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Posted by Allan on 01/15/06 21:22
http://www.videobusiness.com/article/CA6299476.html
Retail preps for high-def
But initial ordering appears limited
By Susanne Ault 1/13/2006
JAN. 13 | Retailers are scrambling to merchandise high-definition
discs following Warner Home Videos unveiling of the industrys first
high-def releases.
As of last week, stores knew street dates for Warners HD DVD
titlesBatman Begins and Million Dollar Baby on March 28 and Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire on April 11though not much else. Warner
spokeswoman Pamela Godfrey said formal solicitations for the HD DVD
titles, including pricing and order due dates, would be sent to
retailers shortly.
HD DVD cases are likely to be the same size as standard disc boxes.
The new format should be distinguished by clear, color-coded HD DVD
banners, Godfrey said.
But despite lingering unknowns, retailers are starting to decide how
they will display titlesfor those that will order them at all, that
is:
Best Buy, Circuit City, Virgin and others plan to stock titles in
both high-def formats. Some of which are ordering 5% to 10% of the
copies they order of standard DVD versions.
We did a survey of 3,000 people, and 68% of them cant even tell you
what HD [DVD] is, Video Buyers Group president Ted Engen said. Were
going to be a bit conservative. If we have a guy that brought in 100
copies of Batman Begins, hell probably take eight to 10 copies of it
on HD DVD.
New England chain Newbury Comics wont stock titles on either format
in 2006, and even some national retailers say they might hold back
title ordering until player sales are robust.
Said Newbury buyer Ian Leshin: We dont think there will be a wide
market for this in the next three years. Well let big-box stores
fight over what happens [with the formats].
Retailers promo budgets for HD DVD and Blu-ray will be led by
studio initiatives or not at all. At the least, retailers hope for
some consumer education materials on the next-generation hardware.
Our marketing support will be guided by what we believe to be the
most durable consumer solution, Best Buy spokesman Brian Lucas said.
Best Buy
does believe one format will live and one will die.
Packaging details remain under discussion, but early rentailing
plans call for blue rental cases for Blu-ray titles. HD DVD and
Blu-ray stickers might be stamped on sell-through boxes.
We can see consumers picking up [a copy] and not realizing what they
have, National Entertainment Buying Group president Todd Zaganiacz
observed.
With few titles officially set for spring, many retailers plan to
slot HD DVD editions next to their standard DVD counterparts on
shelves. Already juggling multiple DVD versions, stores are concerned
about introducing yet another SKU to customers.
New releases will be side by side as widescreen, fullscreen, Blu-ray,
HD-DVD, Hastings director of marketing Mason Goodfellow said. Its
going to take more time to work up a buy. We already have a jumble of
SKUs, [so] whats a couple more?
Days following Warners HD DVD slate announcement, Amazon.com did
carve out a specific HD DVD section, highlighting coming players and
titles. Its likely the site would do the same for Blu-ray, coinciding
with other retail decisions to make both formats available.
Announcements at the recent Consumer Electronics Show confirmed that
studios will release high-def titles in either HD DVD or Blu-ray
formats, or in both. But Warner was alone in setting street dates.
Warners HD DVD films are timed to the launch of Toshibas compatible
player. Suppliers, including Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, will
launch Blu-ray titles when players for the format debut, expected to
be in the spring at the earliest.
Most retailers have measured hopes for early sales.
Its important to recognize that high-def video will initially appeal
to only a small percentage of the video consumer base, Virgin buyer
Chris Anstey said. Most people are perfectly satisfied with the image
quality of standard DVDs. Although the potential for high-definition
is very exciting, we shouldnt expect huge numbers out of the gate.
"Arguing with anonymous strangers on the Internet is a sucker's game
because they almost always turn out to be -- or to be indistinguishable from
-- self-righteous sixteen-year-olds possessing infinite amounts of free time."
- Neil Stephenson, _Cryptonomicon_
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