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Manga Bookshelf

Discussion, Resources, Roundtables, & Reviews

Manga Sales Analysis

A Variation and Diversion on the 2012 Bestseller Charts

January 26, 2013 by Matt Blind Leave a Comment

sailormoon3For those who must know, compiling my data for all of 2012, Sailor Moon volume 3 barely edged out the other Sailor Moon books to be the #1 ranked title. Volumes 1-4 are close enough that they are statistically tied for the top spot, followed by Sailor Moon volume 5, then Maximum Ride volume 5. The next books of note would be Black Butler volume 1 (ranked at #12 for the year), some of Viz’s box sets (Death Note, Zelda, and Fullmetal Alchemist), and Naruto, which starting at #17 and very closely grouped, managed to put vols 53, 54, 55, and 56 all into the top 25.

Why am I posting the 2012 Combined Bestseller List this way? Several reasons: First, many readers have asked me for context, not just the long, long lists. Second, my “bestsellers” are relative and my sources kind of iffy: The paragraph above gives you the flavor of the chart without devolving into arguments over why one book beat another. And finally: I hate the arbitrary year-end chart anyway. But I’ll get into all of that.

Out of convenience and for the sake of simplicity, I’ve always called the list a “bestseller” chart — which is perhaps what misleads some people. If you have access to sales numbers, the top 10 books on any given list should always be the same: after all, if Magical Romance Kingdom sells 1200 copies and Ecchi Omnimanga Robot only sells 1100, then the one will always outrank the other.

If we’re both compiling ‘bestseller’ lists, why are my results always different from The New York Times?

##

There is a lot of data available to the right people, but much of it is never released as both publishers and retailers consider the data proprietary. Neilsen BookScan is the gold standard, and with the recent addition of sales data from Wal-Mart BookScan tracks 80% of all retail book sales, including sales through Barnes & Noble and Amazon. Obviously this would be great data to know, but subscriptions are so expensive you won’t even see prices listed on their website. If you have to ask: you can’t afford it.

Coming from the other side, in 2011 the Association of American Publishers and the Book Industry Study Group combined their respective efforts on tracking publishers’ data and established BookStats. The BookStats reports are industry overviews, though, tracking performance by subject, genre, and format, as opposed to weekly sales of any one given book. It makes a nice complement to the Neilsen data, or so I assume as both sets are well outside of my price range.

The New York Times and the numerous variations of their ubiquitous bestseller lists [they’re up to 20 different lists at the moment] don’t use reports from either: the Times conducts a survey of some small sub-set of retailers and then weights their survey results by a secret arcane formula and then they post the results as a ranking without ever telling us a number. How many more books did Patterson sell over Grisham? No telling.

I can’t say I hate the NYT Bestseller list, or that it’s ‘wrong’ as my methodology is essentially the same as theirs — I’m just much more open as to what my sources are and I always include the weighted score in my rankings. (Not that anyone has really expressed an interest but it’s there for folks to check if they want — When Sailor Moon is ranked higher than Naruto on my list, we can all see why, and proportionally by how much, to the limits of my methods)

Since I don’t have the point-of-sale retail numbers or even a second-hand version like the Times, just what am I tracking?

Simply put: it’s the web.

With so much under lockdown and behind paywalls, I turned to the one source of manga sales data that is readily available to everyone: online sales sites. Load up Amazon and click just a couple of links and you’ll soon see for yourself, as in the course of their normal business Amazon gives you a list of manga. They’ve moved away from calling this a bestseller list at the category level (current terminology is “new and popular”) but they certainly use their own sales history data to determine what to push to the top.

However, we can’t treat sources like Amazon (or any sales site) as an impartial, authoritative source for even a comparative ranking: does Amazon have a legitimate financial interest in making sure folks searching for Death Note see a 13 volume box set [list price $99.99, selling for about $58 at the moment] before the customer sees the more affordable ‘black’ omnibus editions, or even the single volumes for sale, used, starting at prices as low as a dollar each? Of course they want to make the most off of a sale.

“While the Amazon Best Sellers list is a good indicator of how well a product is selling overall, it doesn’t always indicate how well an item is selling among other similar items. Category and subcategory best seller lists were created to highlight an item’s rank in the categories or subcategories where it really stands out.” … “For competitive reasons, Amazon.com generally does not publish this [Actual Sales] information to the public.” Straight from the source: Amazon’s help page for Best Seller Rank

Does Amazon have any obligation — expressed, implicit, or as part of their retail mission — to be an objective source for either journalistic reporting or literary criticism? Of course the answer is no.

