Dragonblade
Adventurer
Interesting post by Goodman. I had a discussion with the chaps who run my FLGS last night when I picked up the Eberron Player's Guide and the Fiery Dragon 4e Battlebox. Yes, I'm a 4e fan. I have come to loathe 3e completely from a rules standpoint. However, I have no problem with Paizo as a company and respect what they are doing with the OGL. I wanted to say that so all my bias' are perfectly clear. 
This discussion occurred before I ever read this thread or Goodman's comments. But basically I asked the managers of my FLGS point blank whether 4e was selling well, and he said it was selling fantastically well even despite the economy. He said they had a great year last year when 4e came out, and it has been selling steadily since then. He credited a lot of that success to WotC's business model of only releasing one major book a month which makes it easy for people to simply buy each new book as it comes out.
I then asked him about Paizo. He did not have very kind words for Paizo. In his opinion Paizo has done everything possible to drive traffic and sales to their own website, and away from hobby retailers.
He currently stocks the Adventure Path books, but they don't really sell. He attributes that to most fans buying direct from Paizo. He is strongly considering dropping the whole line.
He also has no incentive to steer new gamers to Paizo. If they become fans, then they start taking their business to Paizo.com instead of his shop. He doesn't make a lot of money running a game shop and every loss hurts.
So, while they certainly don't pressure customers not to buy Paizo stuff, or disparage them, a sale is a sale after all, they will definitely steer the newbies to WotC and 4e if they come in without a clue as to what to buy.
Paizo's last chance to redeem themselves in his eyes is the release of the Pathfinder core rulebook. They will stock a few and see what happens, but unless it flies off the shelves and Paizo products become steady sellers, they will drop Paizo completely and only get Paizo products if a customer wants to place a special order.

This discussion occurred before I ever read this thread or Goodman's comments. But basically I asked the managers of my FLGS point blank whether 4e was selling well, and he said it was selling fantastically well even despite the economy. He said they had a great year last year when 4e came out, and it has been selling steadily since then. He credited a lot of that success to WotC's business model of only releasing one major book a month which makes it easy for people to simply buy each new book as it comes out.
I then asked him about Paizo. He did not have very kind words for Paizo. In his opinion Paizo has done everything possible to drive traffic and sales to their own website, and away from hobby retailers.
He currently stocks the Adventure Path books, but they don't really sell. He attributes that to most fans buying direct from Paizo. He is strongly considering dropping the whole line.
He also has no incentive to steer new gamers to Paizo. If they become fans, then they start taking their business to Paizo.com instead of his shop. He doesn't make a lot of money running a game shop and every loss hurts.
So, while they certainly don't pressure customers not to buy Paizo stuff, or disparage them, a sale is a sale after all, they will definitely steer the newbies to WotC and 4e if they come in without a clue as to what to buy.
Paizo's last chance to redeem themselves in his eyes is the release of the Pathfinder core rulebook. They will stock a few and see what happens, but unless it flies off the shelves and Paizo products become steady sellers, they will drop Paizo completely and only get Paizo products if a customer wants to place a special order.
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