As always, I
strongly encourage you to look at the BookScan
numbers on your own and make your own conclusions – I’m trying
to be balanced and fair, but, of course, I have huge bookshelves
worth of biases I’m dragging around with me, and your analysis
might be more correct than my own.
Let my lies
begin!
*
* *
OK, that’s the
boilerplate out of the way, let’s start looking at the data.
Here’s the big
picture:
| Year |
Total Pieces |
Growth |
Total Dollars |
Growth |
| 2003 |
5,495,584 |
|
$66,729,053 |
|
| 2004 |
6,071,123 |
10.5% |
$67,783,487 |
1.6% |
| 2005 |
7,007,345 |
15.4% |
$75,459,669 |
11.3% |
| 2006 |
8,395,195 |
19.8% |
$90,411,902 |
19.8% |
The sum of the
Top 750 in 2006 is 8,395,195 pieces for a total of $90,411,902
at full retail. However, the nearly 20% of growth in both is absolutely
overstated because of the difference in reporting methodologies
between 2005 and 2006. Basically, the difference between the sum
of the bottom 200 in 2005 and the sum of the bottom 200 in 2006
is nearly 600,000 pieces and $6 million. There’s really nothing
to do but guess (since I’m not so good with them fancy maths –
I’m sure John Jackson Miller could tell me what the growth was
statistically likely to be!), and estimate that growth was probably
closer to 10-12%. Still excellent, but not as stunning as that
chart would indicate.
The book selling
the most pieces in 2006 was Naruto volume 9 with an amazing
101,457 copies sold. Over 100k, wow! In fact, it was Naruto’s
year, with its first 11 volumes taking 11 of the top 12 spots.
In terms of
gross dollars, 2006’s #1 book was V For Vendetta, selling
nearly $1.6 million (!!) dollars of copies.
Last year’s
quantity winner was Full Metal Alchemist v1 with 67,781
copies sold. In 2006, FMA v1 sold 39k copies. Last year’s
dollar winner was Sin City v1, at $857,659. This year,
Sin City v1 sold $143,548.
Naruto v9 sold about 150% of last year’s top
seller; V For Vendetta did nearly 200% the dollars of last
year’s top seller.
I’ve also arbitrarily
divvied the list into one of five categories: Humor, Manga, DC,
Marvel, and the ever-wonderful Everything Else. While such categorization
is horrifically subjective (Is Asterix “humor”? Is The
Simpsons? And that’s why I’m not showing that part of my work,
to avoid such debates), I did it so to try and track the distinctions
between “traditional” bookstore material (e.g., humor books like
Garfield, or Far Side), and Direct Market-driven
material (i.e., Marvel, DC, and most of the “Everything Else”
group) and Manga.
So, here’s the
year-to-year comparison between my categories:
For Humor:
In 2006, “Humor”
books, the traditional pre-y2k owner of the sales charts, place
34 titles on the Top 750 chart. These titles represent 357,424
units with a total retail of $5,060,097. For some comparative
history, check the chart below.
| Year |
# of placing titles |
Unit sales |
Dollar sales |
| 2003 |
125 |
1,246,141 |
$16,095,800 |
| 2004 |
108 |
829,279 |
$11,460,533 |
| 2005 |
35 |
428,941 |
$5,904,947 |
| 2006 |
34 |
357,424 |
$5,060,097 |
The downwards
trend continues, though we only lose one title from the number
of placing titles. Perhaps more significantly, the average unit
sale works out to 10,512 copies, while in 2005 in was over 12k.
That’s a pretty poor showing for this year.
One of the things
I’ve been tracking over the years is the “evergreen” list – books
that appear year after year after year – and this year, 24 of
the 34 charting titles (71%) have appeared on all four of BookScan
charts that I have access to. This means they’ve been top-sellers
since 2003 (at least!)
Included in
the “evergreen” pile are 7 Calvin & Hobbes titles,
7 Simpsons comics, 3 Foxtrot books, and 2 each of
Boondocks and Far Side. Of those, only Boondocks
posts any sort of a gain against the previous year, but most titles
kept 75% or better of the previous year’s sales.
The #1 “humor”
book for 2006 is The Rejection Collection: Cartoons You Never
Saw, and Never Will See, in The New Yorker with a total of
29,579 copies sold (for $678,838 at full retail) – that’s only
about 78% of 2005’s best-seller, The Book of Bunny Suicides,
which comes in at #2 this year.
The Book of Bunny Suicides lost almost half of its circulation
from last year, by the way – down to 21,494 after last year’s
38,141
Again, the Simpsons
are the unsung hero here – 11 of the 34 top placing Humor titles
for 2006 are Simpsons, or Simpsons-related. There’s
well more than a million dollars a year in publishing Simpsons
comics, which puts the brand at about 1.2% of this years gross
totals of the chart. Again, Bongo is one of those publishers you
just don’t hear much about (and who has spotty penetration in
the Direct Market), but they’re a significant player in the bookstores.
