![]() |
Industry Rant
This has been touched on in various threads in the past but still a good read.
http://www.theouthousers.com/index.p...-industry.html |
Re: Industry Rant
Interesting idea that new comic buyers dwindled after stores like 7-11 no longer carried comics.
That was a great way for kids to get introduced to comics. It's been gone for over 20 years. (Almost 30, really.) The marketing of comic books has been awful over the last two decades, and the writers and editors have let their egos go unchecked as they constantly tried to reinvent the wheel. After a certain point, with sales dwindling year by year, they felt that they had to top themselves and change everything for shock value in hopes that more people would buy these comics with the shocking changes. With continuity out the window, marketing in the toilet, and many storylines (and a lot of artwork) flat out sucking, no wonder Comic Books are an endangered species. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by mrhan
(Post 12886727)
This has been touched on in various threads in the past but still a good read.
http://www.theouthousers.com/index.p...-industry.html Firstly, newstand distribution declined because stores didn't want to carry comic books and distributors didn't want to deal with them. They were low-margin items and took up too much space in the store and effort on the distributors' end to justify their sale in grocery stores and the like. Secondly, the direct market probably saved comics in the 80s. Selling directly to hobby shops at a steep discount instead of eating returns for a better discount benefitted the publishers. You also saw the rise of alternative comics (everything from Fantagraphics' Loce and Rockets to Vertigo's Sandman) that probably couldn't have happened with newstand sales. Thirdly, newstand sales are not going to be the salvation of the industry. The magazine industry is getting annihilated with poor sales and competition from the internet. And the publishers would be drowning in returns of unsold copies. That is even if stores wanted to carry them. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by Josh-da-man
(Post 12887060)
Firstly, newstand distribution declined because stores didn't want to carry comic books and distributors didn't want to deal with them. They were low-margin items and took up too much space in the store and effort on the distributors' end to justify their sale in grocery stores and the like. Secondly, the direct market probably saved comics in the 80s. Selling directly to hobby shops at a steep discount instead of eating returns for a better discount benefitted the publishers. You also saw the rise of alternative comics (everything from Fantagraphics' Loce and Rockets to Vertigo's Sandman) that probably couldn't have happened with newstand sales. Thirdly, newstand sales are not going to be the salvation of the industry. The magazine industry is getting annihilated with poor sales and competition from the internet. And the publishers would be drowning in returns of unsold copies. That is even if stores wanted to carry them. Kids never see comics. They're going to have to do something more than direct marketing to the tiny number of comic shops left in business. There aren't enough of them to reach very many potential new buyers. And Marvel & DC need to get their act together and put out something more appealing. Rebooting every 5 years and making drastic changes that erase major events of the past isn't helping - it's hurting. No one gets invested in anything (characters, storylines, etc) anymore because they know it isn't going to last. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by B5Erik
(Post 12887082)
They weren't low margin. The margin for magazines (and comics) was usually around 40% (I know, because my store stocked magazines). That's not low margin.
|
Re: Industry Rant
I'll just ramble a bit here since I'm pressed for time but I'll come back to it later.
Comics were lower margin than magazines at the time, and were being phased out. I mean think about all the comics they had to rack and pulp on a weekly basis. Magazines don't care as much since they're like 75% ads and they work on impulse buys and distribution numbers, which is why subscriptions are so cheap. The comics industry also started catering to the direct market, even before the whole writing for the trade thing was a thing. http://www.comicsbeat.com/who-killed...comics-market/ As mentioned at the time this article was written, when the new 52 launched DC did a deal with the not yet dead Barnes and Noble to have a full comics rack. I doubt it made a dent. The article in the OP doesn't touch on price, but comics are not an impulse buy at all anymore, even if they still held the interest of kids. If you're going to pay 4 bucks for a comic, are you buying the one that was bent and broken on the newsstand shelf? Way back when , comics were like magazines, disposable entertainment, which is part of the reason why older comics are so rare... Who cared about keeping them in a slab when you could read them, let your friends read them, cut out the mail order forms, etc? Archie had a sweetheart deal for a long time with the distributor for supermarket checkout space, which is why they stuck around (maybe they still are?) with their digests there. I know I was introduced to a ton of comics via digests back in the day, and that venue is all but gone. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by Josh-da-man
(Post 12887060)
And it's mostly bullshit.
