©Novel Buddy
From A Producer To A Global Superstar-Chapter 331: MINI TOUR ?
PROMOTION AND MINI TOUR PROPOSAL
Min Jae chuckled. "You already wrote it like a government memo."
"It needs to be treated like one," Jang Wook replied, calm. "Because what we do next can multiply the money, or scatter it."
Dayo nodded once. "Go on."
Jang Wook scrolled to the first section.
"Objective," he read out loud. "One, sustain Train to Busan momentum into week three and week four without letting it cool. Two, convert album hype into real fan attachment, not just numbers. Three, use both to secure long term international leverage for future releases."
Min Ji raised a finger. "Add one more."
Jang Wook looked at her.
"We need to protect the image of the cast," she said. "They are rookies. The world is watching them like new toys. One bad handling and they become a joke."
Jang Wook typed it in immediately.
Dayo looked at Min Ji briefly. "Good."
Min Jae stretched his neck a bit like he was trying to release tension. "So what is the core idea. Give it to us straight."
Jang Wook highlighted the next section.
"The core idea is a combined mini tour," he said. "Not a full world tour. Not stadium madness. A controlled run. Limited dates. High impact. We attach the movie and the album together in one public movement."
Yuri finally spoke, cautious. "How do you attach them without it looking messy."
Min Ji answered her before anyone else could.
"You make the movie the gateway and the music the reward," she said. "People come because they love the film. They stay because they love the artist. They leave feeling like they experienced both."
Yuri nodded slowly, understanding.
Dayo leaned back slightly. "Keep going."
Jang Wook moved to the next part.
SCOPE
"This is a mini tour across Korea first," Jang Wook said. "Then select Asian countries where we already have strong traction and partners that can move fast. Nothing too wide. We do not want to drown in logistics."
Min Jae’s eyes narrowed. "List it."
Jang Wook brought up the planned route.
Korea, five cities.
Seoul.
Busan.
Incheon.
Daegu.
Daejeon.
He paused and looked at Dayo. "Busan has to be included. It’s the title. It becomes symbolism."
Dayo nodded. "Busan stays."
Jang Wook continued.
"Then two to three Asian markets, depending on scheduling and partner readiness."
Japan.
China.
And one flexible slot between Singapore or Thailand depending on permits and sponsor readiness.
Min Ji tilted her head. "China is always the most complicated. Don’t let it slow us."
Jang Wook nodded. "That is why it is not first. Japan first. China second if permits and approvals align fast. If not, we swap in Singapore or Thailand as the second stop and keep China for later."
Min Jae grinned. "That’s smart."
Yuri swallowed. "So what happens at each stop."
Jang Wook moved to the format.
EVENT FORMAT
"Each stop is built as a two part event," he said. "Part one is film presence. Part two is music presence."
Min Jae raised a brow. "Film presence how."
Dayo answered again, already visualizing it.
"Cast appearance," he said. "Short and clean. Not too long, not too many speeches. You bring out the actors who played key roles. They wave. They say thank you. They take a group photo. They leave the crowd with that feeling of connection."
Jang Wook typed as he spoke.
"Then we add a short Q and A," Min Ji continued, "but we control the questions. We do not let random media ambush the rookies with nonsense."
Jang Wook nodded. "Controlled Q and A. Moderated."
Yuri looked at Dayo. "And the music part."
Dayo spoke calmly. "The music part is me. It is Yuri. It is energy."
Min Jae laughed. "And it is me too if you want the crowd to scream."
Dayo glanced at him. "If you behave."
Min Jae held up two fingers. "I will be an angel."
Dayo rolled his eyes.
Jang Wook brought it back.
"The music part is a short live set," he said. "Not a full concert. Forty five minutes max. We want it tight. High quality. No fatigue. We end with a peak moment, then we leave while they still want more."
Yuri’s smile came out without permission. She tried to hide it but it was too late.
Min Ji noticed and smiled softly. "You’ll be fine."
Jang Wook moved to the business structure.
TICKETING AND REVENUE
"We keep ticketing tiered," he said. "Basic entry for general fans. VIP for meet and greet. Premium bundle for album plus ticket plus limited merch."
Min Jae clicked his tongue. "Bundle is where money hides."
Dayo nodded. "We do bundles."
Min Ji added, "And the bundles should be clean. No scammy look. Good packaging. Good design. Fans should feel proud holding it."
Jang Wook typed that.
