Friday, January 31, 2014

Weekly Trips to the Gaming Store?


So I was sort of surprised to hear that the new White Dwarf is not available by subscription.  So they want people to go down to the store every week to get it.  I heard that they are going allow retailers to return/strip unsold copies so that they will order enough but I wonder if there is a time frame for that.  How many weeks of white dwarfs are going to be sitting there on the shelves.  Just the most recent one, a months worth.  I know that even when I was heavily interested in 40K I would get to a store maybe once a month.  This matters if there are actual rules in the magazines that you might want to have before they get destroyed.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Metal Melt Down



Reports are coming in the GW is shipping left over metal models to be melted down instead of trying to sell them at even a minor discount.   Now tin is running about 10 dollars a pound and a 4 cm cube is about a pound so the metal represents about 1/4th the retail value for many of the models.  So if they marked them even 50% off the would still be able to get twice the amount of money for them than scrapping them.  Ofcourse there are costs of sales which will eat into that return but at least the product goes to your customers who will use it to play your games with other people who could your customers also.  Thus improving the network affect of the gaming which is why you were on top in the first place.

Great Global Warming Comic

I ran into a great comic today on Slate about global warming.  I am linking to the original source.  We have had some pretty cold weather and a lot of snow this year.  The schools have essentially run out of snow days.

It real did remind me of the snow levels we got when I was a kid.  Even though I have lived on the west coast and southwest for 8 years we moved back to about 60 miles from the parents and in-laws about 6 years ago.  Most of the winters have been pretty reasonable were I never considered getting a snow blower which we did have when I was a kid.

The snow piles at the end of the drive are now taller than the kids and probably about wife high.

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

X-Wing Miniatures: HWK-290


Today we take a look at the HWK-290 for the X-Wing Miniatures game.  It is a pretty big ship pretty much filling the blister pack compared to something like the tiny a-wing that is just swimming in the box.

Friday, January 17, 2014

One Word for GW Corporate: Customers



I posted about the half year results yesterday as did many people.  There are now probably 2-3K comments on blog post and message boards about it.  Many people seem happy about the news which leaves other people confused.  “Why would you want GW to fail?”, they ask.  The truth is very few people want them to fail (I doubt even people at Mantic or PP want GW to go out of business).  The people excited by the news hope that it will get GW to right the ship and find ways to reverse the player base erosion that the game has suffered.  These people are still interest enough in GW to be reading on commenting on blogs about it, so while the ground might be barren right now for them they might still be reclaimable.  I am certainly in that camp.  I had a 3 month period where GW mainline stuff did not get mentioned (other than giving it away).  I am back for 2 days now to discuss it before dropping it again until probably summer when the full year results come out.

GW corporate issues come down to one word: Customers.  If you look through GW’s corporate reports you will not find that word very much.  GW is not Walmart which is really about getting the products to the consumer that they sort of really need at low prices which means lots of interactions with producers and transportation costs.   GW as an enterprise has large fixed costs will low marginal costs hence you see a 10% drop in sales lead to a 33% drop in profits.  This means that producing that next space marine tactical squad and getting it to the store is pretty cheap compared to their other costs of business so it is very important for them to have customers to buy those products. 
GW probably wants to see themselves as Apple with a luxury style product but an Ipad while it actually sells for like 500 dollars  costs a significant amount to produce (say $250 as that is what amazon is selling them at for essentially no margin).  So 50% of the cost is actually for the product.  A 40 dollars tactical box probably costs less than 30 cents for produce the minis.  The probably spend about the same on the boxes as on the models.  GW can produce without problems as much product as they want and since they create it also they can essentially invent new products and do all the time.  So having customers to buy these is really the issue they face.