Further reading, for the interested:

Inside the Amazon Sales Rank : Rampant TechPress, undated article.
How Amazon.com Sales Rank is Calculated : Timothy Fish, 30 March 2007
What You Need to Know about Amazon’s Sales Rank System : Bill Stephens, 7 July 2008
It Doesn’t Take Many E-Book Sales to Make a Kindle Bestseller : Sarah Weinman, 30 December 2009
Amazon Sales Rank Explained : Lindsay Buroker, 1 March 2011
Bestseller Lists and Other Thoughts : Kristine Kathryn Rusch, 18 January 2012
Just How Do Those $&%*# Amazon Algos Work Anyway? : Phoenix Sullivan, 6 August 2012
A Rare Glimpse Into What It Takes To Be An Amazon.com Best Seller : Paulo Santos, SeekingAlpha, 27 August 2012

##

What does one do when presented with an unreliable source that may be lying for its own benefit?

Get more sources. Also, whenever possible, “re-interrogate” the source to see if it comes up with different versions of the same story (trying to catch it out in a lie, metaphorically speaking).

I do both. My core data is a version of Amazon’s list that takes into account their “ranking” but also samples heavily from parallel data pulled from numerous Hourly Bestseller lists, set alongside a similar data pull from Barnes & Noble, and for my “third source” I combine data from Buy.Com, Chapters, Books-a-Million, and Powell’s — each of which, separately, are idiosyncratic to say the least. However, when 3-out-of-4 agree on a number one, I feel fairly confident about the choice. By combining the smaller sites I reinforce what I like to think is ‘good’ data and discount any high-ranking outliers that might otherwise crop up.

Outliers creep into the data anyway, because I don’t have the sales numbers. I can only see what the online retailers Are Trying To Sell To Me: you could consider my chart a list of online sales efforts rather than tracking actual completed sales.

After choosing sources and procuring data and (where applicable) assigning weights to data based either on assumed veracity or assumed sales volume: at that point it’s simple arithmetic. Add up the scores and award first place. In practice, I call this a best seller list, though if you’ve seen the posts, you know this is almost always followed by the sub-title, “Comparative Rankings Based on Consolidated Online Sales”. And while some might want to see clarity and truth in such a list, as someone who mucks around in the data on a weekly basis, I know the limits of the method as-well-or-better than anyone.

##

There has been a disconnect:

I like data. I do independent research, look for original sources, always question any cited statistic, and would rather ‘drink from the firehose’ if that option is available.

My readers don’t want to drink from the firehose. Stretching the metaphor: most casual manga enthusiasts would like a nice cup of tea, maybe with a scone.

Even the most wonkish of industry insiders don’t want the full treatment either. If I turn the firehose on them, rather than being cautiously curious and willing to look through it all, or enthusiastic about being given access, or being grateful that I’m willing to share so much with everyone, the feedback I get is that the manga bestseller lists are ‘unclear’, ‘confusing’, and ‘overwhelming’.

I get it. It’s not that the list is confusing (a numbered list, starting with #1…) but rather: readers lack the deep background to see the lists the same way I see them. Hell, I live in spreadsheets half the week, and my ‘free time’ is spent working a 40+hr-a-week job – front-line retail selling books and running a big-box bookstore. My viewpoint is skewed and my approach to sales figures is, unique.

My first attempt to translate from spreadsheet-to-English is “successful” in its own way, but it only gets us a third of the way there. Or less.

The lesson everyone should take from the amazing success Nate Silver enjoyed in 2012 is *not* that Nate was right. It is no longer enough to merely be correct: you have to sell it. You have to be able to put data into a narrative, you have to tell the story.

This takes longer. It takes a lot longer. And I was initially hesitant to do so because I don’t want to be accused of pre-digesting and ‘skewing’ the reported result to serve my own bias. But, in order to reach more readers and make it clear why I spend so much time compiling these reports, I’ll make the effort.

##

If it seems like I’m giving you too many numbers on a weekly basis, things get even worse at the end of the year.