Like every year,
Bill Watterson and Calvin & Hobbes does very well – 7 titles
chart, just like every year that I’ve been looking at this, and
this year they generate a little more than $1.2 million in revenue.
And there hasn’t been a new strip in over a decade!
All in all,
another year of the “usual suspects” in the humor category, with
nothing new coming along to displace the regular and hoary contenders
in the category. With the category continuing to shrink, and no
new voices really coming in, I think this speaks more to the state
of traditional cartooning in 2006 America more than anything else.
For Manga:
The category
killer, to be sure. In 2006, Manga dominates with 575 spots on
the charts for 6,705,624 pieces, and $61,097,050 in retail dollars.
Here’s a year-to-year
comparison chart:
| Year |
# of placing titles |
Unit sales |
Dollar sales |
| 2003 |
447 |
3,361,966 |
$34,368,409 |
| 2004 |
518 |
4,603,558 |
$45,069,684 |
| 2005 |
594 |
5,691,425 |
$53,922,514 |
| 2006 |
575 |
6,705,624 |
$61,097,050 |
Just to get
a little meta here, last year several manga-related blogs copied
out this section (and just this section) of the report. If you’re
reading this in a report not on Newsarama, I strongly urge you
to go
to the source link and read the preamble to this article –
several facts about reporting methodology have changed this year!
Interestingly,
the raw number of titles placing on the charts dropped this year
for the first time – manga is only 77% of all titles list, not
last year’s 80% -- but the unit sales and dollar sales are both
strongly up.
Now, given the
difference in reporting methodologies, a decent chunk of that
growth is actually from “bottom 200” titles posting better numbers.
It’s really hard to precisely calculate what the difference would
be using the old reporting method.
Either way,
it seems to me that manga, while still growing, is no longer doing
so as “explosively” as it once did. Nearly a 40% unit growth from
’03 to ’04, 22% from ’04 to ’05, and about 20% from ’05 to ’06.
Factor in the differences in reporting methodologies, and it’s
probably under 13% growth in 2006. Really, my supposition won’t
be properly tested until next year’s figures, but I think we might
be reaching a plateau for manga sales where the category becomes
“mature”, and a more reasonable 5-8% growth a year is what’s to
be expected.
The winner of
the year, unquestionably, is Naruto. With 12 volumes now
released, Naruto is positions #1-11 on the manga sales
charts, and the only reason it isn’t #1-12 is because v12 was
released in December, so only managed to make it #16 because it
had only one month of sales data.
The 12 volumes
of Naruto combined equal 917,115 pieces, or 13.6% of the
total charted manga on this year’s list. Naruto is 10.9%
of all BookScan GN sales for the year’s chart, for that
matter! That’s both awe-inspiring, and slightly scary.
Again, like
last year what we’re seeing is that entire series are charting
– there are 28 different volumes of Rurouni Kenshin on
the charts, to pick the most lopsided example. In fact, this phenomenon
has gotten more pronounced than last year. While there are 575
“manga” titles that I identified, it only represents 140 different
properties in 2006. (Last year, in 2005, it was 594 titles representing
165 properties) Because rack space is not infinite, more popular
series definitely seem to be squeezing less popular series out.
Further, “entire
series” extends back through the “evergreens”, as well – every
volume of both Love Hina and Chobits have made the
chart every year for the past 4 years, all without any new releases,
or any new promotion or publicity. To be sure, most of the manga
“evergreens” have numbers sliding faster, than the other categories.
While Calvin & Hobbes or Sandman stay relatively
the same, year-to-year, we’re seeing big drops on much of the
long-term manga titles. Love Hina v1, for example, sold
31,290 copies in 2003, 20,830 in 2004, 16,697 in 2005 and “only”
12,203 copies in 2006. Still, there are brand-new, heavily marketed
books that would be very pleased to sell 12k copies in their opening
frame, let alone years later!
There isn’t
always a slide, either – look at Naruto v1’s climb over
the years: 29,805 in 2003, 38,260 in 2004, 61,920 in 2005, and
a whopping 96,651 in 2006.
In following
this for four years, we have a list of 56 manga titles that have
been on each and every list since 2003. That’s an amazing percentage
of the 750 titles we regularly look at, and that’s a lot more
“legs” on many series then I ever would have predicted.
Maybe we can
break down the entire manga chart by publisher. Viz takes 327
of the 575 spots, making them #1 with a bullet. Viz charted 4.1
million pieces, for nearly $36 million. Right now, they’re the
clear elephant in the room, and they’ve done it solely by translated
manga, with no “OEL” (Original English Language) titles at all.
57% of all manga charted by BookScan is Viz’s, and they are almost
44% of all TPs shown, which is astonishing for any publisher.
Viz’s mean “average” title sold 12,731 copies per book. Their
median title sold 7356 copies.