GW is not a luxury brand or status symbol.  It is the niche product which is different.  It is actual the most mass market product in its niche which is a very good thing since it allows economies of scale if they choose to use them which they have recently to boost profit at the cost of losing market share.  Originally GW stores were about market share and exposure with main street locations and multiple staff ready to help customers with demos and space for gaming.  Now they are focused purely on returns with 1 person usually in out of the way places.  Maybe GW found after the LOTR bubble burst that they had gotten about as big as their niche would allow and shifted focus from growth to profits but you still need to retain and attract customers.

In their last full year report, they said that the biggest threat to the company was its own employees.  It is hard to find people who will do things the “GW way”.   But given that the GW way has led to eroding sales volume and players in recent years that does not seem like it is the real threat.  GW’s current response to the sales issues is to reorganize the sales channels but they seem to be moving more up the chain with all trade run out of UK and the webstore under different management.  This is moving things farther from the actual customers.  I remember I heard something about wave serpents going direct only.  Now if I was in charge of trade I would be very against this as this is taking a good selling product off the shelves of my division.  Maybe the new organization would stop stupid decisions like this, but now trade sales and retail and webstores working in one area are not a unified group trying to boost overall sales but can get incentives for trying to cannibalize the sales from another channel.  Does not seem like a good idea to me.  Sort of like the bad decisions like the embargo for down under.  People could buy GW online from retail sellers and have it shipped in relatively small batches across the world for less than the trade stores could get the product from GW for (let alone have any margins).  That means it is time to look at your pricing model for the region not just “outlaw” the shipping.  Doing both together might have been fine but just the embargo is a bad move as the customers know of the price disparity.

How often does GW corporate brass actually get out into the stores especially independent retailers?   I would guess it has probably been a long time since anyone other than the GW trade sales rep has visited most of their trade stores and I would guess that it probably has been a long time since the reps have been to most also.  If you do not actually interface with your customers and the people who directly deal with the customers, can you really make good decisions about the direction of the company.  It is not like the customers are asking for the company to make products that are physically impossible to make (which happens at my workplace where we get requests for products that violate fundamental physical laws of nature).  It is not like they are seriously technology limited.  The have made great advancements in plastic molding for their products so their ability to produce things that customers might want is fully realized.

A few years ago the former CEO said that he did not know why his customers bought GW’s products.  This is a bad sign for the company that such a person would be in charge.  Could you imagine Steve Jobs saying such a thing?  “I do not know why people would buy an Ipod.”  Ofcourse not.  He would know everything he possibly could about the customers desires for the product.  He would know all the reasons why people would want to buy an ipod at an apple store vs an independent.   He would probably have fired anyone in his company who would say such a thing about their part of the business. This person came from a retail background so maybe the question of why the customer would want the product is less important to him than why they would want to buy it from his company but that is not the case here.   One billion people in the western world are perfectly happy never playing a miniature game but they would probably not be so happy without soap or shampoo or food or clothes.  It is a different type of product.  It is not even a generally social accepted product (ie it is not really cool to play with miniatures as an adult) so each customer really is someone special to you that you need to care about.

The GW corporate stuff never talks about new plans for customer attraction or retention.  They do not talk about their value proposition to the customer or what they bring unique to them.  They have taken their customer for granted for too long mainly based on their very dominate position in the niche at the retail level in the UK and the network effect in the game community.  Sort of like how Apple gets the best apps since they have so many users and have a pretty fixed set of devices, GW was getting the customers because that is what they saw at GW stores and that is what people played at home and in the independents.  Once you start to lose that front of pack position that you spent the 80’s and early 90’s building, it is a whole different world. 

Sorry for the wall of text.  If you read it thanks a ton for listening.



Additional Notes:  Webstore unification is a minor thing.  Bringing forgeworld into more exposure is fine the quality issues of forgeworld products are serious and forgeworld products are not the same margin level as GW plastic so they might add to sales but not as much to profits.   Forgeworld products will probably sell better when shipping costs are not such a major issue to the customer assuming you can get the same free shipping at 50 dollars as you do with standard gw stuff.  Forgeworld and Black Library only represent like 10% of GW sales so they would need to double to offset the drop seen in the last 6 months.

