Does that mean people buy it and flip it?
Unfortunately for NDSP, they don’t make money on sales of their used product. Congrats are likely not in order here.
If they are selling well used, then the demand would suggest new units are probably shifting a good amount as well (especially as they are readily available without a wait etc).Well now, a used sale is still a product that went out of the factory line at some point.
Yup. By comparison I don't think I have seen a single Fractal FM9 on the used market here in Finland, whereas FM3 and Axe-Fx 3 Mk1/2 pop up every now and then. Which probably means people are keeping them, or not willing to put down the hefty 2420 € ($2505 USD incl VAT) price...If they are selling well used, then the demand would suggest new units are probably shifting a good amount as well (especially as they are readily available without a wait etc).
Conjecture, but I think devices like Kemper and Helix have been out so long that they aren't as attractive to your average guitarist just getting into modeling, compared to new units like Quad Cortex and Fender TMP that have big color touch screens.
FWIW, the (full) Helix Floor was Reverb's overall #3 seller for 2024.
#2 was the Spark Mini.
I'd add that marketing might play a big part. Not everyone reads guitar forums, but might get their news from Instagram, Tiktok and whatever where you are likely to see NDSP marketing too.I watched the interview with Rhett, Zach, and the analytics guy from Reverb (coincidentally while building out a BI report) where they discussed the sales numbers. It's really interesting and would be fun to look through those reports as a data and guitar nerds.
Anyways, my guess is QC is the highest grossing product (not necessarily units), for a few reasons:
Conjecture, but I think devices like Kemper and Helix have been out so long that they aren't as attractive to your average guitarist just getting into modeling, compared to new units like Quad Cortex and Fender TMP that have big color touch screens. And I don't think Fractal is all that attractive to technophobes.
- Modelers are way easier, cheaper, and lower risk to ship than tube amps or guitars
- Modelers are pretty expensive (compared to pedals), so will of course generate more total dollar sales
- Modelers are gaining popularity and adoption across the board
- Quad Cortex is newer and more attractive than a lot of popular modeling options
- Quad Cortex has more units in circulation than the Fender Tone Master Pro
I'd be curious to see how the sales look in a year. Fender had a big marketing blitz early but nobody seems to be using the TMP. But if I were an average guitarist going into Guitar Center, it would be the most attractive modeler if they were all set up side by side.
I'd add that marketing might play a big part. Not everyone reads guitar forums, but might get their news from Instagram, Tiktok and whatever where you are likely to see NDSP marketing too.
I think the QC is the modeler that will stand out in a lineup because of it's "Apple-ish" design, where it might be viewed as more "premium".
Is there a full list for 2024 anywhere? I don't see "amps" for 2024, just for 2023.
No, they haven't published a list for amps this year. This comes from a Rhett Shull interview with Cyril Nigg, senior director for analytics at Reverb.
Another interesting tidbit was no tube amps, at all, cracked the top 20 list last year. The closest was Fender's Tone Master Deluxe Reverb.
Thomann lists sales rank of everything.