Taren Nighteyes said:
Names:
In the gaming industry, names like Monte Cook and Jeff Grubb are some of the reasons people BUY the books.
The names themselves are selling points that will boost the number of books sold.
WoTC is also allowing these "famous" individuals the opportunity to compete for a share of the gamer wallet. With every layoff, they are decreasing sales (based on name recognition) and increasing the competition.
Sure, they will hire some lower paid designers to create new, even good sourcebooks - the market has gotten tougher to compete in.
Just my thoughts - from a Financial Analyst.
I am sorry, but the general gaming public isn't going to care who the author is. Yes, they do good work, but that only makes an impact with the people that actually know and recognize the names. Just a guess, but I would say that Monte Cook's Malhavok Press' best selling adventure or supplement has no where near the sales of the worst selling WoTC adventure or supplement.
The general gaming public, strangely, also isn't into the gaming news enough to have heard or even thought about the news.
This is not a death-knell for DnD, sorry, hate to disappoint, but DnD will be around for a while. WotC and a variety of other companies have been laying people off and going to contract (read: freelance) work to save on a variety of costs (mostly insurance).
As someone that has been involved with running a business (until just recently) I can honestly say that insurance costs have gone through the roof. Liability, comp, everything has sky-rocketed. Paying someone the same "wage" as a freelancer can still save vast amounts of money vs having them as an employee. It does put the person losing their job in a bad situation though, they have to purchase their own health insurance, etc.
Personally, I don't like seeing these folks go, but my personal opinion isn't going to make their company profitable.
Just some random thoughts,
Patrick