Firstly, newstand distribution declined because stores didn't want to carry comic books and distributors didn't want to deal with them. They were low-margin items and took up too much space in the store and effort on the distributors' end to justify their sale in grocery stores and the like. Secondly, the direct market probably saved comics in the 80s. Selling directly to hobby shops at a steep discount instead of eating returns for a better discount benefitted the publishers. You also saw the rise of alternative comics (everything from Fantagraphics' Loce and Rockets to Vertigo's Sandman) that probably couldn't have happened with newstand sales. Thirdly, newstand sales are not going to be the salvation of the industry. The magazine industry is getting annihilated with poor sales and competition from the internet. And the publishers would be drowning in returns of unsold copies. That is even if stores wanted to carry them. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by majorjoe23
(Post 12887084)
Maybe low margin is the wrong way to describe it, but since comics were $1 to $1.50 at the time, there wasn't much money to be made per comic. Especially since they took up about the same amount of space as magazines like Rolling Stone, which had a higher cover price.
Sure, wire spinner racks are considered evil now, people fanning the tops of the books causing creases and all that, but you could put them anywhere. They took no shelf space because they sat in the middle of the floor. And you could move them. Another consideration is future value. Far less copies survive in high grade condition with newsstand distribution involved. It's flip flopped to NM being the most common rather than the scarcest. Somewhere along the line comics shifted from a mass market item to a strictly hobbyist/enthusiast item. Imagine having to go to a specific store to buy a Snickers bar. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by Josh-da-man
(Post 12887060)
You also saw the rise of alternative comics (everything from Fantagraphics' Loce and Rockets to Vertigo's Sandman) that probably couldn't have happened with newstand sales.
|
Re: Industry Rant
A kid is far less likely to see a comic at 7-11 and drop down $3 to buy than say the $.25 that the comic market was built on. I think skyrocketing prices played far more into their decline than shelf space.
|
Re: Industry Rant
I always thought that the big two should have loss leader anthology books that they market to grocery and convenience stores. A 40 page $1 comic with a variety of family friendly stories (even reprints) of their flagship characters might lose money, but the long-run benefits of reaching those kids might be worth it.
|
Re: Industry Rant
I've said this elsewhere, but price is only part of the problem. A lot of us have anecdotal evidence from buying comics for our kids/nephews/whatever that the kids aren't going to be interested at whatever price.
Walmart does have packs of repackaged comics for cheap: http://www.bleedingcool.com/2016/03/...arley-quinn-1/ They also used to do bundled together reprints: http://www.comicsbeat.com/marvel-ret...arance-prices/ Again I doubt either one made a dent. They're getting the characters out there with the various Marvel cartoons (since Disney has their own set of channels) and movies, and DC is approaching the girls market with Superhero girls (although Harley being included in that seems strange) so that's something. The other issue is that the family friendly stuff is a far cry from their mainstream stuff, so even if you get kids hooked on that, how do you transition them? One last thing about price: when comics were cheap, creators were being routinely screwed over. One reason why reprints will probably never be as cheap as they once were relatively speaking is that creators will have it written into their contracts that they get paid for it, as they should. There's a story where some old school artists were getting upset with McFarlane and his ilk for putting so many details in the art, because a lot of them (not all) drew things as fast as they could. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by Strapped4Cash
(Post 12887243)
I agree with your point, but I feel obligated to note that Sandman was a DC comic for over half of it's run, as Vertigo wasn't established as an imprint until Sandman #47.
Those titles thrived in the direct market where a readership base could be cultivated by the hobby shops, which probably would have never happened if Sandman, Hellblazer, V for Vendetta, and the like were shelved in spinner racks with Superman and Spider-Man. Not to mention the whole "mature readers" thing. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by Josh-da-man
(Post 12887813)
When Vertigo began is irrelevent; lots of stuff was grandfathered into the Vertigo imprint.