First: The calendar is arbitrary. New manga volumes come out each week. They’re ‘new’ for a few months, and depending on the life-cycle and release schedule of the series, they’ll be in demand for six-months-to-a-year and then they descend into the forgotten basement of both bookstores and fan consciousness. A single snap-shot might catch a title at the very beginning, or the very end of its arc. Volume seven of a seven volume series will be considered very differently than volume seven of Naruto, Bleach, or One Piece. Merely looking at the bright, shiny “#1 Manga For 2012!” will blind you to what is actually going on underneath.

Quarterly charts that track each season are not only more accurate, they get closer to the actual ‘heartbeat’ of our beloved manga industry than a single, massive annual bestseller list ever will. In addition, a series of charts allows us to track titles over time rather than burying the data in a single year-end midden.

We all like year-end “Best of” lists, but that should really be the province of the critics, not of data. Good and Popular are not synonyms, after all, though there is often (but not always!) a strong correlation

I do have the consolidated 2012 data; I have plans to do quite a bit with that, including graphs and pie charts (we all like pie charts) over the next month. I’m also working on changes to the weekly reports – for once the posts aren’t late because I fell behind, but rather because I’m working on analysis. The weekly bestsellers are complete, but not ready to be unveiled yet.

Anyway, You’ve survived my thousand-word lecture so I suppose I should just get on with the posting of the lists, and the links.

2012 Q1 Winter

1. ↑7 (8) : Sailor Moon 3 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [6,693.2] ::
2. ↓-1 (1) : Sailor Moon 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [6,355.3] ::
3. ↓-1 (2) : Sailor Moon 2 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [6,347.6] ::
4. ↑12 (16) : Maximum Ride 5 – Yen Press, Dec 2011 [5,648.2] ::
5. ↑13 (18) : Sailor Moon 4 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2012 [5,502.3] ::
6. ↓-3 (3) : Sailor Moon Codename: Sailor V 2 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [5,378.3] ::
7. ↑15 (22) : Naruto 53 – Viz Shonen Jump, Dec 2011 [5,250.3] ::
8. ↓-3 (5) : Sailor Moon Codename: Sailor V 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [4,952.7] ::
9. ↑38 (47) : Fullmetal Alchemist 27 – Viz, Dec 2011 [4,781.8] ::
10. ↑126 (136) : Naruto 54 – Viz Shonen Jump, Mar 2012 [4,528.7] ::

[more]

[Publishers’ Scorecard]
[Top Series/Properties]
[New Releases]
[Preorders]
[Manhwa]
[BL/Yaoi]
[Ebooks]

2012 Q2 Spring

1. ↑4 (5) : Sailor Moon 4 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2012 [6,601.7] ::
2. ↓-1 (1) : Sailor Moon 3 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [6,405.8] ::
3. ↑9 (12) : Sailor Moon 5 – Kodansha Comics, Apr 2012 [6,222.2] ::
4. ↓-2 (2) : Sailor Moon 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [5,893.0] ::
5. ↓-2 (3) : Sailor Moon 2 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [5,855.9] ::
6. ↑20 (26) : Naruto 55 – Viz Shonen Jump, Mar 2012 [5,081.5] ::
7. ↓-3 (4) : Maximum Ride 5 – Yen Press, Dec 2011 [4,480.8] ::
8. ↑163 (171) : Naruto 56 – Viz Shonen Jump, May 2012 [4,317.0] ::
9. ↓-3 (6) : Sailor Moon Codename: Sailor V 2 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [4,265.9] ::
10. ↓-2 (8) : Sailor Moon Codename: Sailor V 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [4,147.5] ::

[more]

[Publishers’ Scorecard]
[Top Series/Properties]
[New Releases]
[Preorders]
[Manhwa]
[BL/Yaoi]
[Ebooks]

2012 Q3 Summer

1. ↑1 (2) : Sailor Moon 3 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [5,900.0] ::
2. ↓-1 (1) : Sailor Moon 4 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2012 [5,872.2] ::
3. ↑1 (4) : Sailor Moon 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [5,727.4] ::
4. ↑1 (5) : Sailor Moon 2 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [5,656.9] ::
5. ↑61 (66) : Naruto 57 – Viz Shonen Jump, Jul 2012 [4,636.8] ::
6. ↑7 (13) : Sailor Moon 6 – Kodansha Comics, Jun 2012 [4,603.0] ::
7. ↑10 (17) : Death Note vols 1-13 box set – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2008 [4,487.9] ::
8. ↓-5 (3) : Sailor Moon 5 – Kodansha Comics, Apr 2012 [4,220.0] ::
9. ↑147 (156) : Vampire Knight 14 – Viz Shojo Beat, Jul 2012 [4,219.7] ::
10. ↑4 (14) : Sailor Moon 7 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2012 [4,191.4] ::

