Nintendo May Pull Wii Ads To Avoid Hype
Due to the lack of product on store shelves and overwhelming demand, Nintendo is considering plans to pull marketing campaigns for the Wii during the holiday season. "The company recently dismissed suggestions that it intentionally engineered shortages to build up hype for the Wii. It claims to be producing 1.8 million of the consoles each month at full capacity. 'The issue of supply management has to be questioned, not least because 2008 is going to be the crunch year for the Wii. It's then that we'll discover whether it's a fad or something with legs,' Screen Digest analyst Piers Harding-Rolls told The Times."
Its wii-diciulous!
Hopefully next year we'll find out if the iPod is just a fad or if it has legs too. How long does something have to be popular to officially not be called a fad?
I heard Nintendo was going to shut down production altogether just to save themselves from the massive demand and large amounts of cash that would be thrown at them.
Talk about fates worse than death!
Why waste advertising money on something that is flying off the shelves? Once once sales start slowing down they can redouble their advertising efforts and get the "hype" machine moving again.
At night I drink myself to sleep and pretend I don't care that you're not here with me
And, while you are at it, get me a couple of Hannah Montana tickets.
I don't know if it's so much about avoiding hype as it's good business sense. The primary purpose of advertising is to generate demand for your product. If the demand exceeds the supply, then why pay for more demand?
I often wonder what would happen if Coca Cola would say "We're not going to advertise for one month". Would people really stop drinking Coke? How much money would they save?
1.8 milions a wii a month is a lot. It's 41 wii per minute, but still not enough for everyone.
An other interesting number from TFA:
"The Wii has outsold Sony's PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's Xbox 360 each by more than two-to-one this year."
I didn't found something funny to put here.
Last I saw The Register was running an article that said Nintendo had already pulled the ads.
The Register Article
Curiosity was framed, Ignorance killed the cat.
eurogamer reports from gamesindustry who reports from The Times.
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/technology/article3018315.ece
Since Nintendo is pulling its hardware ads, why not put some proper marketing on its games? Seriously; the only Nintendo game I've even seen a magazine ad for in over a year was Fire Emblem, and I only saw that one in comic books. If Nintendo wants to reach casual gamers, then it needs to start promoting its ads in places casual gamers go, and hardcore-gaming venues just don't fit that description. Word of mouth alone won't make a million seller.
The writers at Eurogamer were found to have neither Journalism or Business degrees, and were thereby incapable of understanding business, marketing, or how to ask a really good question of the Nintendo PR flacks on why they might do this...
More at 11:57:32.1pm...
Bill
Bad for Nintendo, bad for consumers, and good for intrepid jackasses.
To Nintendo: Produce more Wiis.
To Consumers: Pay Retail.
To jackasses: Die a fiery death.
Does anyone else feel that this press release is an advertisement in disguise, in and of itself? "Our product is so popular that we're actually going to cut back advertising because we probably don't have enough and if you aren't one of the people contributing to the problem, then you are clearly the minority and are not 'with it.' Please desire a Wii for Christmas, now that we have informed you of how popular they are in an advertisement masquerading as a press release that claims we are cutting back advertisements for the product."
It's actually a nice gesture on N's part because with less ads, fewer kids will demand it and then (here's hoping) the ebay black market will cool off a bit.
MP3 is pretty linear.. I don't have a clue how you got "lost".
If you want a fun racing game.. pick up Excite Truck. I think I've logged more hours in Excite Truck than any other Wii game I own except maybe Wii Sports.
Nintendo may hype pulling their ads to avoid hype to generate more hype!
Translation: In Soviet Russia, ads pull YOU!
...the agony and heartbreak of seeing out little ones not getting what they want this christmas...
Forget the kids! Adults will be crying a freaking river in comparison. Unfortunately, the Grinch has a real good attorney and the legal complaint will be dismissed on a technicality.
Anybody noticed that the 249 package hasn't been around for weeks? The only Wii packages I have seen is the $500 bundle that comes with a limp array of add-ons. I was thinking this was a dirty market play on their behalf, but it may have been in effort to curb sales slightly to help overcome the holiday buying frenzy that will lead to even more problems when it comes to supply/demand. However, I never really seen any company (of Nintendo's stature) regardless of the type of industry to bow down to production limitations, esp in the highest profit season of the year for them. Any company with that kind of resources *should* have the infrastructure in place (even temporarily outsourced if needs be) to meet a year long overwhelming demand. They are leaving money on the table, or they have something up their sleeve.
