Friday, March 28, 2025

Pokemon Supply and Demand

Balancing supply, demand, allocations, and the realities of a collector-driven market.

Pricing hot Pokémon products isn’t just about looking at TCGplayer and slapping on a price tag. It's a balancing act between cash flow, allocations, local demand, and national market trends. Here’s a look at how I approach it—and why it’s more complicated than it might seem.


The First Variable: Paying the Bill

When I receive a Pokémon set, I usually have 30 days to pay the invoice. However, most sets are meant to last through a 90-day release cycle. I don’t want to sell out in 30 days just to cover the bill. I'd rather pace my sales over the full release period and focus on maximizing value, not just speed.

Being a legitimate Pokémon retailer also means I need to have Pokémon product available consistently. Going two out of every three months without stock damages customer trust—and it's often the result of allocation issues.


Allocation Lessons from the Auto World

To illustrate this, let’s talk about BMW.

Years ago, I looked into buying one and learned their dealerships didn’t play the end-of-month sales game. Why? Because they operate on yearly product allocations. If a dealer only gets 150 cars a year, there’s no reason to hustle to sell car #100 in July. They can’t call the factory and get more.

Instead, they maximize profit per unit and pace their sales based on the year’s allocation. I once found a loophole with European delivery, which didn’t pull from the dealership’s allocation—similar to a customer walking into a game store and asking to buy product direct from the distributor, with the store just passing it through for a small margin.

Some dealers said yes. Others said no. But the model is the same: allocation controls behavior.

Snowy Munich in January on summer performance tires is another story...



Pokémon Supply: 30-Day Invoice, 90-Day Plan

Back to Pokémon. Even though my bill is due in 30 days, the more important variable is how long the product needs to last. If my allocation is meant to cover 90 days, I plan accordingly.

This is where supply-side logic becomes critical—especially in a collectibles market where reprints aren’t guaranteed.


Demand: Local Appetite vs. Online Market

On the demand side, I consider both local interest and national pricing trends. Right now, a booster box of Journey Together is selling online for $244. My customers know this. If my price is even a bit higher, they’ll shop online instead.

At this high price point, price sensitivity increases. People compare. They wait. They choose convenience or savings.

Locally, Journey Together is cold. So many customers have washed their hands of it, they’re already asking to preorder the next set—which, ironically, I have even less faith in. I don’t want to sell them a $450 box with unknown supply and potential price collapse. And let’s be honest: they don’t want a $450 box. They want a $145 one.


Sometimes, Market Prices Leave Your Community Behind

If the market price is too high for your local scene, you’ll eventually need to adjust downward to build momentum. But for me, right now, that’s not urgent. My Journey Together allocation was slashed. I have about 75% of my usual quantity—and it needs to last one to three months.

At current prices, that’s only about a three-week supply—not ideal. If sales were hotter, I’d raise prices above market. If I needed to move it fast, I’d price well below. That’s exactly what I’m considering for the slow-moving One Piece set right now.


Why This Looks Like a Black Box

To my staff and customers, pricing sometimes feels arbitrary. They’ll notice when we’re above or below market and ask why. The truth is, I’m often not watching the market that closely—until sales start changing. Sales velocity is my signal. When it shifts, I look at pricing. Pricing, after all, is a variable within that velocity.


What I Really Want (And Probably Won’t Get)

Ideally, I’d have unlimited Pokémon boxes selling at a healthy 35% margin. Instead, I get limited product, slower sales, and a higher 62% margin. As a store owner, I don’t want to deal with allocations and math problems—I want happy customers and a steady flow of product.

But that’s not the system we’re in.

And while many of my peers are angry with Pokémon for underprinting sets, I’m not sure who’s at fault. Right now, there’s nothing but Pokétrash left to order. My backorders trickle in, but the rest of the product line is obliterated.

Publishers often claim victory when a set sells out—but for stores, that’s rarely a win.


The Kid Problem

Many Pokémon customers are kids. A $244 box means $6.78 per pack. I can’t sell them for less—although some official events distort pricing with artificially low promos. I also can’t steer them to cheaper sets, because I simply don’t have anything else.

