Posted: 22 February 2008 at 3:20pm | IP Logged | 9
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"The whole notion of "supposed to be monthly" is outdated. If a book does not come out monthly then there is no expense. No one looks at hypothetical sales and profits. They look at ACTUAL profits and loss. So if we get a comic that comes out 6 times a year as long as it brings in a profit then the publishers are happy."
First of all, every part of the business from publisher to distributor to retailer needs to pay their expenses every month. The profit margins for retailers are very slim.
And hypotheticals do enter into it. In the real world, goals are set for annual earnings and executives are expected to meet them. However "hypothetical" those goals may be.
In real terms, a publisher that produces periodicals will project earnings based on the number of books, what they sell and how often they're published. The bean counters going over DC and Marvel's books don't just look at how many copies of each issue Ultimates sell. Somewhere, some executive is looking at Marvel's books going "Ultimate Shtick sells 100 thousand copies and is supposed to be monthly, but it's been published only 3 times the last year. That's a loss of 900 thousand sales." And that's what we're talking about. Not 300 thousand sold, but a loss of 900 thousand sales.
The regular monthlies are the backbone of the industry. They may not be the top sellers, but they're what keeps the customers coming in every week when their favorite comics are so delayed they may as well wait for the trade (in which case it's easier to put in a pre-order at Amazon than it is to take that fruitless trip to your LCS every week or month.)
The dichotomy isn't here between fantastic sellers that come out every 3 or 4 months versus substitutes that barely scrape by. It's well known in publishing elsewhere in the world that if you alternate between top talent and dependable workhorses at decent intervals in a periodical, you can sustain the sales BETWEEN top talent at a level only slightly below what the top talent can guarantee but well above what the less popular talent can bring in on their own.
That is, as long as the periodical is published on time in intervals no longer than, say, a month. (Weeklies can get by for more issues with average talent, for instance).
Regular publication is good for the industry. If one team can't produce monthly, scheduled fill ins gives the fans something that month to tide them over and it's "jobs for the boys". Win-win.
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