MP3 was a little confusing when you had to return to certain areas of certain planets to get upgrades, or reach new areas after you got the previous upgrades. Somehow I managed to finish, though.
As for Excite Truck, I agree. It's especially fun with the "crazy monster truck" (I think it's called) unlocked. It's big, fast, and has a never-ending "POW" that lets you plow through everything and everyone.
I'm currently obsessed with Super Mario Galaxy. I am stuck trying to get through "Luigi's Purple Coins"... That level is one big death trap.
And at the end of the day, I still go back to Wii Sports.
The stores are doing the bundles not Nintendo.
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
I was going to buy a Wii for my kids this Christmas. I even had $275 burning a whole in my pocket for it. For about two weeks if I had seen one at retail or been notified by iTrackr that there was one available I would have snatched it up. This weekend my kids wrote their letters to Santa. None of the three had a Wii on their lists. I realized that maybe I wanted the Wii more than they did. So I spent the $275 on the stuff they wanted and had money left over. I'm glad I never found a Wii.
We willna be fooled again!
Perhaps you'll like Rygar: The Battle of Argus? Not exactly my cup of tea, but I am more of a casual gamer lately. Moreso because of time constraints than anything. Check out the release list, there are a lot of promising titles.
I also recommend Super Mario Galaxy (the best so far), Super Paper Mario, Excite Truck, Zelda (that took me forever to finish!), and you already have Metroid Prime 3.
Nintendo knew what they were getting into, and they have been in the business far too long to cry ignorance.
So, after the raging success of the Gamecube (not a resounding success), they should have predicted that they would outsell the best selling console by a 2:1 margin? I would think that their previous experience with their console would result in a more timid launch.
I can tell you that the supply shortages have personally detered me from even wanting to buy a Wii anymore. Getting one of these things has become more of headache then it's worth.
Over 13,000,000 people disagree with you. It sounds more like you've made up your mind and are trying to justify it, rather than wanting a Wii, trying to buy one, then getting disappointed over and over.
I'll get my wii-mote fix at a friends, then I'll get board and go back to my PS2 (which has better graphics imo), and my next gen console whatever it will be, probably PS3.
Ah yes, bashing the graphics when you can't trash anything else. Yes, the PS3 probably has the best graphics of all of the current generation consoles. But then, it's selling very few of them too. So you want to pay more for the least popular console. I guess the fact that you don't actually own it is an indication of how desired it is.
Learn to love Alaska
Zack&Wiki. SMG. At least look at Elebits, Trauma Center (both of them), RE4 Wii, Guitar Hero, Geometry Wars, ... there's tons out there. It's hard to say what exactly you'll like best. There's more RPGs coming, supposedly.
My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
Its not like they are really needed here neither, plus you dont really see too many ads specifically for PS3 and 360 neither.
Plus the ads talked about being pulled were for the UK, not the states.
Make SELinux enforcing again!
LSD can have some serious long term effects though.
If I were to rank the safty of doing each of those drugs regularly (weekly - monthly) I would say:
Alcohol, Tobacco (if you truly only did it weekly it would probably be safer than alcohol in the same usage pattern), LSD, Crack.
Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
Compared to the earlier Metroid Prime games, it really held your hand the whole way through. Seriously, it's basically always "suggesting" where you should go next after you complete your current goals.
Nintendo knew what they were getting into, and they have been in the business far too long to cry ignorance.
... how much does it cost to open a factory? How long does it take to tool it up and get it running? How long does it take your entire supply chain to catch up (maybe IBM can only produce 1.8 million processors per month?)? And then what happens if you get the factory running, and demand slacks off to only 1.1 million per month, now that you've upped your capacity to 2.5 million per month? Yeah, that's right, you just wasted millions (or, more likely, billions) of dollars.
Yes, they've got enough experience to expected normal console sales. What they've experienced with the Wii is completely unprecedented. Nobody has *ever* sold 15 million consoles in 1 year. How do you expect them to plan for beating their best estimates by a factor of 2?
And before you say "well, just build more factories!"
my PS2 (which has better graphics imo)
Ahh, that explains your post. You live in a world where the PS2 doesn't have the weakest hardware of last generation. Well, in your world, everything you posted is probably correct and insightful. So, my apologies.
--Jeremy
Jesus was a liberal
It's totally easy to keep a "semi-constant" stock when no one wants your product. Right now, Nintendo has sold more Wii consoles than Microsoft has sold 360 consoles. And the 360 had been in stores for about a year before the Wii came out. So divide the number of Wii consoles sold in half (current estimates are saying 13 million) and let's talk about hypothetical.
