A blog on issues affecting Australia's newsagents, media and small business generally. More ...

Month: September 2005

The future of newspapers is in the product and not gimmicks designed to sell the product

Bob Cauthorn has posted an excellent blog entry at Corante about newspapers and why sales are falling.

It is the product. Bob is right. His comments fit with my earlier entries here about the ridiculous number of product giveaways and competitions being run by News and Fairfax to sell their products. For every sale you win with a CD, a DVD or drink coasters you confuse a consumer about the value proposition of the newspaper.

Consumers are losing sight of why they are buying newspapers.

The masthead must stand for something beyond competitions and free product. Spike increases are not sustainable and while they may help with an audit they do not fix the newspaper malaise.

As a newspaper retailer I want product I can respect, product which consumers seek out because of content. That type of consumer will be more valuable in long term business and basket depth.

Newspapers don’t have to lose a race with online media. The two are different, serving different needs and even different consumers.

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Media disruption

Vodafone cuts newsagent sales commission by 37.5% and hurts small business

Newsagents are reeling after Vodafone announce a 37.5% cut in sales commission.

Around 2,600 newsagents have invested heavily in technology, delivered valuable in store real-estate and increased sales significantly. The reward for all this effort? The 37.5% cut in commission.

Under the new pricing newsagents receive 5% for Vodafone recharge sales.

Vodafone says that newsagents will make more because of growing sales an that the higher commission is competitively unsustainable.

Newsagents have high operational costs: around 11% of turnover goes in wages; rent – between 6% and 12% (depending on location); theft – between 3% and 5%; overhead – 5%.

While Vodafone recharge brings traffic to newsagencies, most customers want the recharge and nothing else.

To lose 37.5% of revenue having just invested in equipment and real-estate is a body blow to small business newsagents and something Vodafone could have managed better.

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Uncategorized

Online retailing to double by 2010 says Forrester Research

news.com has story of a Forrester Research report finding that U.S. online retail sales will grown from US$172b in 2005 to US$329b in 2010.

Newsagents are losing ground. As a channel we have no online strategy. This means we’re not preparing for the move of news, information and entertainment products (newspapers and magazines) online. Nor are we competing for online stationery, lottery or greeting card sales. We ought to be leading the charge online on some of our product categories.

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Newsagency challenges

Girlfriend magazine leads the charge on consumer engagement

Girlfriend is a successful newsstand magazine in Australia. It’s website is even more successful. They are at the forefront of Internet use – readers get to have a say in the making of the magazine including article suggestions and choosing the front cover. At their u make the mag section of the website their constituents can connect with the staff of the magazine in a way which I’d suggest no other media outlet in Australia matches today. Girlfriend is an excellent model. My only criticism is that the office blog entries are too well written and too sanitised to be genuine blog entries.

Other publishers in Australia should be following the Girlfriend lead and connect with their constituents in an open ended online conversation.

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magazines

Newsweek on telcos becoming media companies

This Newsweek story is the latest in mainstream media about the disruption in entertainment and news distribution as a result of telecommunication developments. There was a time when publishers were publishers and TV networks were TV networks and Telcos were Telcos. The news and entertainment channels have become a mosh put and the original independent retailers in the channel are under the feet of the new dancers.

Government has an obligation to small business to help them navigate these challenges. I’m not talking about a handout but rather an obligation to ensure that small business understands the changes and has the resources necessary to navigate the future they choose.

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Media disruption

Dual standards exposed in Australia as Federal Government ponders changed in media regulation

Back in the late 1990s newsagents lost their monopoly in the distribution of newspapers. Newsagents had no say in the matter and were not assisted through the structural change by publishers or government. The result has been years of drifting with an outcome still not in sight. The focus of the changes was competition.

It is disappointing that at the pointy end of Australian media the government is not as focused on competition as it was with newsagents.

Rather than being told what to do by the few who control media and the pipelines which deliver access to media in this country, the government should remind itself of its obligation to competition and what is best for consumers.

I fear that Australia will be a media backwater unless the government changes its priorities. Their meddling is one reason our broadband take up has been slow; why digital television is failing; and, why media ownership is concentrated and therefore consumers less well informed.

Newsagents copped the competition push on the chin and have got on with business. Media companies need to do the same and the only way that will happen is if the government listens to and acts on its rhetoric.

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Media regulation

Newspapers and new routes to market, MediaWeek reports.

Why newspapers are finding new routes to new markets is a good analysis of significant changes occurring in the UK newspaper distribution space.