Tokyopop is
the #2 manga publisher, with 155 titles charting – that includes
their OEL, as well as their licensed books like Cars and
Spongebob Squarepants. Subtracting those, there’d only
be 141 “actually manga” titles charting. I’m including everything
however, and Tpop brings in 1.7 million pieces, $16.7 million
retail dollars. Viz’s lead against Tpop surged ahead this year,
as Tpop doesn’t even do half of Viz’s business. Quite the dramatic
change from 2004 (where Tpop led Viz 265 to 174). Still, don’t
feel too bad for them – Tokyopop is still taking 27% of the manga
volume that BookScan shows. Their mean average is 11,244 copies
sold, while their median title did 7486 copies. Tokyopop’s best-selling
title is Fruits Basket v13 with an excellent 54,465 copies
sold in 2006, with Kingdom Hearts v2 right behind with
52,212 copies.
Coming in at
#3 is Del Rey, with 41 books charting, for 431,467 pieces and
$4.7 million retail dollars. Mean average of 10,523, median of
8,273. Del Rey has fewer “big hits”, but they’ve got a much stronger
line consistency then their two largest rivals. Their best selling
title in 2006 was Tsubasa v8 with 23,206, while Negima
v9 is only inches behind at 22,885.
#4 is Dark Horse,
which places 21 books, for 161,481 pieces and $1.8 million retail.
Mean average 7690, median 7156. Best seller was Vampire Hunter
D v3 with 14,744 copies, with Hellsing v1 coming in
at 11,683
And the #5 publisher
is ADV, placing just 10 titles for 71,093 copies and $710k retail
dollars – mean of 7109, and median of 6876.
The rest of
the publishers that chart – DMP (8), Ice Kunion, Go! and DC (3ea),
and Bandai and Brocolli (2 ea) – combine for 21 titles sold. The
only thing in that batch that I would consider a real success
(over 10k) is Megatokyo v4 from DC which, with sales of
16,331, nearly triple DC’s next closest from-Japan title.
It might also
be worth noting that the combined volume of publishers #3-9 doesn’t
even come close to matching the volume of Tokyopop alone. Viz
and Tokyopop combined represent 482 of the 575 (84%) of all manga
titles listed – that’s up from 83% last year. And if you look
at it in terms of pieces it is even worse: 2 publishers represent
5.8 million pieces of 6.1 million for the category – that’s 95%!
And people say the Direct Market is lopsided!
Looking at things
more generally, manga represents 4 of the Top 5, 19 of the Top
20, 44 of the Top 50, and 84 of the Top 100 for 2006. There are
13 manga titles that sold over 50k units – last year that was
only 4. There are 67 that sold over 20k – up from 56 in 2005.
Thanks to the change in what this report is, only 37 have sales
below 5k, but don’t compare that to 2005’s 184, since that was
pretty garbage analysis.
Taking a look
at OEL, there are, like last year, 13 OEL titles: Four volumes
of Megatokyo (v1 5683, v2 4912, v3 5918, v4 16,331), Return
to Labyrinth (8761), two volumes of Warcraft (v1 14,021,
v2 19,174), and two volumes each of Bizenghast (v1 5930,
v2 6396), Dramacon (v1 8056, v2 9604) and I Luv Halloween
(v1 6068, v2 5537) – those last three are all up a chunk from
their 2005 numbers, and all are clearly profitable books at this
point. Courtney Love’s Princess AI, which last year did
(v1 9862, v2 12988) failed to chart in 2006.
For DC:
2006 was a very
good year in the bookstores for DC. They placed 59 titles in the
Top 750, with total unit sales of 551,160, and $10,246,082 in
retail dollar sales.
Here’s a year-to-year
comparison chart:
| Year |
# of placing titles |
Unit sales |
Dollar sales |
| 2003 |
74 |
336,569 |
$6,151,258 |
| 2004 |
39 |
179,440 |
$3,135,983 |
| 2005 |
42 |
298,484 |
$5,440,001 |
| 2006 |
59 |
551,160 |
$10,246,082 |
That’s a fairly
massive gain from the year before, as you can see.
DC is very much
helped by the sales of V For Vendetta – the only non-manga
title to crack the Top 5 in sales (or the Top 20, for that matter),
bringing in 79,907. It is also the #1 book of the year in dollars
($1.6 million), bringing in single-handedly 1.7% of the dollars
of BookScan’s Top 750!
Plus, there’s
the hardcover edition, as well, which sells another 5992 copies
for $180k. That’s crazy stuff, there. V For Vendetta sold about
15k in 2005 – this is, basically, a good example of the phrase
“printing money”.
What’s really
curious about this to me is that, clearly, the success of V
For Vendetta is predicated on the release of the film. Same
with last year’s success of Sin City, or this year’s (see
below) of 300. And yet 2006 gave us another small art film
(Superman Returns), and the bounce on the Superman titles
seems minimal, if not downright desultory to me.