If only 6.5 million Wii consoles had sold in the same time frame (still more than the PS3) there would be no shortage right now. Or ask this question, if demand for the 360 was the same as for the Wii, would we see 360 consoles on the shelves? (Just double the number sold currently (around 12 million)) Do you think there are 12 million more 360 consoles in stores right now?
Hell, Sony wishes they had Nintendo's problems right about now (not enough stock for overwhelming demand, making cash hand over fist, maintaining top-notch development studios).
So, in most respects there are no shortage of Wii consoles being produced, Nintendo just has the problem of almost everyone wanting one.
My twitter
And Prime 1 and 2 and Zero Mission. Basically ever since Super Metroid the game has been asking you to imitate Metroid-like actions, while telling you where to go. The feeling of being alone in a huge hostile world is definitely diminished when your ship is intelligent and gives you hints.
What sound do people on rollercoasters make? Hint: it's not Xbox 360.
Crap, I still haven't unlocked Crazy Monster Truck... I'm still working on completing the Super Excite races.
I freakin' hate the Finland courses! why can't they be all like mexico?? *sigh*
Don't even have time to look at SMG right now.. after Excite truck I've got Ikaruga for the GC to finish, and thats already kicking my butt on level 1!
I had more trouble with the Canadian courses. For some reason I just couldn't hit all the tree runs just right. I don't remember having much trouble with Finland once I got to know the shortcuts. There are several places where you get lots of air and you can come down in a path going through trees, cuts lots of distance off and you get lots of tree runs there, too.
I still haven't finished all of the skill challenges, though.
I just finished getting 120 stars in SMG, now if I go back and finish off Bowser again I get to play the whole game over as Luigi. Not sure if I'll go all the way through with that one or not...
Topless Wii....
http://snipurl.com/1v3lf
It's not safe for work, unless you work in a topless bar...
I have no sig yet I must scream.
Keep in mind that part of the Wii's lasting appeal are the social channels that are available, completely free.
It's with timekillers like Everbdoy Votes and Check Mii Out that the Wii appeals to the non-gamers of the family. It doesn't feel like a game when you're taking a silly survey and guessing what everyone else is going to pick, or watching a parade of virtual models (some of which are pretty clever).
Having the news, weather, even the whole World Wide Web available with just a click from the couch is nothing to gloss over.
There are two types of advertising. Advertising to get you to buy a specific product, and advertising for a brand.
The types of ads you are talking about here (and 99% of all soda ads) are advertising for the brand. The goal of the ad is not to get you to run out and buy a coke now, or even to encourage you to buy Coke for your next 3 hour meeting. It is to implant more and more of the idea that "Coke is good" in your subconscious.
Building a brand is about getting a larger chunk of the pie from the huge swath of the population that really doesn't care too much about your product vs. your main competition. The sole point of these ads is so that when you are in a situation like in a shopping mall in front of a Coke machine and a Pepsi machine, you will choose the Coke machine. You don't really know why, you like the taste of them both just fine, but you just have always *preferred* Coke.
This is different from the Wii, because it is not an impulse-buy item. People don't go to Walmart with the idea that "I am going to buy a video game system" and pick when they get there - they decide and know beforehand. Advertising for non-impulse buy items is to try to get you to buy that PARTICULAR product. There is a degree of brad advertising as well of course, but mostly, ads for these types of things have to be targeted to elicit that "go buy me now" type of response, rather than the subconscious "we are better than Sony" response.
Your link has a date of December 10th, and your link has a date of one day after that.
Buy Dragonball Z Tenkaichi 2 (or 3.) Haven't had a chance to play the third one yet, but the second one is pretty goddamn awesome and it only costs $30 or so.
Mind you, I'm speaking as someone who usually can't STAND to watch the show. It doesn't matter what your opinion of DBZ or anime in general is--this is simply the finest fighting game ever produced, and the Wii controls really draw you into it. Tenkaichi 3 supposedly has more extensive Wiimote-based controls, plus the ability to play online for free.
By OP I mean Jeff.
"When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
They did take measures to expand. They have just been continuously underestimating future demand since launch (as everyone except hte most rabid Nintendo fanboys have)
So why were they worried about overestimating demand? Because if the Wii wasn't the success it is, they'd have to tear down a bunch of factories.
Nintendo is a pretty big corporation (and was before the Wii launch). I'm pretty sure they have several people more qualified than you (or I, or most people for that matter) looking over these details.
"When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"