[more]

[Publishers’ Scorecard]
[Top Series/Properties]
[New Releases]
[Preorders]
[Manhwa]
[BL/Yaoi]
[Ebooks]

2012 Q4 Autumn

1. ↑12 (13) : Sailor Moon 8 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2012 [5,599.1] ::
2. ↓-1 (1) : Sailor Moon 3 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [5,086.3] ::
3. ↔0 (3) : Sailor Moon 1 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [5,045.2] ::
4. ↑3 (7) : Death Note vols 1-13 box set – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2008 [4,985.9] ::
5. ↓-3 (2) : Sailor Moon 4 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2012 [4,863.6] ::
6. ↓-2 (4) : Sailor Moon 2 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [4,591.7] ::
7. ↑35 (42) : Naruto 58 – Viz Shonen Jump, Sep 2012 [4,389.7] ::
8. ↑2 (10) : Sailor Moon 7 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2012 [4,208.6] ::
9. ↑21 (30) : Yotsuba&! 11 – Yen Press, Sep 2012 [4,110.0] ::
10. ↑200 (210) : Naruto 59 – Viz Shonen Jump, Nov 2012 [3,947.0] ::

[more]

[Publishers’ Scorecard]
[Top Series/Properties]
[New Releases]
[Preorders]
[Manhwa]
[BL/Yaoi]
[Ebooks]

Filed Under: Manga Bestsellers, Manga Sales Analysis

What the fans want, what the fans buy: Online Sales Analysis year-end 2011

March 23, 2012 by Matt Blind 1 Comment

Brigid asked:
What manga would draw you to a comic shop?

“That actually raises an interesting question: You can buy Naruto anywhere, but Twin Spica is hard to find in a bookstore—I would make a special trip for that, but I can see the opposite point of view as well—retailers want to stock what sells. So let me throw this question to the readers: Which manga would entice you to do your shopping in a comic shop?”

##

Not every reader has access to the kind of numbers I have (though I certainly share quite a bit) and everyone has their own favorites — but I recently compiled the 15-week chart for the end of 2011 [18 Sep 2011 through 1 Jan 2012] so I can maybe answer Brigid’s question with a bit more, rigor than most.

Let’s start with the top selling series. ICv2 has already released their top 25 Manga Properties for 2011 and their list is going to look a lot like mine — though theirs is “based on interviews with retailers, distributors, and manufacturers” and I compile online sales data instead.

Here’s ICv2’s Top 10

1. Naruto, Viz Media
2. Bleach, Viz Media
3. Vampire Knight, Viz Media
4. Sailor Moon, Kodansha Comics
5. Black Butler, Yen Press
6. Blackbird, Viz Media
7. Fullmetal Alchemist, Viz Media
8. Rosario + Vampire, Viz Media
9. Soul Eater, Yen Press
10. One Piece, Viz Media

And here’s my top 15 from Q4 2011:

1. ↑4 (5) : Sailor Moon – Kodansha Comics [16,019.7] ::
2. ↔0 (2) : Naruto – Viz Shonen Jump [11,156.0] ::
3. ↔0 (3) : Maximum Ride – Yen Press [10,796.1] ::
4. ↓-3 (1) : Black Butler – Yen Press [10,697.3] ::
5. ↓-1 (4) : Vampire Knight – Viz Shojo Beat [10,208.8] ::
6. ↑4 (10) : Pokemon – Vizkids [8,073.2] ::
7. ↔0 (7) : Negima! – Del Rey [7,508.1] ::
8. ↑4 (12) : Warriors – HC/Tokyopop [7,375.6] ::
9. ↑5 (14) : Fullmetal Alchemist – Viz [6,987.1] ::
10. ↓-2 (8) : Black Bird – Viz Shojo Beat [6,748.6] ::
11. ↓-2 (9) : Bleach – Viz Shonen Jump [6,537.1] ::
12. ↑6 (18) : Blue Exorcist – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced [5,676.4] ::
13. ↑29 (42) : xxxHolic – Del Rey [5,663.0] ::
14. ↓-8 (6) : Ouran High School Host Club – Viz Shojo Beat [5,636.1] ::
15. ↑12 (27) : Death Note – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced [5,565.9] ::