While our marketplace is difference we are experiencing change, significant change. What the MediaWeek analysis does not cover is the impact on the small business newsagents. The impact of loss of traffic will be significant. The big question is when. Phillip Meyer says newspapers will vanish in 2040 (in his book, The Vanishing Newspaper), newsagents say they will never vanish. Regardless of your position the channel is being impacted. Publishers are leading the change and newsagents need to understand the impacts of their moves and to take initiatives to mitigate the impact and find new traffic.

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Uncategorized

We always love a princess or how covers still count

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Princess Mary is a godsend for weekly magazine publishers and newsagents. Put her on the cover and sales jump. In my own store I know Mary can add between 15% and 25% in sales. While yesterday’s New Idea has been out barely 24 hours I can tell from the sales data that this issue, with Mary on the cover, will be at the high end of the range. Mary is our new Diana since the content almost does not matter – the key is the photo and the prospect of more inside.

Last week’s imported Hello! is another example of cover power. Kylie Minogue was on the cover and it was a sell out in five days whereas we would usually return 30% of supply.

While the science of magazine covers is not a new discussion, it is important to newsagents and other retailers as it helps us attract new shoppers and that underpins our relevance compared to online, for the moment.

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Uncategorized

Sudoku delivers healthy magazine sales

In just four months we have seen thirteen new Sudoku magazines published covering twenty individual issues. This is a new segment within the magazine category, a segment quite different to traditional crosswords. Sudoku sales are strong and smart newsagents are leveraging of newspaper traffic to grab these sales.

While on the one hand I comment and even worry here about the impact of technology on newspapers and magazines and in particular newsagents, on the other hand I’m happy to cheer this bricks and mortar success with Sudoku product. No other retail channel could have launched a new magazine segment like Sudoku as successfully as newsagents have. The success underscores a value proposition newsagents have for publishers in launching titles – as long as we have the core traffic necessary.

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Uncategorized

Whispers become a shout as Australian newspapers and magazines write about changes impacting their businesses

2005 started with barely a whisper on the pages of newspapers and magazines about the impact of blogging, podcasting, better mobile devices, 3G and broadband in homes. It was as if the changes being talked about so openly in Asia, Europe and the United States was not relevant to Australia. The whispers gained some volume following Rupert Murdoch’s speech in Washington in April to the American Society of Newspaper Editors. Then, in the last month, it’s as if someone has said it’s okay to talk about this stuff, it’s okay to speculate about our future. The whispers have become a shout.

Most of the capital city dailies have run stories about the impact of the Internet. The Age, the Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian Financial Review have written the most from what I have seen. This month’s Marketing magazine has an excellent if brief round up including an excellent piece by Martyn Thomas about whether newspapers will survive beyond 2040.

While I would have liked newspapers and business magazines to have paid more and earlier attention to the impact on mainstream media of technology and other changes noted above, their coverage now is welcome. I wish newsagents would pay the same attention to the changes going on around them. The old arguments about why people like newspapers over a computer screen are redundant. Newsagents and others ignoring the changes need to either get a new line or develop a business plan to help their business navigate the change.

The changes are inevitable as we can see from elsewhere in the world. What we need to understand and navigate is the impact.

Footnote: Maybe publishers could have frank dialogue with newsagents about what their experts see as the likely impact on the news and information supply chain.

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Uncategorized

Blogs, Katrina and the pursuit of the truth about what went wrong in New Orleans

No blog better illustrates the power of the blog as a medium than Josh Marshall’s Talking Points Memo blog. Marshall and his readers are helping compile a timeline of the events leading up to, during and after Hurricane Katrina. The timeline is compelling reading. Regardless of your politics it would be impossible to read it and not be outraged at the events and lack thereof.

I expect Marshall is achieving more today through the timeline than the enquiries which will follow. He is doing it without spin, transparently and by interacting with his readers and it is this interaction which interests me the most. Interaction is the oxygen of blogging in the area of news. It is what has been missing in mainstream media and what so many obviously crave. Blogging is ‘hot’ because people want to report what they know, challenge what they read and influence the words of history. Blogging allows that.

While you can turn on any of the cable news channels and see stories of anger and frustration at an inadequate and late response from varying levels of government in the United States to Katrina, non which I have seen have offered the power of the list created by Marshall and his readers. Their document makes the case.

As publishers navigate their way to a more interactive relationship with readers, the newspaper supply chain (newsagents here in Australia) needs to embark on a similar journey. For 130 years we have sold news day in, day out and newspaper publishers have published news. Publishers are changing: readers and becoming colleagues – while that metamorphosis may take some time yet, it will happen. In the case of newsagents we have not even begun to collectively contemplate how we must change. Whereas our businesses were once the key consumer connect in the news ‘conversation’, now we’re an aging relative in an overcrowded photo.