Those titles thrived in the direct market where a readership base could be cultivated by the hobby shops, which probably would have never happened if Sandman, Hellblazer, V for Vendetta, and the like were shelved in spinner racks with Superman and Spider-Man. Not to mention the whole "mature readers" thing. Because those two things were soooooo different. We went from DC Comics, which already had "mature readers" and those same books you mention, and others, which had already been "cultivated by the hobby shops" (by that do you mean comic book stores?) for years. DC Comics, where so many things were possible and where people could, and did, sample a myriad of titles in order to find the best that fit them. So we transitioned from that, which already had all the advantages that you mention, to a separatist system all about labels that reinforced people's prejudices and validated discrimination and meant that some readers didn't even try "regular" DC titles that might have appealed to them, while others did the same the other way by avoiding Vertigo's output. I didn't, and still don't, understand the benefit of promoting closed-mindedness, the ghettoization of readership, hipster d-bags, and people using their fandom of one thing as an excuse for smug meritless intellectualism. |
Re: Industry Rant
Stopping newsstand distribution was a business decision that was the right move from a short-term perspective but turned the entire comic book market into a niche product accessible only to hardcore readers. It smacked of a decision made by accountants at the time that had no long-term vision for comic books.
Their presence on newsstands had raised the visibility of comics as a medium to children for decades. The first comics I ever saw as a kid were on spinner racks at local convenience stores. I've always thought DC and Marvel should provide loss-leaders aimed at children under 10 in high-traffic venues. They've tried various versions of this idea in limited experiments over the years. Sell them at $1 as long as you can. I'd also blanket the market with licensed videogames aimed at younger ages. Include comics with them. I bet those LEGO games have introduced more potential readers to Marvel and DC than anything else they've done the past three decades. |
Re: Industry Rant
Comics in drug stores are still a print periodical medium. How are magazines and newspapers doing? The magazine store I worked at in the early 1990s is long gone.
People want television and video games. Sorry, folks, but floppy comics are going the way of the vinyl records. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by Nick Danger
(Post 12889271)
Comics in drug stores are still a print periodical medium. How are magazines and newspapers doing? The magazine store I worked at in the early 1990s is long gone.
People want television and video games. Sorry, folks, but floppy comics are going the way of the vinyl records. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by majorjoe23
(Post 12889279)
If this analogy worked, floppy comics would be the only growth sector of a dying industry,
|
Re: Industry Rant
I don't know how the problem can be solved, but high prices and no real mainstream distribution is certainly keeping a new audience from discovering comics. But I notice that in Japan, comics still sell very well, and when I'm visiting there I still see them being sold in every convenience store and train station kiosk, big fat books with cheap cover prices. Also, tons of genres, appealing to all demographics. I wonder if US publishers could learn something from them?
|
Re: Industry Rant
Japan is a cultural exception that hasn't been polluted by corporate Western media pushing the digital agenda. I don't think anything media related that happens there can be applied to the United States. Western companies in control of entertainment content want to kill off physical media sooner rather than later.
I did come across a Barnes & Noble location this weekend with a fairly healthy selection of various DC comic books and related magazines aimed at kids in the magazine section. It surprised me because this was a more rural location. I did notice that Marvel had an Ultimate Spider-Man thing aimed at children for $3.99 in the section. It wasn't really a comic book per se, it included kid activities and coloring sections in a larger but traditional comic book story format. The actual DC issues looked better with their covers, but how would anyone know since they were completely hidden by the divider except for the comic's title? There was something interesting that caught my eye. Some publisher calling itself Double Take Comics (??) had a whole set of Walking Dead-related comics sold as one bundle alongside the DC issues.. While they didn't interest me, that is something that would interest me with the right material. |
Re: Industry Rant
Some other things about Japan:
The main way of publishing are huge weekly or monthly anthologies printed on very cheap newsprint, and a cutthroat way of managing which titles are in the anthology. Series are carefully manicured by the editors and with their direction artists and their assistants usually kill themselves making deadlines (unless they reach the upper tier of creator, and even then it's not pretty). Polls are taken about the most popular series every installment, and if you dip below the line for consecutive times you'll either change this up or face cancellation. Because of this, the collections are actually reprints of the anthology material, on better paper but a smaller size and in black and white. Japan itself is much smaller in size. Distribution costs are much lower. This is similar to why they can have a much better infrastructure for cell phones than the US. The cost of the anthologies are dirt cheap, and the collections relatively cheap for the size. Here, if an independent publisher wants to make a comic about some niche, the distribution costs for a lower print run are insane and the cover price skyrockets. Japan is also largely a commuter society. I'm not sure about the rest of the US but everyone here drives themselves. Even then I'm sure cell phone games are cutting into manga reading. |
Re: Industry Rant
I've also heard manga artists can barely pay the bills unless they have a breakout hit that morphs into several other mediums like anime. The industry in Japan is much closer to the business model DC and Marvel had back in the 60s and 70s. Pay the creative talent very little and profit off the greater mass sales.