[see more]

First, I report things a little differently: You can see that from August to December, Sailor Moon went from 5th place to 1st, Fullmetal Alchemist and xxxHolic [both nearing final volumes] were also on the rise, as was Death Note [thanks to the omnibus-style ‘black editions’]

There is also that pesky number at the end, which is my Score. Since Amazon doesn’t report volumes sold, neither can I, but my score might be considered very roughly equivalent: Sailor Moon likely outsold Death Note 3-to-1, for example — or at the very least, Sailor Moon was in my top 10 three times as often.

The goal of my process is not only to rank the top 10, or 25, or 2500 manga for any given timeframe but also to determine vectors: motion up and down the charts, which titles are strong new releases, which are even stronger in pre-orders.

Speaking of preorders: I run that chart as well; here’s a top 10

8. ↑73 (81) : Sailor Moon 3 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [4,744.6] ::
18. ↑53 (71) : Sailor Moon 4 – Kodansha Comics, Mar 2012 [3,804.1] ::
19. ↑698 (717) : Sailor Moon 5 – Kodansha Comics, Apr 2012 [3,646.3] ::
84. ↑3143 (3227) : Sailor Moon 6 – Kodansha Comics, Jun 2012 [1,711.9] ::
93. ↑355 (448) : Negima! 33 – Kodansha Comics, Jan 2012 [1,593.5] ::
117. ↑1056 (1173) : Negima! 34 – Kodansha Comics, Apr 2012 [1,330.1] ::
121. ↑475 (596) : Dance in the Vampire Bund 11 – Seven Seas, Jan 2012 [1,319.7] ::
128. ↑531 (659) : Black Butler 8 – Yen Press, Jan 2012 [1,217.8] ::
136. ↑1025 (1161) : Naruto 54 – Viz Shonen Jump, Mar 2012 [1,135.5] ::
145. ↑731 (876) : Private Teacher 2 – DMP Juné, Jan 2012 [1,066.0] ::

[see more]

We’re still looking at the same timeframe, the last 15 weeks of 2011. The top 4 pre-orders over the fall were the next four volumes of Sailor Moon — in the case of vol. 6, folks were ordering it 6 months or more before it would even come out, likely as soon as they caught wind of a link or found it themselves online.

I hate to characterize ICv2 as the ‘direct market’ — but in some ways that is their target audience. I think this also explains why they have Sailor Moon as only the #4 manga property, while for me it was solidly #1 and has been for over 6 months.

…Sailor Moon was obviously performing better online. This raises an obvious question, though: If I’m a LCS or small bookstore owner, why would I stock titles that are already selling online? Haven’t any prospective customers already bought their books?

Yes, and no. Amazon only does about 20-30% of trade book sales [varies by quarter, and yes, expanding: source], and please note the barriers to entry: to shop from Amazon you need either large stacks of gift cards (not so common) or a valid credit card. If you still feel the manga market is primarily tweens and teens from 12 to (say) 22, then you’ve identified a market that is desperate for the books but can’t (always) buy online.

If you compare my list to ICv2, you might also notice I’m heavier in Kodansha & Yen, and not as deep in Viz — though the Shonen Jump marquee titles are all there. I think this is reflective of book store (and Wal-Mart) stocking patterns — you can buy Naruto anywhere, as noted. Outside of Shonen Jump, though, things get dicier.

##

One way I used to cut through the haze (back in 2008) was to post a ‘Midlist’ Chart, noted at least once as “denarutofied for your convenience and my sanity”: the concept was to exclude the top 5 (or 10, or 15) series (that even back in 2008 were already running into dozens of volumes) so we could see what else was selling.