Example: in
2005 Superman: Birthright sold 2582 copies. Its 2006 totals
are 7565. Clearly a gain, and expressed as a proportional one,
quite significant, but in terms of the additional absolute number
of copies sold, it’s basically inconsequential.
Same thing with
Superman/Batman v1 (2005, 13748; in 2006 18796) or Showcase
Presents Superman v1 (2005: 2724, 2006: 5965). Even the Jim
Lee illustrated Superman: For Tomorrow v1 only barely manages
to chart with 5410 copies.
2005’s Batman
Begins seemed to add anywhere from 8k to 15k to significant
Batman backlist – but Superman Returns seemed to barely
be able to add 5k to its library. Is this because Superman is
a simpler character (ie: read one, read them all?), or simply
isn’t culturally relevant to the 21st century?
[And, parenthetically,
Batman sales don’t immediately snap harshly downwards this
year – Dark Victory did 6552 in 2005, in 2006 it scores
6703; Batman Greatest Stories Ever Told did 3824 in 2005,
in 2006 it is 5958; Dark Knight Returns did 17761 in 2005,
and 15689 in 2006; Long Halloween hits 12777 in 2005 and
11591 in 2006. There’s only three real big course corrections
for Batman – Hush v1 (2005: 18640, 2006: 10247), Hush
v2 (2005: 19883, 2006: 10010), and Batman Year One HC (2005:
15295, 2006: 6345)]
[The more impressive
aspect of that? 2005 sales on those Batman titles were, generally,
greater than their 2003 and 2004 sales combined. To not
lose that audience, and, in some cases, to build upon it? Pure
gold.]
Anyway, an interesting
side effect of V For Vendetta being dragged into the spotlight,
is that it seems to have also generically increased Alan Moore’s
profile in the book stores – Watchmen also climbs, from
some 17k in 2005 to a whopping 37k in 2006. League of Extraordinary
Gentlemen also bounces up a bit with v1 doing 5618 in 2005
and 7994 in 2006. Even the DC Universe Stories by Alan Moore
collection racks up 5650 copies this year.
One other “media
impact” title looks to be A History of Violence –which
moves 6886 copies this year. While the title didn’t appear to
chart in 2005 (when the film was released theatrically), the home
video release appears to have moved the needle on this one.
DC’s “evergreen”
list (the books that have charted every year since 2003) is exactly
identical to last years – 13 titles – but performance is a little
mixed this time around. There are a couple of gainers (Crisis
on Infinite Earths sold 106% of 2005, Kingdom Come
109%, Sandman v1 at 110%, Sandman v7 at 122%), but
it’s largely offset by the drops in Hush and Batman
Year One noted above.
I suppose that
one of the things that continues to surprise me is how (relatively)
well DC’s superhero “event”-driven properties continue to do.
Crisis on Infinite Earths, as noted above, has charted
every single year, and that’s a pretty impenetrable work, twenty
years later. Heck, I know my multiple Earths as good as anyone,
and I’m a big ol’ DC fanboy, and even I can’t bear to read CoIE
any longer. The fact that the bookstore market sells more copies
of that book than, say, most of Vertigo’s output, I think puts
lie to some of the “Elitist” arguments about the book market (that
the market there wants “literary” material, for one)
It’s not just
CoIE – even some of the build-up to Infinite Crisis
made the list: OMAC (5564) and Villains United (5290)
both did well in that channel. Both did better than volumes 5-10
of Sandman, for example, which surprises me at least. In
a similar mode, the IC tie-ins of Superman Sacrifice
(5217) and JLA Crisis of Confidence (5315), also make the
list. And the late-in-the-year hardcover of Infinite Crisis
(11,350) was within spitting distance of an-entire-twelve-months-of-sale
of Sandman v1 (11,540).
Heck, even three
volumes of Teen Titans made the list. It is apparent to
me that the bookstore market is, in fact, interested in some percentage
of super hero work.
Having said
that, Vertigo did do better this year than ’05 – the first
seven volumes of Sandman (plus Endless Nights) chart.
That’s up by two books from last year. In addition, we get three
volumes of Fables (plus 1001 Nights of Snowfall),
and four volumes of Y, The Last Man (plus Pride of Baghdad).
That’s a substantially better placement than we’ve ever seen before.
There’s also
Absolute Sandman v1, which, while only in at 7k units,
becomes DC’s #3 dollar book thanks to that $99 cover price.
Odds are that
next year won’t be quite so cheery for DC (I certainly
don’t expect V For Vendetta to continue to shift those
kinds of numbers over the long haul, although the upcoming Minx
line could provide a boost), but there’s absolutely no
way they can complain about their performance in 2006 – it’s terrific!
DC’s #4 book
is one I actually have over in the manga category – the 4th
volume of Megatokyo.