That’s the real dilemma: skating from one allocation-restricted CCG release to the next while trying to run the rest of the store like a normal business. For some game stores, this CCG nonsense is the business.


Magic Isn’t Much Better

Magic players aren’t immune to the chaos, either. There’s a ton of speculation around the Final Fantasy crossover, rumored to be the largest Magic print run ever. If that doesn’t ring alarm bells, you might not know CCG history.

Here’s the takeaway:
Don’t presell more than you can comfortably refund.
Don’t order more than you can fully absorb.

That’s the balance we all have to strike—until something changes.

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Paying Suppliers

 How We Pay Our Suppliers

For those curious about the trade, here’s how we handle supplier payments:

Payment Terms

While not a payment method, terms dictate when we pay our bills. They’re harder to secure these days, but I have 30-45 day terms with most suppliers. These terms influence how I buy products, with the goal of selling them before the bill comes due. Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn’t.

But how do I actually send them money?

Payment Methods

  1. Credit Card Up Front

    • Many suppliers accept credit cards without extra fees.
    • The IRS considers most cashback rewards non-taxable income, so I take advantage of that.
    • Since I personally guarantee my company’s credit, I also keep the rewards.
  2. Mailing a Check

    • Yes, this is still a thing, and it’s how I pay most of my suppliers.
    • I use electronic banking through my local community bank.
    • Games Workshop recently announced they would no longer accept checks. For them, I wait until I’m past due or over my limit and then email them to charge a credit card on file.
  3. Payment Portals

    • Almost every supplier has a portal now (looking at you, ACD).
    • Some link to credit cards, while others pull directly from my checking account.
    • Asmodee’s portal is my favorite—it allows scheduling payments on a credit card, meaning I can combine supplier terms with my credit card terms.

Managing Credit Cards

  • I recently added a Capital One Spark Cash Plus, which has no preset spending limit.
  • This helps spread out large purchases, preventing a single $40,000 bill from hitting right when sales tax and payroll are due. Instead, I make two $20,000 payments at different times of the month—far easier to manage.
  • I use this card exclusively for two major vendors who account for half of my credit card expenses. It also simplifies QuickBooks entries with a single "Cost of Goods Sold" entry.

Previously, I relied on a Chase United credit card for travel rewards, but I don’t travel as much anymore. Watching my frequent flyer miles stack up into six figures, I decided it was time to switch things around.

Deal Breakers

Let’s talk about interrupting my flow—something I absolutely despise.

Take PG&E, for example. They’re the only bill (aside from taxes) that can’t be auto-paid. Every bill must be manually scheduled. It’s a failure point and a needless interruption.

The same logic applies to suppliers. If I can’t schedule a payment, my workflow is disrupted. Fortunately, most suppliers allow either scheduled payments or checks.

However, GTS Distribution is a headache. Paying by check often leads to delays, forcing many to make manual payments—something I consider unacceptable. Yet, I still use them, send my checks, and just hope they open their mail so the spice can flow.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Crown of the Grognard's Legacy

When I was in IT and finally had some money, I spent it on miniatures. I would drive out to Concord, near where my store is now, and visit Games Unlimited. This legacy game store was the king of their local market. They had a small mezzanine level where they kept their role playing stuff, including every Reaper miniature on its own hook. Nobody else had this breadth and depth of stock, which is why I drove 30 minutes to get there.

That mezzanine wasn't air conditioned, so in the summer months, you would rush up, grab what you were looking for, and exit as quickly as possible without getting scolded for running in the store. Our own mezzanine can't handle the heat when it's over 90 degrees, so I have more sympathy now.

I would take these minis to another store, Gamescape San Rafael, where the manager would speed paint them for me using an ink technique. I am told he got fired for doing this on the clock. My bad. I had an assembly line of recently bought, to be painted, and painted miniatures on their way to my table.

I once couldn't make it to Games Unlimited, so I started pulling large numbers of minis off the Gamescape wall to buy, when the clerk accused me of attempting to shoplift. Running a good game store is hard. You can see why I thought I could do better.

