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Nintendo shortage Wii-lly hurts company

Posted Dec 03 2007, 08:13 AM by Kim Peterson
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I was shopping at a Best Buy in San Jose yesterday and here's what I found:

Stacks of PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 consoles. When I asked where the Wiis were, a saleswoman gave a small snort and shook her head. The store was out.

It's a common scenario across the country, and in other parts of the world. A year after its release, the console that many expected would be in third place has become a hit of such proportions that people still line up overnight to buy one. I've had a Wii since its launch, and spent a good chunk of the weekend playing "Super Mario Galaxy." This console definitely holds up over time. [readmore]

Wii mania is in full swing right now, with the system selling for $400 or $500 on eBay. And while it's great to be making the must-have gift this year, Nintendo execs are rightfully bemoaning the missed opportunities the shortage is creating.

Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aime recently said the high demand is keeping the company from its goal of selling the Wii to non-traditional gamers, such as women and 40- and 50-year olds who aren't video game fans.

"They aren't going to sleep outside of a store overnight or visit a retailer five or six times," he said. "It is literally a missed opportunity." 

Fils-Aime was more critical in another interview: "A shortage benefits no one," he said. "We're disappointed. This was all about how we didn't accurately estimate demand. We need to be more bullish about the potential for the Wii." 

So there it is. Nintendo didn't have enough faith in its own system, and is paying the price this holiday. The company is cranking out 1.8 million consoles per month and says it simply can't produce any faster. CEO Satoru Iwata has said that one bottleneck after another keeps popping up on the production line, and that slows everything down.

It's a huge misstep, with Microsoft and Sony happy to provide an alternative for frustrated parents who can't find a Wii. Sony CEO Howard Stringer is practically gloating these days. "It's a little fortuitous that the Wii is running out of hardware," he said recently.

If Nintendo is helping competitors sell consoles, something is seriously out of whack. Fils-Aime is right to be disappointed. The Wii is on a lot of Christmas lists, but this is not a holiday Nintendo should be proud of.

Comments

 

I think it's absolutely outrageous that Nintendo can't keep these Wii's in stock.  I stood outside Best Buy this weekend for five hours for them to come out and say they only had 28 Wii's!!! Ridiculous!!  These stores are only getting from 6 to 30 Wii's and they only come every three weeks.  I have given up on trying to get a Wii.  I really don't think they are worth me calling all over town and waiting in line for hours.  I will just get a PlayStation and call it a day.  Nintendo, you are really screwing up!!!!!

My family has been looking for a Wii for the last few months and have twice been told that a store had them in stock, but would NOT sell it to us because Nintendo wouldn't allow them to sell the ones they had until a certain day.  We are a little miffed about this and are wondering if we will continue to shop for it when told "We have them but can't sell any until 8:00 a.m. tomorrow.  You can wait in line at 6:00 to get one." This was not even the day after Thanksgiving.

I really don't think that Nintendo didn't have faith in it's own console. It's that they didn't expect a demand of this proportion. Many have said that the Wii is the only real next-gen console available.

I also think Nintendo prides itself on durability and a well-made product, which could be why production it taking longer: they would rather it take a little longer to get out there than sell you a product that glitches.

for my kids it was the wii system for the family or 2 nitendo ds for the kids... would've rather had a family system. but not this year i guess!!!

they are oh so right about the missed opportunites, where as i am 50ish & female, i cannot take the time or energy to run all around town trying to find this game.I never considered an xbox or playstation, but one look at the sports games on the Wii and i was sold. Hard to be sold on something you cannot find to buy.Would have made nice XMAS presents.

A huge misstep? Your own pictures and experience tell you parents arent turning to the other consoles...at least yet.  Are parents that frustrated when stacks of Xbox360s and PS3s are all over the place? Is Sony benefitting at all? Doesnt look like it.  The PS2 maybe...considering it still outsells the PS3.

As upset as Reggie may be, I'm sure its quite a good problem to have and work through.  It's not that they never believed in their product, its who would have thought it would take off so fast and have such a ridiculous demand.  1.8million a month and they still cant keep any on the shelves.  The PS3 cant even sell 10% of that.  What problem would you prefer: A demand/supply issue? or No one is buying my product?

I think I'd take the the first and so would any sensible company. It would only be fortuitous to Sony if they offered to let Nintendo rent out a production facility.  They would at least make some cash back from all those PS3s that no one is buying.

And use logic next time you write an article.

I gave up trying to get one and bought an XBox 360 instead.

I would argue that they are carefully keeping supply low..they have had a year of this demand and look at the history of the DS' supply. If they keep supply low and demand high they keep high profit margins and, even better, huge word of mouth.  Like this article.  

My 11 year old Daughter really wanted a Wii and was asking us to get her one for her birthday back in July, and we still have not found one for her! After reading this articial, I guess we won't even be lucky enough to get her a Wii for christmas!

As a 40-50 year old woman I feel I am a perfect example of a non-traditional gamer Nintendo was hoping would buy a Wii.  I had decided over the summer that this would be the family gift this Christmas.  I had no idea that they would be impossible to find come Thanksgiving.  What makes me mad, is the people spending all night in line waiting for the doors to open to grab up one of the 10-20 systems that come in don't really want the game.  They are going to go home and try to sell it on e-bay.  While I have bid on about 7 or 8 systems on e-bay, I refuse to pay more than the system is worth.    

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