The mean average
DC title sold 9342 copies, while the median book was 6854 copies.
None of this counts the three DC “CMX” manga titles. DC has one
title that tops 50k (V For Vendetta), one that tops 20k
(Watchmen), and only 2 that chart under 5k.
For Marvel:
Marvel, too,
did much better in 2006 in the bookstores, versus 2005.
They placed 33 titles for 294,852 units and $5.7 million dollars
in retail dollars.
Here’s a year-to-year
comparison chart:
| Year |
# of placing titles |
Unit sales |
Dollar sales |
| 2003 |
73 |
455,553 |
$8,428,962 |
| 2004 |
50 |
227,985 |
$3,756,764 |
| 2005 |
26 |
153,317 |
$2,459,027 |
| 2006 |
33 |
294,852 |
$5,702,307 |
Marvel’s big
2006 knockout punch is the Halo Graphic Novel, with 32,174
in BookScan sales, and just over $800k in retail dollars sold.
For point of comparison, the next highest title is House of
M, at 17,365, just over half the sales. Halo is also
the #3 dollar book of the entire chart, which is very impressive.
Halo’s dollar total is about 14% of Marvel’s total charted dollar
sales. So, yeah, they have to be happy with how it did.
Marvel’s “evergreen”
list (titles that have charted every year since ’03) is now only
six items long (Ultimate Spider-Man 1, 2, 6, Ultimate
X-Men 1, Ultimates v1, and Wolverine: Origin),
but the good news is 5 of the 6 gained on year-to-year. Ultimates
v1, for example, did 148% of 2005’s number. Even the dropper (Ultimate
X-Men) still sold 92% of the previous year’s total.
In fact, just
about every Marvel title common to this year and last shows gains,
or when there are drops (like Astonishing X-Men v1’s 13948
in 2005 down to 10730 in 2006) they’re offset by something else
(like the 15,328 copies of Astonishing X-Men v2)
The third X-Men
film, if it had an impact on sales, it’s basically invisible.
As noted: Astonishing v1 = down, Ultimate v1 = down.
The only thing I can point to as a possible effect would be 6525
on Dark Phoenix, or the 13,602 on Phoenix Endsong,
but the former was out of print for a while, and the latter is
a new release, so I don’t know.
Also a hit in
the Bookstore market: Marvel Zombies, with 13,037 sold.
Am I the only person who remembers when Marvel comics weren’t
even allowed to use the word “zombies” in their comics, and they
called them “zuvembies”? Ah, sweet economic revenge!
I want to reiterate
that, like last year, there’s not a single “digest format” comic
on this chart. There’s a general market perception (I’m looking
at you Marc-Oliver Frisch!) that the “kids” comics’ poor periodical
sales showing in Direct Market is “made up” by the digest-formatted
collections in the bookstores. I can find exactly zero evidence
of this. Now, this doesn’t mean there’s not some other possible
channel (maybe they’re doing muy excellente in, I don’t know,
book clubs or something), but they’re not racking up traceable
gains via the BookScan reports.
In theory, they
kind of have to be selling somewhere, since publishers
(especially Marvel!) tend to be fiscally conservative about that
kind of thing – but Marvel digests aren’t selling anything significant
in the book market (same goes for DC’s “Johnny DC” line)
Neil Gaiman’s 1602 is now only Marvel’s #7 best-selling
title – it rises for the third year in a row (2004: 10,183; 2005:
11,767; 2006: 12,112) – and, again, outsells Sandman. And,
once again, this continues to surprise me.
Marvel’s core
superhero product is largely growing in the bookstore market,
and even without a Halo in 2007, I’d expect their BookScan
numbers to grow again next year. Civil War, after all,
and possibly Dark Tower and some of the Dabel Bros stuff
should add well to their bottom line.
The median average
of a Marvel book on this years chart is 8935 copies, the mean
is 7002. Marvel placed only one book over 20k (Halo), but
only one under 5k.
For Everything Else:
Another bunch
of gains in this “category”. 48 titles place for 486,135 pieces,
and $8.3 million retail dollars.
Here’s a year-to-year
comparison chart:
| Year |
# of placing titles |
Unit sales |
Dollar sales |
| 2003 |
32 |
95,355 |
$1,684,624 |
| 2004 |
36 |
230,831 |
$4,360,522 |
| 2005 |
39 |
435,178 |
$7.733.180 |
| 2006 |
48 |
486,135 |
$8,306,366 |
Lots and lots
to talk about in here, because this is the Defenders of categories
– it’s not really a category at all.
The obvious
stuff, first: Best-selling book in this category? Persepolis
v1 with 28,796 units (v2 sells 10,119, a surprisingly harsh drop),
making it the #5 non-manga title for the year. That’s an excellent
performance, but it makes me puzzled about last year’s chart.
In 2004, Persepolis did 26k, but it was nowhere to be seen
in 2005. It could have fallen below the end-of-week threshold
last year, I guess, but I’m at a loss for any other explanation.
