by kpa » Sat Apr 23, 2011 4:13 pm
The comic book market as a whole is soft these days. The consistent sellers have always been the key Marvel and DC superhero titles, and their numbers aren't anywhere near where they used to be. According to retailer orders for March, only one comic (FF #1) sold over 100,000 copies. Series from the core franchises-- X-Men, Batman, Spider-Man, Avengers-- are selling in the 40,000-70,000 range per issue... so numbers are way down from where they were in the 1990s.
Nearly half the books in March's Top 100 sold less than 30,000 copies, and only 2 or 3 non-Marvel/DC books even managed to break into the Top 100. There's a lot of titles from the smaller publishers that sold less than 10,000 copies last month.
Godzilla comics have never been big sellers so I doubt IDW or most retailers are expecting anything different this time out. IDW's various GI Joe and Transformers titles sell between 5,000-15,000 per issue so selling 59,000 copies of Godzilla #1 was a fluke and they know it. IDW found a clever way to boost sales and create publicity for a new series, and they'll probably be very happy if Godzilla is selling 10,000-15,000 copies per month by issue #5.
Any retailer who has been in the business for a while knows where the market stands and that moving 500 copies of any title isn't likely. If they signed on for the retailer cover campaign for Godzilla #1 they must have felt it was worth doing... even if it was just as a vanity item. I've read that some places did premiere parties for the exclusive, and it could also be used to generate local publicity, get people into the store, sell on ebay, use as display items, etc. My understanding is that some stores were selling the exclusive at a higher price. So there are options beyond immediate sales that could make it worthwhile. Obviously, 75 stores across the country felt so.
All in all, I think IDW's promotion was good for the book. But it will be the quality of the stories + Godzilla's level of popularity with comic book readers that will have lasting impact and determine whether or not the series has longevity.
Last edited by
kpa on Sun Apr 24, 2011 4:30 am, edited 2 times in total.
Keith