In case you were wondering, I was running a home brew Ptolus inspired game, based on Monte Cook's notes and some other odds and ends, before there was a Ptolus product. That Ptolus campaign lasted in various forms for 10 years.

Eventually I would open my store, becoming a small competitor of Games Unlimited, one of six stores within that recommended 10 minute drive time. Games Unlimited had the traditional young grognard at the counter, some relative of the owner, who would take your money while telling you your game was bad and you should be ashamed for playing it. He never told me this, but his customers would regale me with these tales of poor customer service.

I liked all the games and had time to listen to you tell me about your campaign. I was in a learning mode and legitimately fascinated. I also had every role playing game in distribution on my shelves. It was dumb, but it marked me as an ally to the RPG community. I was ignorant to most things not D&D, but open to learning. I also had every Reaper miniature in stock. So why brave the attic? Three years later I moved to a three times larger location, Games Unlimited's owner fortuitously retired at the same time, and they closed the shop.

The shop closed because the grognard couldn't wear the crown. I grabbed the crown as they departed, their last gasp an attempt to sell the store to a regional competitor, and hoped I would be worthy of it one day. Being all things to Games Unlimited customers, minus the grognard, became a goal. Of course, there were many things we did things differently, as I would explain to customers, because there was a reason they closed. We inherited a lot of their business. Six years later I was wearing the crown when realized I had become the surly grognard, at which point I left the front counter for good. The crown apparently has side effects.

Perhaps one day I will head west on a white ship with my fellow crown wearers, weary, a bit physically broken, but happy the business day is finally over and the doors are locked.

Crown of the Grognard's Legacy

Rare, requires attunement

This tarnished silver crown bears the faint embossing of miniature swords, dice, and scrolls along its band, and its crest is shaped like the mezzanine of a grand hall, complete with tiny shelves carved into the metal. Despite its unassuming appearance, the crown emanates an air of authority and nostalgia, its weight heavier than it seems, burdened with the memories of countless gamers and the spirits of bygone game stores.

Properties

  • Merchant’s Wisdom. While attuned to the crown, you have proficiency in the Persuasion and Insight skills. If you are already proficient, your proficiency bonus is doubled for checks using these skills when interacting with customers or negotiating business deals.
  • Stockmaster’s Precision. The crown grants you the uncanny ability to always know what’s in stock. As an action, you can name an item, and the crown will give you a mental image of its exact location within your shop or storage area.
  • Beacon of Fellowship. While you wear the crown, customers and allies within 30 feet feel a faint sense of camaraderie and are subtly compelled to trust you. You gain advantage on Charisma (Persuasion) checks to foster goodwill or encourage purchases.

Curse: The Weight of the Crown

The crown is a relic of legacy, and its influence comes at a cost. Over time, the wearer begins to feel the strain of its expectations and the voices of customers past, present, and future weighing on their mind. This curse manifests subtly at first but worsens with time:

  • Heat of the Mezzanine. The crown’s wearer becomes inexplicably sensitive to heat. Any area above 90 degrees Fahrenheit feels unbearable, causing the wearer to suffer disadvantage on Constitution saving throws made to resist exhaustion while in such conditions.
  • Grognard's Burden. Each day you wear the crown, there is a cumulative 5% chance (to a maximum of 50%) that your attitude begins to sour into that of a traditional grognard. This manifests as surliness, dismissiveness, or an inability to recognize the value of other perspectives. This effect lasts until the crown is removed and a Remove Curse spell is cast.
  • Indelible Nostalgia. The crown instills an unshakable longing for “the old days.” The wearer has disadvantage on Wisdom saving throws to resist becoming distracted by memories of their past or lamenting changes in their field.

History

The Crown of the Grognard’s Legacy is said to have passed from shop owner to shop owner, carried on the shoulders of those who sought to dominate their local market and make their mark in the gaming community. But each bearer learned the crown was more than a symbol of success—it demanded sacrifice. Legends say those who wore the crown too long became reclusive, bitter, and obsessed with their ideals of the "perfect store." The crown’s final bearer abandoned the counter entirely, realizing that its weight could only be endured for so long before it consumed them.

Do you dare to don the crown and seek to carry on the legacy, or will you forge your own path, free of its burdens?