|
Re: Industry Rant
COMIC STORE SALES BLEW THE DOORS OFF IN AUGUST
Up Over 31% vs. Last Year http://icv2.com/articles/markets/vie...ors-off-august Sales to comic stores by Diamond Comic Distributors in North America were up a whopping 31.62% over the same month a year ago in August, the company announced today. With DC’s Rebirth relaunch driving sales, periodical comics were up 44.58%, while graphic novels were up a more modest 5.53%. [...] Diamond noted that it had shipped over 10 million non-promotional comics during August for the first time in nearly 20 years. |
Re: Industry Rant
People buy good comics. Proof.
|
Re: Industry Rant
I feel like a lot of the record sales is ironically what we're complaining about in this thread.
DC seems like the main reason here. Some of that is due to them finally bringing back pre new 52 stuff. Some of it is them relaunching everything with number 1s and making stuff like Batman twice a month. I feel like that's still milking the same audience. Plus these few initial months have a lot of returnability for the DC titles, so retailers are more willing to take a risk, which is good. The encouraging part to me is that Supergirl Rebirth cracked the top 10. That's good considering the new 52 series was cancelled, and perhaps the tv show is actually bringing in readers. |
Re: Industry Rant
I think it's mostly excitement about DC Rebirth. I was seriously contemplating getting back into monthly comics after reading a few of the number ones. I plan to pick up most of the Rebirth trades when they come out.
|
Re: Industry Rant
Brian Hibbs has a rebuttal to the article posted in the OP, from the retailer side. Apparently comic book resources doesn't have columns anymore so he moved to comicsbeat:
http://www.comicsbeat.com/tilting-at...out-nighthawk/ I didn't realize that most DC comics are a full dollar cheaper than the average Marvel title. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by fujishig
(Post 12901381)
Brian Hibbs has a rebuttal to the article posted in the OP, from the retailer side. Apparently comic book resources doesn't have columns anymore so he moved to comicsbeat:
http://www.comicsbeat.com/tilting-at...out-nighthawk/ I didn't realize that most DC comics are a full dollar cheaper than the average Marvel title. |
Re: Industry Rant
|
Re: Industry Rant
If you read a lot of the comments on these articles, a lot of people feel that Marvel is losing people by focusing on side characters and charging four bucks a pop for them. But that is exactly what diversity is, so you don't end up with everything just related to Spider-man and Batman, etc.
That Champions number is insane, though, apparently because of a huge Scholastic order that is no doubt returnable. But if it can interest even a few kids... Heck I ordered it in last month's order. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by mrhan
(Post 12903486)
|
Re: Industry Rant
The question is, how long is it gonna work? I do hope it gives Marvel a wake up call on the price of their books, though. I also think the absence of anything X related has something to do with it too. But we'll see, before new 52 I was the biggest DC fanboy around, and I hope they do great things (or at least well enough that I can get a decent Legion book again).
|
Re: Industry Rant
Marvel is little more than a vanity press now for Disney's movie division. I don't think Disney cares much about Marvel Comic's actual profitability. Throw in and print as many diverse characters as possible, to give the movie division cover when they make the Mandarin something else.
|
Re: Industry Rant
Maybe Marvel & DC should try to get their comics into newsstands, drugstores, & other mainstream stores again. Just to see if it works. If it doesn't then stop it in a year. Maybe not send out the entire selection of monthly books but the books of the most prominent heroes that kids would be familiar with. Probably characters that were featured in films/shows.
