Stats:
For the week ending 26th March 2011, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 18.69% vs 81.31%
Blu-ray sales total spending: $25.33 million
DVD sales total spending: $110.21 million
These stats available from here:
(direct link to stats: http://www.homemediamagazine.com/fil...rch-041111.jpg)
Top 10:
Despite not being the best selling title in the combined (Blu-ray + DVD) sales chart, The Tourist managed to become the best selling Blu-ray title of the week thanks to the superior Blu-ray market share it enjoyed over the number two ranked (the best seller, on the combined chart), Yogi Bear.
Also new for the week was the sci-fi action film Skyline, which came in distant third, selling around half as many copies as Yogi Bear.
How Do You Know was the only other new release in the top 10, and it placed 6th.
The new releases were unable to improve upon last week's overall Blu-ray market share and revenue, with both dropping slightly.
Here's the complete top 10 chart is below (new releases in bold, and Blu-ray exclusives are denoted by *):
Market Share:
Market share was largely unchanged, as mentioned earlier. The Tourist performed stronger in terms of Blu-ray market share than Yogi Bear, which meant that the combined chart best seller only came second. The Tourist has a Blu-ray market share of 343.8% vs Yogi Bear's 27.93%.
Skyline performed the best out of the new releases, with 39.10% of all sales belonging to the Blu-ray format. How Do You Know was the worst, at 18%.
Only one title managed to have a 50%+ market share (meaning its Blu-ray editions sold more copies than the DVD editions), and that was Inception with 51.11%.
You can see the Blu-ray top 20 market share chart here:
Year to Year Comparison
The stats for the week ending 27th March 2010 are as follows (you can see stats and analysis for the week ending 28th March 2010 here - note that data has since been revised, and the reporting period has changed as well, but this historical data is still useful for comparison purposes).
The same situation as last week, where both DVD and Blu-ray sales decreased compared to the same week last year (largely due to the then latest Twilight movie being released, plus the first two Toy Story movie's debut on Blu-ray, not to mention the 4 other new releases in the top 10 that week, including The Blind Side).
Blu-ray sales decreased by $19.98m (down 44.1%), while DVD sales decreased by $114.25m (down 50.9%) producing an overall loss of $134.23 million in combined revenue.
Blu-ray's market share still managed to increase from 16.8% to 18.69% (a growth of 11.25%).
For the week ending 26th March 2011, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 18.69% vs 81.31%
Blu-ray sales total spending: $25.33 million
DVD sales total spending: $110.21 million
These stats available from here:
(direct link to stats: http://www.homemediamagazine.com/fil...rch-041111.jpg)
Top 10:
Despite not being the best selling title in the combined (Blu-ray + DVD) sales chart, The Tourist managed to become the best selling Blu-ray title of the week thanks to the superior Blu-ray market share it enjoyed over the number two ranked (the best seller, on the combined chart), Yogi Bear.
Also new for the week was the sci-fi action film Skyline, which came in distant third, selling around half as many copies as Yogi Bear.
How Do You Know was the only other new release in the top 10, and it placed 6th.
The new releases were unable to improve upon last week's overall Blu-ray market share and revenue, with both dropping slightly.
Here's the complete top 10 chart is below (new releases in bold, and Blu-ray exclusives are denoted by *):
- The Tourist
- Yogi Bear
- Skyline
- The Fighter
- *Bambi: Diamond Edition
- How Do You Know
- Megamind
- Hereafter
- Due Date
- Despicable Me
Market Share:
Market share was largely unchanged, as mentioned earlier. The Tourist performed stronger in terms of Blu-ray market share than Yogi Bear, which meant that the combined chart best seller only came second. The Tourist has a Blu-ray market share of 343.8% vs Yogi Bear's 27.93%.
Skyline performed the best out of the new releases, with 39.10% of all sales belonging to the Blu-ray format. How Do You Know was the worst, at 18%.
Only one title managed to have a 50%+ market share (meaning its Blu-ray editions sold more copies than the DVD editions), and that was Inception with 51.11%.
You can see the Blu-ray top 20 market share chart here:
Year to Year Comparison
The stats for the week ending 27th March 2010 are as follows (you can see stats and analysis for the week ending 28th March 2010 here - note that data has since been revised, and the reporting period has changed as well, but this historical data is still useful for comparison purposes).
Originally Posted by Stats for week ending 27th March 2010
Blu-ray sales decreased by $19.98m (down 44.1%), while DVD sales decreased by $114.25m (down 50.9%) producing an overall loss of $134.23 million in combined revenue.
Blu-ray's market share still managed to increase from 16.8% to 18.69% (a growth of 11.25%).
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