I wasn’t saying you personally wanted cheap digital; my argument is in the fact that you think cheap digital or even cheap print will find this huge new audience. My point is I don’t think at any price there is this huge audience of new readers out there. I pray and hope there is, but I have seen nothing to indicate there is. I’m just saying price isn’t the main issue hurting the comic industry. I don’t think the current prices help, but I’m not sure lower prices are the answer. Even at $0.25 a copy do you think 200,000-500,000 people would magically start buying comics? I don’t! I think there are other problems with comics, some in the industry some outside the industry.BobBretall wrote: I have ZERO desire to buy digital comics so this is definitely not a case of the way I wish things would be.
This is just the way I think they NEED to be to increase sales and capture new market share.
It's the businessmen sitting at the table doggedly sticking to the untenable $2.99 price point (for digital) that are going to ride the comics business into the ground like Slim Pickins on that bomb at the end of Dr. Strangelove......
It's not my job to make a business case to the comics execs. All I'm doing is observing the tendency of people to not spend non-trivial amounts of money on stuff they do not REALLY REALLY want.
Like it or not, comics are not things most people REALLY REALLY want.
They can keep catering to an ever-shrinking niche market with high prices because that audience is already hooked (but, as you observed, people leave every month, so it's shrinking) or try something to win over a new market.
Maybe there are other ways to get a lot of new people to buy digital comics besides attractive pricing, I don't know what they are. We'll see.
To start with I’m not sure how many people want to read anything and any cost. It is a sad state of affairs that so many Americans simply don’t read. Particularly young people, since I don’t assume you think people 45+ are going to start reading comics the assumption has to be that young people will. I volunteer a couple days a week in my local library, the books are free there. And I’m in an upper-middle class part of the city, people don’t read. About 60% of the items checked out are media (DVD’s, Music CDs or books on CD), another 25% are children’s picture books that parents or nannies read to small children, that leaves the adult and young adult book circulation rate at less than 20%. Most of those books that are checked out are checked out by one of two groups I see most often women over 40 and men over 55 neither a huge potential audience for superhero comics. One could also argue that kids are not aware of the library, but that isn’t true either. We have a large number of kids in the library every day, what do they do? Most of them take advantage of our free Wi-Fi and internet terminals. I have talked to them; do you think they are looking up articles, doing research on line? No, they mostly check social media sites, chat and play games. This is not a problem in the comic industry it just seems to be the way it is in our society.
Secondly, even if books were cheap digitally how would people outside the comics’ community know this? The industry does almost no advertising outside the existing community. I don’t blame them, advertising is expensive and I don’t know what the reward on advertising dollars would be. Even this announcement and other big news in the recent past the industry hasn’t advertised, it’s hoped a big media outlet would run with a press-release on a slow new day. Hoping to get a blurb on CNN or in a newspaper is hardly an advertising strategy. It’s the old if a tree falls and no one is there to hear it situation.
Again I hope I’m wrong, I just don’t see these new readers coming out of thin air to buy comics digital or print at any price. Think back to when you started reading comics, did you make an informed economic choice or was it something else that brought you in. Very few of us started reading at an older age; we might have come back at an older age but didn’t start there. A rational economic choice isn’t what brought any of us in, and it won’t bring in anyone else either.