Book & CD) can be found at 3 stockists and is available and in stock. We check millions of product prices at stores every day to find and compare the best live prices available, so you can get the very best price when shopping. We track all the price movements including price increases and price drops so we can alert you as soon as the item is at the best price. Price movements, price drops and discounts are pretty common and can lead to big discounts and savings.The cheapest and best price for Relaxation For Dummies (Book & CD) is available for £8.76 at Amazon.co.uk. The saving between the cheapest and the most expensive store is £8.23 which is 48%!Relaxation For Dummies (Book & CD) is in the Mind, Body, Spirit Books, Books category.Product prices are accurate as of the date indicated and are subject to change. Product and price data is supplied directly from the store. HotBot makes no guarantees on the accuracy of product and price data.




The price displayed on the store website at the time of purchase will apply when you buy the product.Product features CategoriesBooksMind, Body, Spirit BooksDimentionsHeight: 9.2 inch Length: 7.4 inch Weight: 0.7 kg Width: 0.8 inch Edition Pap/Com LanguagesEnglishManufacturer John Wiley & Sons Number Of Items 1 Number Of Pages 398 Package DimentionsHeight: 1.0 inch Length: 9.1 inch Weight: 0.8 kg Width: 7.3 inch Package Quantity 1 Release Date December 30, 2011 Photos of Relaxation For Dummies (Book & CD) Looking for who stocks Relaxation For Dummies (Book & CD) in the UK?We search online to find and compare the cheapest prices, all the available UK stockists and check who has your item in stock now ready for you to make your purchase. By comparing hundreds of stores daily we make sure we have the best comparison to make your life easier to ultimately find you the best prices and save you the most money!Stockists of Relaxation For Dummies (Book & CD) are listed below and the best live prices available can be found above.




Amazon.co.ukeBayWaterstones £8.29 £8.35 £74.99 £109.00 £8.29 £11.40 £8.75 £9.80In an age of iPads and wi-fi enabled cuddly toys, the humble Lego brick has not only endured, it has survived and thrived against all odds. The number one toy among children, the colourful building bricks also have a devoted following among adults. Self-proclaimed Lego artist Nathan Sawaya painstakingly recreated Michelangelo’s David from 16,349 bricks for his recent exhibition The Art Of The Brick, while a lifesize model of Santa Claus and his sleigh, complete with nine reindeer, has been put together in Covent Garden with 700,000 bricks by Lego building firm Bright Bricks. Psychologists suggest the idea of a Lego “cult” is in no way exaggerated. These small colourful blocks appeal to almost every individual, of any age, attracted by the idea of building things. And the appeal lies partly in the fact that the potential to build something is never-ending. A professor of mathematics calculated that there are more than 915m ways to combine six eight-stud Lego bricks.




“Lego is a lot more than a toy – it’s a creative expression. We see a lot of adults hugely engaged with it. With Lego you can make the most amazing things — things you’d never imagine,” says Jorgen Vig Knudstorp, 46, at the opening of Lego’s new London office off Chancery Lane. “And people continue to surprise us with their creations, especially if you think that the brick has been around for more than 50 years.” When Danish carpenter Ole Kirk Christiansen made the first interlocking brick in 1949, he took the name from the first two letters of the Danish phrase leg godt, meaning “play well”. Lego’s knobbly plastic bricks and yellow figures are now known all over the world. The business has stayed in the family, based in Billund, Denmark, a village with a population of 10,000. About 4,000 Lego staff are based there and at the first Legoland theme park. Knudstorp, who has been Lego’s chief executive for 10 years and was the first person outside the Kristiansen family to run the company, says: “People just love to make things.




It’s deep in every human being.” Jorgen Vig Knudstorp at the opening of the new Lego office in London But things haven’t always been so clear cut. A decade ago, the business almost went under amid competition from hi-tech gadgets and fears people no longer wanted to play with plastic building bricks. Lego faced competition from Mega Bloks, a Canadian company that exploited the expiry of Lego’s patents in the mid-1990s, and had also made unsuccessful and costly forays into children’s clothing, jewellery and computer games. The Danish company reported record losses of 1.6bn Danish kroner (£144m) in 2003 and breached covenants with its bankers. Private equity groups circled and there was speculation Lego would be gobbled up by rival toy giant Mattel. Knudstorp, a former management consultant at McKinsey, was brought in to rescue the company. After writing up a “back to basics” plan, he set in motion the biggest corporate turnaround in recent history. He shed products which were performing inadequately and cut costs dramatically.




His radical approach paid off. After 10 years of growth, Lego announced record results for 2013. Profits before tax were 8.2bn Danish kroner (£800m) and revenues had quadrupled over the past decade. This year, there are signs that record will be broken again after net profit rose by 14pc to 2.7bn kroner, and Lego overtook Mattel to become the world’s largest toy manufacturer. Lego creations are now a work of art In 2012, 45.7bn Lego bricks were produced at a rate of 5.2m per hour. Lego says that on average, every person in the world owns 94 Lego bricks. Tie-ins with a Lego film, Star Wars and Harry Potter have helped Lego connect with a new generation of young builders, although the company does not make it a part of company strategy. “We’ve learnt the hard way. The Lego film is very successful and there’s more to come there but we only have a partial ownership in that movie. If people want to create theme parks, books or video games, it’s great because it’s a way to embed the child even more in Lego but we don’t consider them new growth avenues for the company.




We will focus on the brick and bringing it to more and more children,” says Knudstorp. The Lego Movie has been a huge hit He adds that traditionally mothers and grandparents buy toys, but that in the case of Lego, fathers also get involved. However, questions about gender representation have arisen recently, with Lego at the centre of a furore over its portrayal of women. The company was criticised for its Lego Friends play set, which critics said reinforced stereotypes with its pink and purple building blocks and explicitly girly themes. Earlier this year, seven-year-old Charlotte Benjamin’s strongly-worded letter to the company criticising the lack of strong female characters went viral. When Lego released a range of women scientists this summer, they sold out, although Knudstorp says the move wasn’t to mollify feminist critics. “Since the 1950s, Lego has been equally for boys and girls. There’s no reason boys and girls shouldn’t be building the same things. It’s a horrible thing to say this is a boy’s toy, this is a girl’s.




We try to make a great creative toy and then we have some themes more targeted towards the typical girl or boy.” He adds that the female scientist range came about because an adult Lego female fan, who happened to be a scientist, thought it would be fun to make a set that displays her daily work life. It became a hit when she put the idea forward on the Lego Ideas Platform, which allows people to propose ideas to the company, and if successful they get 1pc of the revenue in return. The Lego sleigh in London's Covent Garden Asked whether there is any truth in the statistic that Lego buys its plastic for less than $1 a kilogram and turns it into bricks that sell for more than $75 a kilogram, Knudstorp says it’s not a relevant distinction. “When I pay for a newspaper, I pay for what is written on it. When you buy plastics from Lego, you’re not buying kilos of plastic – you’re buying a wonderful play experience.” Lego is now on a push to expand overseas. It has opened offices in Malaysia and Turkey and is expanding rapidly in China.

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