Still playing with the same data set [last 15 weeks of 2011] here’s a new top 10 minus the top 5 properties:

1. ↑8 (9) : Yotsuba&! 10 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [4,613.5] ::
2. ↑18 (20) : Fullmetal Alchemist 26 – Viz, Sep 2011 [3,550.8] ::
3. ↑18 (21) : Rosario+Vampire Season II 6 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2011 [3,541.3] ::
4. ↑19 (23) : Negima! 31 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [3,454.8] ::
5. ↑20 (25) : Warriors SkyClan & The Stranger 1 – HC/Tokyopop, Jul 2011 [3,222.1] ::
6. ↑20 (26) : xxxHolic 17 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [3,187.9] ::
7. ↑20 (27) : Pokemon Black & White 2 – Vizkids, Jul 2011 [3,176.6] ::
8. ↑ (28) : Negima! 32 – Kodansha Comics, Nov 2011 [3,110.0] ::
9. ↑20 (29) : Pokemon Black & White 3 – Vizkids, Sep 2011 [3,054.1] ::
10. ↑20 (30) : Black Bird 10 – Viz Shojo Beat, Sep 2011 [3,048.2] ::

[in the list above and the following Midlist rankings, the number in parentheses is the actual ranking, Autumn 2011, and I renumbered this top 10 to show how many ranks each title ‘jumps’]

Next, Let’s eliminate the top 10 series.

1. ↑8 (9) : Yotsuba&! 10 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [4,613.5] ::
2. ↑19 (21) : Rosario+Vampire Season II 6 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2011 [3,541.3] ::
3. ↑23 (26) : xxxHolic 17 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [3,187.9] ::
4. ↑29 (33) : Bleach 36 – Viz Shonen Jump, Sep 2011 [2,968.2] ::
5. ↑29 (34) : Skip Beat! 25 – Viz Shojo Beat, Oct 2011 [2,942.3] ::
6. ↑30 (36) : Pandora Hearts 7 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [2,898.6] ::
7. ↑32 (39) : Blue Exorcist 4 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2011 [2,800.4] ::
8. ↑32 (40) : Death Note vols 1-13 box set – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2008 [2,793.2] ::
9. ↑34 (43) : Ouran High School Host Club 17 – Viz Shojo Beat, Dec 2011 [2,633.7] ::
10. ↑34 (44) : Berserk 35 – Dark Horse, Oct 2011 [2,632.7] ::

And now the top 15.

1. ↑8 (9) : Yotsuba&! 10 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [4,613.5] ::
2. ↑19 (21) : Rosario+Vampire Season II 6 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Oct 2011 [3,541.3] ::
3. ↑31 (34) : Skip Beat! 25 – Viz Shojo Beat, Oct 2011 [2,942.3] ::
4. ↑32 (36) : Pandora Hearts 7 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [2,898.6] ::
5. ↑39 (44) : Berserk 35 – Dark Horse, Oct 2011 [2,632.7] ::
6. ↑39 (45) : Highschool of the Dead 4 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [2,626.4] ::
7. ↑39 (46) : One Piece 58 – Viz Shonen Jump, Sep 2011 [2,582.2] ::
8. ↑40 (48) : Cardcaptor Sakura Omnibus 2 – Dark Horse, Dec 2010 [2,566.2] ::
9. ↑41 (50) : Finder Series 4 Prisoner in the View Finder – DMP Juné, Aug 2011 [2,511.1] ::
10. ↑43 (53) : Soul Eater 7 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [2,357.2] ::

And now a top 25: in addition to the exclusions above, now we’re skipping Highschool of the Dead (Yen Press), Yotsuba&! (Yen), One Piece (Shonen Jump), Pandora Hearts (Yen), Legend of Zelda (Vizkids), Soul Eater (Yen), Rosario+Vampire (Shonen Jump Advanced), Dengeki Daisy (Shojo Beat), Skip Beat! (Shojo Beat), & the View Finder series (DMP Juné) — note the top ranking volumes of each of the series are still in the top 40 overall — and we’re still left with

1. ↑43 (44) : Berserk 35 – Dark Horse, Oct 2011 [2,632.7] ::
2. ↑46 (48) : Cardcaptor Sakura Omnibus 2 – Dark Horse, Dec 2010 [2,566.2] ::
3. ↑56 (59) : Spice & Wolf (manga) 5 – Yen Press, Oct 2011 [2,253.4] ::
4. ↑57 (61) : Battle Royale (novel) – Viz Haikasoru, Mar 2003 [2,177.7] ::
5. ↑59 (64) : D. Gray-Man 21 – Viz Shonen Jump Advanced, Nov 2011 [2,141.4] ::
6. ↑62 (68) : Witch & Wizard 1 – Yen Press, Sep 2011 [2,000.3] ::
7. ↑63 (70) : Drops of God 1 – Vertical, Oct 2011 [1,894.6] ::
8. ↑65 (73) : Shugo Chara! 12 – Kodansha Comics, Sep 2011 [1,867.5] ::
9. ↑66 (75) : Bakuman 7 – Viz Shonen Jump, Oct 2011 [1,844.5] ::
10. ↑67 (77) : Vampire Kisses Graveyard Games 1 – HC/Tokyopop, Sep 2011 [1,811.5] ::