"Also," Min Ji continued, "we should add a film themed collectible, small but special. Something tied to Train to Busan. People love objects that feel like history."
Dayo nodded again. "Approved."
Yuri raised her hand slightly like a student. "What about hard copies. Because fans are already buying."
Jang Wook answered, "Hard copies are included in premium bundles. For general buyers we push online and store pickups. We coordinate stock before dates. No shortage chaos."
Min Ji sighed. "Shortage chaos creates hype but it also creates anger. Balance it."
Jang Wook wrote, "Controlled scarcity, not shortage."
Min Jae leaned back and smiled. "This is the first time I’ve heard scarcity discussed like a weapon."
"It is a weapon," Dayo said calmly. "If you don’t use it, someone else will."
Jang Wook scrolled again.
MEDIA STRATEGY
"This is where we win big," Jang Wook said. "Every stop produces content."
Min Ji nodded. "Behind the scenes clips. Stage moments. Cast wave moment. Fan reactions. Airports. Rehearsals. Controlled interviews."
Min Jae snapped his fingers. "And the trend."
Everyone looked at him.
"The trend is already burning," Min Jae said. "People are posting the album with Train to Busan tickets. We can turn that into an official campaign without killing the organic feel."
Dayo’s eyes sharpened already having an idea of what he planned. "How ?"
Min Jae leaned forward.
"We pick one simple tag," he said. "We do not overbrand it. We repost the best fan posts. We reward them with surprise tickets, merch, meet and greet. That makes it spread harder."
Min Ji nodded slowly. "And we do it like a thank you. Not like a corporate campaign."
Jang Wook typed.
Dayo said, "We also need to protect the narrative."
Jang Wook looked at him.
Dayo continued, voice steady. "This tour should not feel like we are milking them. It should feel like celebration. Like gratitude. Like the world is witnessing history and we are inviting them into it."
Min Ji nodded once. "That’s the tone."
Jang Wook scrolled to operations.
OPERATIONS AND SECURITY
"Security will be heavy," Jang Wook said. "Especially with crowds. We coordinate venue teams and local agencies. We do not allow chaos. We do not allow media to corner anyone."
Dayo added, "Separate entry and exit routes. Controlled backstage. No random access."
Min Jae frowned slightly. "And what about the cast. Some of them are not used to this yet."
Dayo said, "They get handlers. Each one gets someone assigned. They do not move alone."
Yuri listened quietly, absorbing how serious it was.
Jang Wook typed the last section.
TIMELINE
"Two to three days," he said, "we finalize Korea venues and dates. Four to five days, we confirm Japan and one other market. Within seven days, we announce."
Min Jae blinked. "Within seven days. That’s fast."
"It has to be," Dayo replied. "Momentum does not wait for paperwork."
The main reason Dayo was hasting was he now had only two more weeks left before the Global Spotlight Card effect finish so he wanted to Mil... no encourage fans to buy more.
Min Ji looked at Dayo. "Do we tell the public the full route at once."
Dayo shook his head. "No. We announce Korea first. We tease the rest. We let them chase. Then we drop the next cities when they start begging."
Min Ji smiled. "Good. That keeps control in our hands."
Jang Wook finished typing and turned the screen slightly so everyone could see the full proposal cleanly.
He looked at Dayo. "This is the full structure. We just need your final call."
Dayo stared at it for a moment, not because he was unsure, but because he was imagining the consequences. The money. The pressure. The envy. The attention. The mistakes waiting to happen if they moved with ego.
Then he nodded.
"We do it," he said.
Min Jae exhaled like he had been holding his breath.
Yuri’s eyes went wide again. This time she looked excited, but also nervous, like a person standing at the edge of a stage for the first time.
Dayo looked at her.
"Yuri," he said, calm. "You’re part of this. You show up. You smile. You sing. You don’t carry fear. Let the work carry you."
Yuri nodded quickly. "I will."
Min Jang Wook, without being told, saved the file and sent it to their internal group.
Dayo stood up.
"Alright," he said. "That concludes it. Jang Wook, start venue calls tonight. Also coordinate cast handlers and appearances. Min Jae, build the fan campaign and the tag plan."
Min Jae grinned. "Finally. Something fun."
Dayo paused, then added the last line that made everyone straighten again.
"And keep it quiet until we are ready. No leaks. No premature excitement. We move like professionals."
They all nodded.
The proposal was done.
The decision was made.
Now the only thing left was execution, and the world would feel it soon enough.