Grocery stores would be the idea place to put a spinner. Everyone has to go to grocery stores. Many of the ones around here have a decent magazine section so its not like they couldn't find a spot for some comics. Walmarts would also be ideal. Pretty much everyone goes there. When I was younger, my city had 1 comic store and it was way out of the way. I might convince my family to take a trip there ever 2 months. Thankfully, comics were still everywhere so I could go to the bookstore in the mall (B Dalton I think - remember those?). Even the drug store in my tiny little two carried comics. I really just got Transformers and GIJoe monthly so I could always get issues. There was the boom of comic stores were most malls had one but now a days, we are back to the comic stores being few and far between. In my city, there are a couple but they are not located near the big mall/retail centers. If I relied on getting rides, it would again be an out of the way, once in awhile trip to one. |
Re: Industry Rant
I get the feeling the industry will have to change up its current model as the print side shrinks.
I think we'll see things like trades collecting 3-4 issues much quicker than we get these days. In fact, that may become the floppy of the future. Individual issues may go away. |
Re: Industry Rant
Originally Posted by PhantomStranger
(Post 12907242)
I get the feeling the industry will have to change up its current model as the print side shrinks.
I think we'll see things like trades collecting 3-4 issues much quicker than we get these days. In fact, that may become the floppy of the future. Individual issues may go away. This uptick in 4 issue trades is alarming to a trade waiter like me. I don't know how single issue readers do it. If trades continue to shrink, I will just discontinue buying normal trades and hold out for premium trades like complete collections, deluxe editions, omnibuses, etc. And if the publishers never put out those premium trades, then I'll either read digitally one of these days, or just not read their product at all. |
Re: Industry Rant
Marvel started doing this years ago with the four issue collections, I remember picking up Peter David's X Factor and when I realized this was happening, I stopped cold turkey. And all of their worthwhile stuff gets collected again and again: usually a small hardcover when the run is hot (and you're really dumb if you buy these because they will eventually drop it), softcovers, larger collections, then an omnibus if it's any good. If it's not good or worthwhile, oh well who cares? It's like they've conditioned me to wait and wait and wait, and if you do that, people will move on or lose interest.
As long as they have a devoted fanbase addicted to monthly buying, that will remain the norm because they can milk the fanbase with new number ones and alternate covers and whatever, and despite the complaining the fans will eat it. The fanbase won't grow that way, but the money is still coming in. As far as getting comic racks back in grocery stores... How? Just take a gigantic loss and pay the grocery stores through the nose with full returnability? There are comics in Toys R Us, in Walmarts, etc., and I bet they barely move the needle. |
Re: Industry Rant
DC is changing things up a bit for Rebirth. The trade paperbacks are coming out first before the presumed hardcovers. If you are someone waiting on Rebirth hardcovers, it could be a long time.
All I would ask Marvel and DC to do is place one spinner rack of trades in general retail stores like Walmart and Best Buy. I have no delusion that newsstand distribution is coming back in any form. The exposure alone to new customers is worth it even if the idea isn't completely profitable. Chalk it up as an advertising expense. |
Re: Industry Rant
DC Comics stopped doing newsstand edition for their books on August of last year, so now the big two are officially off the newsstand market.
http://blog.comichron.com/2018/02/en...nd-issues.html Marvel has a digest book on the shelves every quarter but that is being released by Archie Comics. Other than that, both Marvel and DC have tried to sell books in 3-5 packs at places like Wal-Mart, Ollies and Five Below to mixed results. |
Re: Industry Rant
I've been hearing and reading horror stories of many LCS around the US gouging prices on new books that came out today, like Immortal Hulk #15, Naomi #3, Avengers: No Road Home #6 and Venom #12 among others. Many of the stories say that these stores are keeping all the copies of these books behind the counter and selling them $5-$20 over the cover price. And these are the regular covers, not the variants. In an industry that is losing customers, it seems that these jackasses apparently want to lose them quicker for short term profits.
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:34 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.