…a short list: even (and especially?) after eliminating so many worthy books all of these manga volumes are still Top 100 titles. (and if these aren’t series you’re already familiar with, if I were a shop owner I’d endeavor to learn a few.)

If all you have room for is a single run of bookcases along a medium sized wall [say 10-15 ft.] that is still space for 800-1500 manga volumes [do the math] : Enough for every extant volume in the Top 20 manga series [yes, including One Piece & Naruto] and some others besides.

Filed Under: Manga Sales Analysis, UNSHELVED

Thinking about Manga in Four Dimensions

September 22, 2011 by Matt Blind 1 Comment

I don’t think people realize just how much online manga sales data I’ve collected, or how I’ve managed to collate and correlate it. : ProfessorBlind, Twitter, 9 September

##

I have a lot of data.

I also check in weekly at online books sales [looking at manga, specifically] across numerous sites. Sometimes, while churning through all that data, I get a hunch — an impression that one title is trending, or that something isn’t quite right. There’s no way to specifically call out what is different or odd about the charts [unfortunately] without a lot of extra work — like I said, it’s just a hunch.

But sometimes it’s worthwhile to dig into the data to confirm that hunch.

This past spring, something seemed to be going on with Fruits Basket. Of course, it’s an older title, dare-I-say a Legacy manga title. Seems like it’s been around and talked about forever — Heck, we even did an MMF on it. But even given it’s evergreen popularity, I got a hunch that something else was going on.

Please note, this did not show up in the top 10 bestseller lists. This was way down on the charts. In fact, when I actually compiled the data, I was surprised – and it took a bit of work to figure out all the various aspects, and provide at least a few theories on why.

I’ll have to clarify quite a bit here, but there’s nothing for it but to get started:

The flat horizontal lines are Benchmarks, average annual sales for some perennial manga titles — from the bottom, they are Lone Wolf & Cub 1 (grey ~2), the Azumanga Daioh Omnibus (green ~18), Buddah vol 1 (yellow ~38), Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind 1 (blue ~49), and Naruto 1 (orange, top line, ~133; yes, kids are still buying into Naruto)

The vertical lines correspond to dates – from left:

  • 13 Jan – Tokyopop announces distribution deal with Diamond, cancelling previous distribution through HarperCollins
  • 1 Mar – Tokyopop lays off majority of editorial staff
  • 26 Apr – Tokyopop’s website closes, and redirects all links to their Facebook page
  • 31 May – Official end of all publishing for Tokyopop in North America

Actually, there was also the announcement that Tokyopop would cease operation, on 15 April, but it seems we all knew it was coming at that point, and the press release didn’t affect online sales one way or the other, quite yet.

The two troughs visible in the chart above correspond to:

First, A lack of supply in February, as Tokyopop changed distributors,

and then, a lack of [online] demand in July, as we all ran into Borders to pick up manga on clearance.

##

The spikes in the chart? Oh, I think most of us can guess why demand spiked — Casual fans of Fruits Basket who happen to also follow manga news online knew: it’s time to finish up this one. Volume 23 was released in 2009, so it was likely a matter of laziness… “Well, it’s a Tokyopop title; I’ll pick up the Ultimate Editions, or maybe wait for a box set…” [one was announced but never materialized]

But suddenly, not only was there not going to be a box set, the publisher was gone – so we snap up what we can find in stores, and start filling in the holes by purchasing online. Based on my chart, and on immediate demand in August – it looks like volume 17 is going to be the hard one to get.

See Also:

End of an era: Tokyopop shutting down US publishing division
MMF: Why Fruits Basket?
Tokyopop Website Replaced by Facebook
Tokyopop shutdown, CLAMP launch

Filed Under: Manga Sales Analysis, UNSHELVED

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