Either way, good gains from 2004, and that’s positive news.
The largest
dollar book of the year in this section was Frank Miller’s 300,
with $673,290 in retail dollars sold. Number two is Alan Moore’s
Lost Girls, coming in with $651,825. That has to be an
enormous relief for the good folks at Top Shelf! (Lost Girls
is #11 in dollars for the entire chart)
The real big
news for me personally, is that we can now see the Scholastic
books, including Jeff Smith’s Bone. I’m suspecting that
they had been previously miscategorized, because sales roar in
with 25,730 for v1, 18,371 for v2, 27,392 for v3, and 22,280 for
v4. If you add in the additional 8441 copies that Smith’s Bone
One Volume collection sold, that’s over 100k for the year
in one channel alone. Because of its price tag, the One
edition brings in nearly 50% more income than the best-selling
color volume.
Scholastic also
sells 9843 copies of the first Babysitter’s Club comic,
and 7465 copies of the first Goosebumps volume. I’d love
to know how those compare to current sales on the prose books,
really.
Dark Horse has
another decent year (adding the 17 books here to their manga business
gives them $4.1 million in business for the year), but after the
“movie year” last year for both Star Wars and Sin City,
there’s a big come down.
The seven volumes
of Sin City collectively sold 185,713 copies in 2005. In
2006, only six chart, for 37,425 copies total. That’s a real severe
drop, of course, but those are still perfectly credible numbers
and should be recognized as such.
Star Wars licensed
titles faced a similar down turn – in 2005, Dark Horse placed
88,978 Star Wars comics sold, between eight titles. 2006 makes
that only 38,863, over seven titles.
But a lot of
ground is made up by their new charting titles: the aforementioned
300 (22,423), as well as Serenity with 17,727 (does
that seem a little low to anyone else?), and both volumes of Penny
Arcade (v1 13,213, v2 7280)
Image places
exactly one book on the chart – Walking Dead v4, with 5311
copies. None of the other volumes chart, but in ’05, v1 sold 4152
copies.
Top Shelf has
the dollars success with Lost Girls, as I mentioned above
(8691 copies), while their perennial Blankets holds on
with 6028 copies sold, down a bit from 6654 in ’05 and 6882 in
’04.
Also perennial,
Slave Labor gets their traditional sales of Johnny The Homicidal
Maniac (9276), and Squee (5353). Both are down a bit
from last year, but those are still enviable sales.
Devil’s Due
makes the chart with two volumes of Forgotten Realms comics
– v1 does 6481, v2 does 7218
Fantagraphics
charts the Complete Peanuts 1955-’58 box set again, with
4961 copies, down from 9225 in ’05, but not a blessed other thing,
including any current single volumes of Peanuts. Remember,
in ‘04 v1 of the series sold over 25k copies. Have the later releases
of the series really dropped off that much, or is there something
else going on? If it’s a legitimate drop-off, how can that be?
Chris Ware’s
two books have dropped off, so no Acme anything to be found.
Rabbi’s Cat and the R. Crumb Handbook also vanish
after strong performances last year. We do see Charles Burn’s
Black Hole , however, which drops a bit with 6240 copies
sold (it was 7460 in ’05).
Finally, after
being missing for as long as I’ve been doing this, Maus
appears. 19,769 copies of v1, 11,696 copies of v2, and another
11,072 copies of the boxed set of the two. I think these must
have been classified as something else in previous years, because
those numbers don’t make any sense, otherwise.
Alison Bechdel’s
Fun Home launched with 20,129 copies. I think I find that
a disappointing number (especially relative to something like
Persepolis) because this was a major launch, reviewed extremely
well (Time named it “Book of
the Year” for crying out loud!), and it had an extensive marketing
push (we received this elaborate fold out brochure with a DVD
[!] when they sent us an advance galley – and it’s rare to receive
galleys in the first place as a retailer!) It’s possible, as
it always is, that the stores most likely to sell the book may
be a “specialty” channel, and not reporting to BookScan (I’m thinking
about LGBT focused stores in this case) – but in the “mainstream”
book market, I was really expecting a number in the low 30s, if
not the 40s.
Also with what
I would call a disappointing performance, the third volume of
Flight (the first one from Ballantine) sells a scant 4993
copies. Its hard to see how a full color thick anthology like
that can even be breaking even at that kind of a number, assuming
they’re paying any one to create the work in the first place.
Scott McCloud’s
Making Comics debuts with 12,881 copies which seems pretty
reasonable for what’s more or less a textbook. No sign of Understanding
or Reinventing, though, so not sure what’s up with that.
The Harvey Pekar
edited Best American Comics 2006 comes in at 12,859 copies.
I have no idea what other Best American… volumes do, but
for an anthologized survey book, that seems like a pretty terrific
number to me.
