DaveMage
Slumbering in Tsar
Hussar said:These are the guys and gals who participate in Living campaigns, go to tournaments and probably buy considerably more product than most of us.
No one bought more WotC 3.x RPG titles than I did.
Hussar said:These are the guys and gals who participate in Living campaigns, go to tournaments and probably buy considerably more product than most of us.
Mythtify said:I just think that JD's statment that WoTC marketing of 4th edition was a failure is absurd. The point of marketing is to sell your product. WoTC was sold out of 4th edition before it was even for sale in most stores. That, in business, is marketing success.
Imaro said:Huh? I don't understand this. Are you saying WotC sold their entire print run to distributors and that shows how effective their marketing was? Or that said print run has actually sold out so that customers can no longer buy them (which IMHO would be the only example that shows marketing was a success), or something else.
Mythtify said:I just think that JD's statment that WoTC marketing of 4th edition was a failure is absurd.
Tetsubo said:The poll here on EN World shows 39% of responders are not buying 4E. This poll is being taken from the core audience of D&D. The 4E marketing team failed to convince 39% of its core demographic to buy their new product. That is failure on a grand scale. Almost on a New Coke scale.
Of course, as this post demonstrates, people on the internet aren't always going to represent a demographic of people that can even be reached by marketing. There are many reasons to think that the people responding to message board polls are not a group to court.Tetsubo said:In that regard, the 4E marketing team failed miserably. The poll here on EN World shows 39% of responders are not buying 4E. This poll is being taken from the core audience of D&D. The 4E marketing team failed to convince 39% of its core demographic to buy their new product.
DaveMage said:No one bought more WotC 3.x RPG titles than I did.