by val » April 1st, 2006, 6:45 pm
Did you know there was a production limit? I didn't know. Wani only made 8000 copies total, and when we bumped into Range Murata, he was heading there to sign a couple thousand(!) prints. Based on his comment, Wani must have kept a minimum of 25% for direct pre-sales and then more for sales via their site after its release.
Unfortunately, we only have two copies remaining of the Wani Special. I'm really disappointed to see that they shorted stores in the end because we had actually confirmed before and after our second order that Wani still had lots of unsold stock.
Not surprising that Amazon has stock. I'm sure they have a very big budget that allows them to freely buy as much as they want far in advance of a product's release... Please don't get me wrong. I didn't say all stores are sold out. I said Wani is sold out, so stores won't be able to restock, and many stores did not receive all copies on order. For us, we have zero remaining but I didn't know that until we went to pay for some items today. They didn't even tell us. We had to ask when the other half of our form|code order would arrive, and apparently, it will never arrive.
It is surprising to read that Amazon is charging more for form|code now because it's illegal for a store to manipulate prices on Japanse publications if they store sells on the Japanese market. That's why nearly every import book, JP toy or JP DVD is marked down at Amazon.co.jp, but the Japanese books are always listed at Japanese retail price. According to Japanese law, stores in Japan are not allowed to charge more or less than a book's Japanese retail price. The JP retail price is typically printed on the product (with and without tax) for your protection because stores are not allowed to change it. The rule only applies to products released by a Japanese publisher with a Japanese ISBN. The product must also be purchased by the store via wholesale for sales on the Japanese market. Even Wani is required to sell their own books at exact JP retail if they choose to sell directly to consumers. At most, a store can offer a bonus to be competitive, like point cards, phone cards, free shipping, free bonus item (provided the free item was not produced for resale purposes), etc. Similarly, every single store in Japan pays the same wholesale price, and all distributors make the same profit. It's some strange law with the Japanese book industry that prevents price wars, favortism, etc. Everything must be equal, so if the small shop on the corner orders 2 copies of a book and the big shop on the other corner orders 200 copies of a book, then the small one gets 1 and the big one gets 100 if only 50% of all orders for the one book can be filled. Regardless of demand and supply, the law states the price must not vary from retail.
Anyways, I'm just grumbling because it appears (this is just my opinion) that Wani delayed the release to simply get more direct sales because we saw form|code at the Comiket and it was already complete, pending mass production. Plus, they suddenly shipped it without warning to distributors, and also shorted them without any notice. typical really.
Last edited by
val on April 4th, 2006, 11:43 am, edited 1 time in total.