Moderator: Andrew
Archetype wrote:Was wandering around Walmart early this morning and decided to see how many Journey CDs they had.
They had:
Revelation (2)
Infinity (1)
Frontiers (3)
Greatest Hits Live (1)
Eclipse (100+)
My Walmart serves an area of about 15,000 people
It was interesting that they only had three copies of Def Leppard's Mirrorball set.
steveo777 wrote:Archetype wrote:Was wandering around Walmart early this morning and decided to see how many Journey CDs they had.
They had:
Revelation (2)
Infinity (1)
Frontiers (3)
Greatest Hits Live (1)
Eclipse (100+)
My Walmart serves an area of about 15,000 people
It was interesting that they only had three copies of Def Leppard's Mirrorball set.
That's twice as many Lippard cds as they'll need.
steveo777 wrote:That's twice as many Lippard cds as they'll need.
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
RedWingFan wrote:steveo777 wrote:That's twice as many Lippard cds as they'll need.
And they're still out selling Eclipse.
Saint John wrote:RedWingFan wrote:steveo777 wrote:That's twice as many Lippard cds as they'll need.
And they're still out selling Eclipse.
Mirrorball sold 19,350 in its debut week and Eclipse sold 21,400. Moreover, when Journey released a sweet package deal like Mirrorball, 2008's Revelation, it sold 105,000 in its first week.
Don wrote:Elvis outsold Eclipse on Wal-Mart's chart all of last week. Now Eclipse is behind Leppard, Cook, Aretha Franklin and an 11 year old.
Digital sales for Eclipse have been dead from the beginning. The only Journey album on Wal-Mart's top 100 downloads is the Greatest Hits at #25. Forget about iTunes and Amazon. No album promotion on either service left it DOA.
Eclipse is averaging about three discs sold per Store, so for them to have 100 sitting on the rack shows you how much everyone was riding on DSB fever pushing this album.
Fail.
Saint John wrote:RedWingFan wrote:steveo777 wrote:That's twice as many Lippard cds as they'll need.
And they're still out selling Eclipse.
Mirrorball sold 19,350 in its debut week and Eclipse sold 21,400. Moreover, when Journey released a sweet package deal like Mirrorball, 2008's Revelation, it sold 105,000 in its first week.
WykkedSensation wrote:I bet ya though that 'Mirrorball' sells a lot more overall than 'Eclipse' does. Lets wait for the sales after 6 months and Lippard will be way ahead.
Saint John wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:I bet ya though that 'Mirrorball' sells a lot more overall than 'Eclipse' does. Lets wait for the sales after 6 months and Lippard will be way ahead.
Yeah, you're probably right. Like Revelation, it's just too good of a deal for most fans to pass up. But the dismal numbers for each show a common denominator ... but what is it? Is it that people have given up on the genre? I can't see this being the case, when just 3 years ago Revelation sold so well. Now DL, a group with just as many fans as Journey, puts out essentially the same package as Revelation, and it flops in its debut.
My guess is that most people simply didn't know these items were on sale. Especially in Mirrorball's case, as those numbers shocked me. But it did have some promotion. Hair Nation on Sirius had a LOT of nice 30 minute spots featuring the album, its songs and a few interviews. Eclipse suffered from zero promotion and poor pricing. After Revelation being $11.88 for the re-records, the new songs and a DVD, to now asking fans to shell out $10 for a single CD was a huge mistake. The thing was completely overpriced, relative to Revelation. Eclipse should have about beeYon $7. And I think it will be ... very soon!
Monker wrote:....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
Saint John wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:I bet ya though that 'Mirrorball' sells a lot more overall than 'Eclipse' does. Lets wait for the sales after 6 months and Lippard will be way ahead.
Yeah, you're probably right. Like Revelation, it's just too good of a deal for most fans to pass up. But the dismal numbers for each show a common denominator ... but what is it? Is it that people have given up on the genre? I can't see this being the case, when just 3 years ago Revelation sold so well. Now DL, a group with just as many fans as Journey, puts out essentially the same package as Revelation, and it flops in its debut.
My guess is that most people simply didn't know these items were on sale. Especially in Mirrorball's case, as those numbers shocked me. But it did have some promotion. Hair Nation on Sirius had a LOT of nice 30 minute spots featuring the album, its songs and a few interviews. Eclipse suffered from zero promotion and poor pricing. After Revelation being $11.88 for the re-records, the new songs and a DVD, to now asking fans to shell out $10 for a single CD was a huge mistake. The thing was completely overpriced, relative to Revelation. Eclipse should have about been $7. And I think it will be ... very soon!
Monker wrote:Saint John wrote:RedWingFan wrote:steveo777 wrote:That's twice as many Lippard cds as they'll need.
And they're still out selling Eclipse.
Mirrorball sold 19,350 in its debut week and Eclipse sold 21,400. Moreover, when Journey released a sweet package deal like Mirrorball, 2008's Revelation, it sold 105,000 in its first week.
And, having 100 copies of Eclipse still on the shelf compared to DL's 1 says a lot about what was expected, how much was spent on ordering CD's, and how much wasted shelf space it is now taking up. Mirrorball may be just as big of a flop, but not nearly as much money was wasted on the product.
Monker wrote:Saint John wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:I bet ya though that 'Mirrorball' sells a lot more overall than 'Eclipse' does. Lets wait for the sales after 6 months and Lippard will be way ahead.
Yeah, you're probably right. Like Revelation, it's just too good of a deal for most fans to pass up. But the dismal numbers for each show a common denominator ... but what is it? Is it that people have given up on the genre? I can't see this being the case, when just 3 years ago Revelation sold so well. Now DL, a group with just as many fans as Journey, puts out essentially the same package as Revelation, and it flops in its debut.
