Yes has a long history of poor management, label, distribution, pretty much anything having to do with the business side of things. They make this amazing music, put out a new album, and people never see or hear it. Ask 10 people at random, at least nine of them will say "What? Are they still around?"
I remember in '96 when Keys to Ascension came out. Some bonehead made the decision to split up the new studio material and include it as bonus tracks to fill out two double CDs of live material from a one-off concert that no one had heard of. Anderson, Howe, Squire, Wakeman, and White had 75 minutes of new music; seven tracks including two epics. This was the triumphant return of the classic lineup, and not even their own label cared. Later, they attempted to remedy the situation by finally putting all the studio material together on a single disc called Keysstudio (what the...?) and again didn't promote it at all. The material is good, maybe not great, but damn it, this was the same band that made Going for the One. They were back! It would have sold huge, if anyone actually knew about it.
I'm not a huge fan of the 90125 band, but one thing they did right during the 80's was make videos and actually promote the band. "Owner of a Lonely Heart" was the band's only #1 hit, mostly because it's so catchy and commercial sounding, but it sure didn't hurt that it was actually promoted.