That’s it for
“art comics” – there’s no D&Q, there’s no FirstSecond (on
that one I checked with a source, yup they’re all below the 4784
line; nope, not even American Born Chinese)
Also charting
in the “other” category are two volumes of W.I.T.C.H. (v1
at a big 9487, and v6 at 5525), v1 of Tintin in the 3-in-1
HC format (5975), and the out-of-left-field Manga
Claus at 5658 copies.
Finally, we
have our obligatory things-that-are-not-comics on the list, with
the we-see-it-every-year Bloody
Crown of Conan which, hey, they sell 5265 copies of. We
also get a Madagascar board book with sound chips for 4 year olds,
hurray!
Only four “everything
else” books sold under 5k copies. Six sold over 20k.
And that’s pretty
much what BookScan in 2006 looks like to these eyes.
*
* *
So, how does
the DM compare to any of this? Well, that’s the million dollar
question, and mostly the answer is the usual “dunno, we’re comparing
apples to oranges”. Again, DM
sales reports are focused on sell-in, while BookScan reports
sell-through. DM sales reports only include Diamond, which, while
largely accurate for Marvel, DC, Dark Horse and Image, potentially
are just a fraction of sales for publishers like Fantagraphics
or Drawn & Quarterly. Further, Diamond’s reports don’t actually
list sales figures, it lists an “order index” where sales are
compared to that month’s issue of Batman (the periodical).
ICv2 appears very confident that its numbers are accurate, but
virtually every publisher tells me they’re off by some factor.
To confuse things
more, Diamond doesn’t even provide “order index” figures for their
year-end reports. Just a straight list with no numbers attached.
Diamond’s year-end reports are available here on Newsarama. Follow
these links for 2003, 2004, 2005 and, our
subject this time, 2006. Another
problem is that Diamond’s lists are relatively short – only the
Top 100 for both comics and books. That’s not really enough to
judge a 750-item-strong list against.
Still, there’s
a certain amount of figuring it out that can be done. It is possible
to sum up ICv2’s
reports and draw certain conclusions from there. For example,
the #94 book on Diamond’s 2006 book list is Fruits Basket
v15, which was released in December. It charted, according to ICv2, at 7019
copies. Therefore the bottom of Diamond’s chart is right around
the 7k mark.
The top of the
chart? A little trickier. The #1 book is V For Vendetta,
and it charted as a Top 100 TP for nine of the twelve months of
2006. We can positively show 31,861 copies sold. There could be
as many as 3651 more copies that sold in the “missing” months,
so I think it’s probably safe to say that V For Vendetta
sold 35k in the DM (add another 10-15% for the UK, too).
The #2 book
for the year, Marvel Zombies, tracks in four of the five
months it was released for 22,462 copies. #3 is Fables: 1001
Nights of Snowfall which tracks for all three of its three
release months for 20,920. At #4, Serenity, we start running
into problems – it only tracks for four of the twelve months it
has been on sale, and we can sum those up to 14,061 copies bought.
However, book #6 (The Halo GN) only appeared on four of
the six months it could have, and sums to 19,921, which means
Serenity had to have done over 20k, so it’s underreported
by around a third!
In fact, it’s
possible (if vanishingly likely) that a book on sale all twelve
months of 2006, that came it at place #101 each month, could have
sold 13,342 copies – that’s the sum of place #100 each month,
minus twelve copies.
This year there
are a massive fourteen books on Diamond’s year-end Top 100 list
that did not appear on any monthly Top 100 chart! I used
to call this “the Watchmen effect”, because Watchmen
was once the most visible example of this problem, but 2006 was
good to Watchmen in the Direct Market (it’s our #8 title),
and we can track it for 11 of the 12 months for a sum of 18,326
copies (which means it’s probably north of 19k)
The first place
this effect shows up is #19 on the year end chart – New Avengers
v1: Breakout TP. This book doesn’t show even one time on any
of the twelve individual monthly charts of 2006. Yet, it absolutely
had to have sold over 12,641 copies, because that’s what
we can track for year-end book #24, Y, The Last Man v8.
In my heart,
I’m convinced that either ICv2’s analysis (and CBG’s for that matter) has
some math error (perhaps from the small percentage-of-Batman
that Diamond uses as their base figure), or that Diamond’s year
end Top 100 measures things somewhat differently than the month-to-month
ones do. I can’t prove it, however, because the data set we have
is too small. I really wish Diamond would start releasing the
TP data out to 200 places rather than just 100.
Basically, there
are only a few data points that I can feel comfortable about,
where there is enough month-to-month data to judge them accurately,
and several of those few points hinge on Walking Dead,
which had a remarkably dependable charting for most of its five
volumes. #9 (v1) is about 18k, #13 (v4) is around 16k. I also
feel OK about #24 (Y, The Last Man v8), at around 13k,
#38 (Fables v8) at around 10k. After that we drop down
to #69 (Family Guy v3 – though, really, that should be
under the comics part of the chart!) at around 9k, then all the
way down to #94 and Fruits Basket v15 at 7019. Other than
that, there’s not a calculation that I can make, outside of the
Top 10, where I’d be willing to stand up in court.
