Wednesday, March 07, 2007

I wish I worked for Marvel's marketing department

I'm a cheap bastard.

I'm a college student, so I don't have much disposable income.
After beer and food, I don't really have much left in my budget for comics.

Thankfully the owner of my local comic shop is cool and lets me leech off his shelves like the little kid at the news stand in Watchmen. That is, as long as I buy a couple of books every week.

My point being is that this week, as i sat in Quinlan Keep's comfy chair, Marvel made me pick up a whole stack of comics just to keep up with what's going on with the Civil War aftermath. My problem isn't that there was too much coming out, that's never a problem.

The problem was that there wasn't enough!

In every issue, as Tony Stark was trying to pick out the new Avengers lineup, he had a pretty nifty screen showing all of the registered heroes and villains he had to pick from.

As I saw this over and over again, I wondered why I didn't have access to this.

I sat contemplating how easy it would be for Marvel to set up a mini-site with a replica of Stark's database showing exactly what he's looking at. Personally, that would clear up a lot for me. I'm not very well versed in the more denizens of the Marvel universe, and I'm sure that same thing alienated a lot of casual readers from Civil War.

I mean, I had never even heard of Typeface before Frontline, and now I'm supposed to care that he died?

Then the advertising student part of my barin kicked in, and I thought of how much farther they could have gone with this.

Marvel could put a few weeks between Civil War #7 and Mighty Avengers #1 and given readers a chance to guess the new lineup using Tony's database.

They could have made it a contest and given a prize to whoever guessed it right.
I mean, I think it's pretty safe to say that Marvel wouldn't have had to give out shit, because not one single person in their right mind would have picked fuckin' Ares (but I am interested to see where they go with that).

Anyway, the whole contest could have been interesting. The fans would be involved, visiting the site, reading each others' lineups, message board arguing (and from a marketing point of view, reading ads and adding their emails to marvel.com's newsletter).

Quesada and the gang could even choose like 5 of the coolest team combinations and give the winners autographed drawings of their Dream Mighty Avengers. Nerds love shit like that.

I graduate in May.

Gimme a job, Quesada.

4 comments:

invisiblist said...

I dunno, man. Sounds like a really freakin cool idea, but the ambiguity that Marvel is putting into their campaigns and interviews wouldn't really fit in with this.

Besides, the potential continuity mistakes this could cause would just give folks more shit to complain about.

KangolLove said...

Typeface is dead? Nooooo!!!!

Words from Monk. said...

This would have been a great move, honestly. Mix social networking in with actual written work...

I can't imagine why they wouldn't do something like this.

Kenny said...

I've seen Marvel embrace the internet is some cool ways before (such as animated trailors, or that Fantasy Editor project Tom Brevoort hosted a while back), but I think one of the reasons we haven't seen any of the companies take it too far is because the fans are already doing all the legwork themselves.

Granted, logging into Tony's database via an official Marvel website would be cool as shit, but I question whether it would be worth the effort for Marvel seeing as how there are third party forums all over the net that would already be buzzing about the new line-ups regardless.

Fandom keeps the hype machine pretty well greased on its own, so why bother? Just let Marvel focus on getting those books out on time!

Oh wait...