Weekly releases seems mainly like a scheme to get players to the store more often.  This might help sales some with impulse buys and more interactions with salespersons but really is still trying to sell more things to fewer people which is not really the direction they need to be looking at due to the network effect in table top gaming.

Changes to the magazines.  Sounds like they are doubling the monthly content level with 4 weekly and 1 monthly release on average but also sounds like the price for all that is probably going to more than double.  It could be a good move as it might allow for broader content in the monthly magazine keeping it interesting to all the player base each time while you can be more selective on the weekly ones to get those related to your game or faction.  People have been complaining about White Dwarf for years but I do not really see its performance as a major issue given that in most places it is not mass market (ie you do not see it unless you go into a game store) and so much of what it used to be should be digital and most likely free as the cost of production is so low in the grand scheme of things.   Think about it.  How many places charge you for information about what they are selling and how to use their products for normal customers.  My wife is a papercrafter and scrapbooker.  One of the major groups there recently had like a 3 days of like 6 hour webshows about how to use their products.  While they can be downloaded for a price you could watch them for free live and during several replays.

A fully burdened professional workday is probably less than 500 dollars.  Given that the people are already there designing, painting, and playing the games making them craft articles based on what they did would probably cost like 1 man day each.  5 real articles a weak for 52 weeks is like 125K.  Like 1 full time worker and then small contributions from the rest of the staff.   That seems like a lot of money but remember that the sales drop we are talking about was 7 million pounds. So you at the 1% level of the sales drop.   Even weekly must read articles on the GW site would be way better for them than people getting most of their news on the blogs where many negative comments about your products appear.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

GW Sales Down 10% and Share Price Down 20%

Not much more to say than the title.  GW sales for the half year were down more than 10% and that announcement caused the stock to crash down 22.5% back to levels last seen in 2012.   Since the peak last year they are down 33%.  The new price moves the P-E ratio back to the reasonable range at 15.6 but that might be on the high side as the company is going the wrong direction.  Interesting it looks like a serious player sold some stock yesterday as the volume has so spikes at the 700K share level.  Making those sales yesterday instead of today netted(saved) that investor over 1M pounds.  They talk last year about returning to real volume growth so they appear to have missed the mark.

They are also reorganizing sales management and moving all trade sales under a global head in UK which is a pretty bad idea as trade sales are significantly different things to deal with in the USA with very few GW locations and more saturated market like the UK. 

I know I said I was not really going to be talking about GW but this is a significant sales shortfall.  It is not like they were not pumping out products from June to November.  The new space marines codex was just in September.  I will note that GW did not have a uniform price increase last year instead raising prices on new releases so they will probably take from this results that they should have raised prices like 10%.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Lego Club Magazine: Girls get extra Insert


So my daughter used to get the Lego Club Junior Magazine while I got the normal Lego Club one.  If you do not know Lego Club magazine is a free magazine Lego sends out every other month.  It highlights new releases and has some comics.  It is about 20-30 pages long.  Nothing even at White Dwarf level of content but they mail it to you for free so what can you expect.

My daughter is a little older now so they moved her up to the normal magazine also so we get two but I noticed last time and this current issue that she gets an additional insert which is about 8 pages long with info on Friends sets.  This time there was info on the new Disney Princess sets.  So this info is only sent to girls but it is included.  My daughter had complained about a year ago that there was none of the girl content in the magazine and went so far as to write a letter to complain.  Now it is there for some people.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

X-Wing Mini Game: Falcon vs 2 Ties and Advanced


Before the holidays, my family spent a few nights on the other side of town with visiting both my in-laws and my mother, brother, his wife and daughter.  Even though it was only like 1-1.5 hour drive over the weather forced us to speed two nights at my in-laws.  I decided to pack up my X-wing stuff to try to get in a few games with my brother who got me started in gaming like 3 decades ago now but such events are tough to get going with a 1.5, 2.5, and 7.5 year old kids around needing attention.