9 of the Top
Diamond 100 are manga. 50 of them are from DC, 25 from Marvel.
Again, this doesn’t mean very much with only a snapshot of 100
books, but there you are. Perhaps more intriguingly, only 47 of
the Top 100 are corporately-owned superhero comics.
The big winners
for the year, in my mind, are Fables (where all eight volumes,
and the OGN charted), Y, The Last Man (again, all eight
make it), and Walking Dead (all five). All of those did
substantially better in the DM than in the Bookstores. 1001
Nights of Snowfall, for example, only charted 7415 copies
via BookScan, while the DM can show 20,920 copies bought – nearly
triple!
One other thing
we can’t really gauge the impact of because the charts don’t extend
far enough is how much “Direct Market” business is actually flowing
to other channels, because of either price or availability issues.
On the latter, Diamond is really quite spotty when it comes to
having stock-on-hand for non-brokered publishers. Even on obvious
sales no-brainers like a Naruto (for which pricing is much
better buying as a DM store from Diamond), there are many many
weeks of the year where we’re forced to go to Cold Cut or Baker
& Taylor because Diamond just doesn’t have the stock.
Then there’s
the other hand of things – the Pantheon’s, the Ballentine’s, the
Drawn & Quarterly’s – where the pricing from Anyone But Diamond
is so much better you’d be a chump to buy them via DCD.
Diamond is kind
enough to give me a few more data points each year, so we can
track some other metrics of how the DM is functioning. While I
(and probably you, too), tend to separate things into two channels
(Direct Market and Bookstores), Diamond actually has more than
a dozen different ways of identifying customers. Because of this,
there may be some amount of variation between one year’s data
points and the next. That is to say that these numbers aren’t
audited, and should be viewed with a small amount of suspicion.
Also, as always,
these figures are for Diamond Comic Distributors, not Diamond
Book Distributors, their bookstore arm.
The first thing
I always want to know is “how many DM stores are there?” While
this is a fluid calculation (for one of many examples, if a chain
store consolidates multi-store ordering into a single order form,
that is opaque to this snapshot), we’ve set on using the number
of accounts turning in a monthly order form for the month of September
as our benchmark each year. In 2003 it was 3300 order forms. In
2004, it was 3275 order forms. In 2005 it dropped to 3200. In
2006, it rose back up to 3300 order forms submitted. That’s a
great sign – after 2 years of shrinking numbers, it’s begun to
rise.
I very much
think this is of major concern to the Direct Market – we’re mostly
held back by our penetration of the market, so to see it rise
again is a great relief.
I also ask Diamond
to pull the number of stores ordering backlist items from Diamond’s
“STAR” system for September of each year. My theory with this
data point is that stores doing a healthy business in book format
comics have to be doing regular restocks via STAR, rather than
waiting for the “slow boat” of reorders shipping through the regular
frontlist monthly orders. This “STAR penetration” figure was 1800
accounts in 2003, 2275 accounts in 2004, 2400 accounts in 2005,
and, finally, 2800 in 2006.
This, to me,
is a healthy statistic – that number is growing strongly year
to year, indicating more of the business is working with and in
perennial sales. A solid backlist department, properly managed,
is the bedrock of steady sales.
I also think
the “STAR penetration” figure is probably a closer indicator of
how many “real” comic book stores there are – knocking out the
buying collectives, or the card store carrying a few “hot” comics,
or whatever. My rule of thumb for “is it a comic shop?” is probably
“Do they stock and restock Watchmen?”
Since Diamond’s
publicly-presented charts don’t include this kind of information,
I also ask what overall growth looked like. For comic books, I’m
told that Diamond showed a +12.5% growth in dollars sold, and
+6% growth in pieces. The big discrepancy between dollars and
pieces is largely down to the increase to most standard format
comics to $2.99 in 2006.
The TP/GN category
has sales up a massive +10% in dollars, and +12% in pieces – that’s
the third year of double digit growth for the category, and probably
comes close to tying BookScan’s growth (which is harder to calculate
this year because of the change in the actual chart)
So, yeah, I
continue to be bullish on the Direct Market. The stats show, despite
an enormous amount of competition, we’re at least holding our
own, even while we continue to be the bigger market for comics
and graphic novels overall.
That’s what
2006 looked like to me. What do you think?
**************************
Brian Hibbs has owned and operated Comix Experience in San Francisco since
1989. Feel free to e-mail
him with any comments. You can purchase a collection of the
first one hundred Tilting at Windmills (originally
serialized in Comics Retailer magazine) from IDW
Publishing. An index of Tilting at Windmills on Newsarama
can be found right here.