My guess is that most people simply didn't know these items were on sale. Especially in Mirrorball's case, as those numbers shocked me. But it did have some promotion. Hair Nation on Sirius had a LOT of nice 30 minute spots featuring the album, its songs and a few interviews. Eclipse suffered from zero promotion and poor pricing. After Revelation being $11.88 for the re-records, the new songs and a DVD, to now asking fans to shell out $10 for a single CD was a huge mistake. The thing was completely overpriced, relative to Revelation. Eclipse should have about beeYon $7. And I think it will be ... very soon!
Your guesses have been completely off. Journey had a story to tell and a guy who brought people out of the woodwork because he does a good Perry imitation. Along with the package being so cheap, that is why it sold. DL doesn't have that story to go along with the new release. And, neither does Eclipse.
Nobody cares about these bands except a few thousand fans on the internet. The masses care when you give them a reason to. Arnel is yesterday's news now. No matter how good the music is, those fickle fans have moved on to the next flavor of the month. Journey avoided being the 'flavor of the month' their entire careers, until Revelation...when they embraced it for a big paycheck. Journey LOST fans in the long run because of Revelation....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
conversationpc wrote:Monker wrote:....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
And there's where you lost me. You weren't worried about anything. Be honest.
conversationpc wrote:Monker wrote:....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
And there's where you lost me. You weren't worried about anything. Be honest.
Toph wrote:Monker wrote:Saint John wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:I bet ya though that 'Mirrorball' sells a lot more overall than 'Eclipse' does. Lets wait for the sales after 6 months and Lippard will be way ahead.
Yeah, you're probably right. Like Revelation, it's just too good of a deal for most fans to pass up. But the dismal numbers for each show a common denominator ... but what is it? Is it that people have given up on the genre? I can't see this being the case, when just 3 years ago Revelation sold so well. Now DL, a group with just as many fans as Journey, puts out essentially the same package as Revelation, and it flops in its debut.
My guess is that most people simply didn't know these items were on sale. Especially in Mirrorball's case, as those numbers shocked me. But it did have some promotion. Hair Nation on Sirius had a LOT of nice 30 minute spots featuring the album, its songs and a few interviews. Eclipse suffered from zero promotion and poor pricing. After Revelation being $11.88 for the re-records, the new songs and a DVD, to now asking fans to shell out $10 for a single CD was a huge mistake. The thing was completely overpriced, relative to Revelation. Eclipse should have about beeYon $7. And I think it will be ... very soon!
Your guesses have been completely off. Journey had a story to tell and a guy who brought people out of the woodwork because he does a good Perry imitation. Along with the package being so cheap, that is why it sold. DL doesn't have that story to go along with the new release. And, neither does Eclipse.
Nobody cares about these bands except a few thousand fans on the internet. The masses care when you give them a reason to. Arnel is yesterday's news now. No matter how good the music is, those fickle fans have moved on to the next flavor of the month. Journey avoided being the 'flavor of the month' their entire careers, until Revelation...when they embraced it for a big paycheck. Journey LOST fans in the long run because of Revelation....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
Toph wrote:conversationpc wrote:Monker wrote:....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
And there's where you lost me. You weren't worried about anything. Be honest.
Monker is a lying tool - just ignore him.
Monker wrote:conversationpc wrote:Monker wrote:....and all of this is what I was worried about when they hired Arnel and went down the retro sound with him.
And there's where you lost me. You weren't worried about anything. Be honest.
Wrong. Do a search for my posts in this forum with Nostalgic, nostalgia, etc. I was constantly harping on this right from the hiring of Arnel. It was a bad decision to go retro and live off of nostalgia. Journey has always been a progressive band, looking at the future. That ended with Revelation, and that was a huge mistake...and they will never be able to make up for it now...if they even intend to try.
Saint John wrote:WykkedSensation wrote:I bet ya though that 'Mirrorball' sells a lot more overall than 'Eclipse' does. Lets wait for the sales after 6 months and Lippard will be way ahead.
Yeah, you're probably right. Like Revelation, it's just too good of a deal for most fans to pass up. But the dismal numbers for each show a common denominator ... but what is it? Is it that people have given up on the genre? I can't see this being the case, when just 3 years ago Revelation sold so well. Now DL, a group with just as many fans as Journey, puts out essentially the same package as Revelation, and it flops in its debut.
My guess is that most people simply didn't know these items were on sale. Especially in Mirrorball's case, as those numbers shocked me. But it did have some promotion. Hair Nation on Sirius had a LOT of nice 30 minute spots featuring the album, its songs and a few interviews. Eclipse suffered from zero promotion and poor pricing. After Revelation being $11.88 for the re-records, the new songs and a DVD, to now asking fans to shell out $10 for a single CD was a huge mistake. The thing was completely overpriced, relative to Revelation. Eclipse should have about been $7. And I think it will be ... very soon!
Don wrote:Tom Welch, the senior music buyer for Wal-Mart has decided to leave the company. Welch is responsible for exclusives from bands like Kiss, Journey and Def Leppard. He steps down in August. Tiffany Van Laar, an underling in the video division will be stepping up take over the position.
steveo777 wrote:Don wrote:Tom Welch, the senior music buyer for Wal-Mart has decided to leave the company. Welch is responsible for exclusives from bands like Kiss, Journey and Def Leppard. He steps down in August. Tiffany Van Laar, an underling in the video division will be stepping up take over the position.
So Welch fucked up these promotions and now has been asked for his resignation? LOL PWNED!
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 62 guests