Fujifilm's X100VI and Ricoh's GR IV remain unavailable at authorized dealers well into 2025, with retailers reporting waitlists stretching beyond 12 months and manufacturers unable to close the supply gap, according to Fstoppers. The shortages began at launch and have persisted for over a year, transforming two compact cameras into allocation exercises where pre-orders sell out within hours and used units trade above retail on secondary markets.
Both manufacturers have publicly acknowledged production constraints but have not expanded manufacturing capacity to match demand. Fujifilm continues to ship the X100VI in small batches to select retailers, creating recurring drop windows that generate social media attention and traffic spikes each time inventory appears. Ricoh has taken a similar approach with the GR IV, releasing limited stock through its own direct channels and a narrow network of specialty photo retailers. Neither brand has discounted the models or expanded distribution to mass-market electronics chains.
The mechanism is scarcity as a demand accelerant. When a product remains unavailable for months, it shifts from a purchase decision to a status marker. Consumers who secure a unit post unboxing content, reinforcing the perception that ownership requires effort and timing. The extended waitlist period filters casual interest and concentrates demand among enthusiasts willing to monitor stock alerts and join waitlists across multiple retailers. This creates a self-reinforcing cycle: scarcity validates desirability, which sustains demand even as the product ages and competitors release alternatives.
For physical-product brands, the play is controlled scarcity at launch followed by disciplined replenishment. Start with a manufacturing run sized 20-30% below projected first-year demand. Announce a specific launch date and open pre-orders for a fixed window—48 to 72 hours—then close the queue. Ship the first batch on schedule, then release subsequent inventory in small drops every 4-6 weeks. Communicate each restock 24 hours in advance via email and social channels, creating a predictable cadence that rewards attention without requiring constant monitoring.
Keep pricing firm. Do not discount to clear inventory or accelerate sales. If demand softens, extend the interval between drops rather than lowering the price. Use each restock as a content moment: share behind-the-scenes production updates, customer stories, or minor product refinements. The goal is to make each availability window feel like an event, not a clearance. For a small brand, this approach requires tight inventory management and a direct sales channel that captures customer contact information during the pre-order phase, allowing you to control the restock narrative without relying on third-party retailers.
The broader pattern is that scarcity works best when it feels structural rather than artificial. Camera manufacturers can credibly cite semiconductor supply chains and precision manufacturing constraints. A small brand launching a premium notebook, a limited-edition kitchen tool, or a specialty outdoor product can build the same credibility by sizing the first run to actual production capacity and communicating the manufacturing reality. The wait becomes part of the product story, and the customer who eventually receives the item has invested attention and time, which increases perceived value and reduces return rates.