What I want is for my newsagency to connect with people as directly and personally as Josh Marshall does in his blog. I want to help people have a voice on matters which concern them. I want to be relevant in this new world.

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Newsagency challenges

It’s time for newsagents to respond to publisher online acquisitions

What was once an understood commercial media landscape has been turned on its ear thanks to faster, better and lower cost mobile devices and mobile coverage; self publishing tools; and a desire for citizens to create content. There are entirely new channels (online communities, podcasts, blogs etc) attracting advertising and this is what’s behind many of the acquisitions by publishers in the last few months. Thinking abut these and, in particular, the News Corporation US$1.7b shopping spree on online businesses, I wondered what Australian newsagents should/could invest in to shore up consumer traffic and therefore revenues. Here’s my (incomplete) shopping list:

  • Australia Post government owned retail network. (I know the government says it’s not for sale – maybe we need lobby for it to be put on the market.)
  • Content download business: music, films etc. from a kiosk in our store
  • WiFi network – providing Wireless access from our shops.
  • Internet service Providers.
  • Online advertising business.
  • Online news network. (We could create this based on our broad geographic spread.)
  • Mobile device retail – create our own brand for a store within a store concept.
  • Hair salon chain.
  • Coffee chain.
  • Build a ‘how to’ business – based around a selection of products we sell (or could sell) and embracing ‘community’ and ‘interaction’. Our stores could be the place people connect rather than all this impersonal online stuff. Games. Jigsaws. Painting.
  • The next juice concept – create the retail traffic generator, it’s cheaper than buying someone else’s success.
  • This list is by no means complete. My point is that we need to be ‘acquiring’ customer traffic and we need to be doing that now. Our future is in our hands. None of our existing suppliers are going to make investments which support our channel unless it suits them commercially. We control our future.

    DISCLOSURE: I own a business developing a new product/service which may lead to a new revenue stream for newsagents.

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    Uncategorized

    Alpha magazine issue #3 not tracking well for News Ltd.

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    Alpha #3 has been out a week and early indications from newsagents I speak with is that it is not selling as well as issue #2. While I’m no expert on these things I’d say Alpha is in trouble. Consumers are confused by the low price ($2.00) and by the requirement to buy the local News Ltd Newspaper. Newsagents are bearing the brunt of consumer frustration when they want to purchase the magazine and are told that they have to buy a newspaper as well. There is strong anecdotal evidence supporting my views not only from across my own counter but also from other newsagents.

    Alpha is a great product but it needs urgent surgery to succeed. By the way, ther have an excellent blog for the magazine.

    This is what I wrote a few weeks ago and what I still believe today:

    If I were in charge of Alpha I would increase the cover price to $7.95 – the quality of the product supports such a price; I would include teaser articles some of the features in the News Ltd newspapers with a coupon at the bottom of the article encouraging an Alpha purchase for $5.95 discount.

    This approach does two things. First, it pitches the price of the product where it should be based on quality. Second, rewards the consumer for their interest.

    Okay, since the magazine is published by a newspaper publisher I’d do something else. My third strategy would be to offer a competition entry with purchase of the magazine and I’d promote this on the coupon in the newspaper. Maybe a car giveaway each issue or a holiday or a hit out with a tennis star or a training run with a footy club. Who knows what the prize should be?

    As it stands Alpha will die unless there is a more integrated and considered marketing strategy. Newsagents are working hard but the $2.00 cover price and lack of support for building what is a new niche is making it challenging. I want it to work.

    On a pocket return basis I have Alpha taking 10 pockets at present and the return I anticipate for the month is $55.00. That does not pay the cost of the real-estate. A higher cover price with a lower sell through would be better economically.

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    Uncategorized

    New York Times launches Times Select and answers the argument about free online content from newspaper publishers

    It’s good to see the New York Times charging, from Monday, for access to some content online. Times Select membership will cost US$49.95 a year.

    There is a long running argument about whether access to content online should be free. That newspaper publishers have provided free access online to what is charged for in their physical product has, in my view, devalued newspapers. This move by the Times respects the work of their contributors and the value of their masthead.

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    Uncategorized

    Podcasting, it gets bigger

    Report from ClickZ News about an AOL podcasting initiative. This move by AOL is further proof that exectuives consider there is enough money in podcasting to warrant their embrace.

    In commercial mainstream media terms Australiua is a podcasting backwater. In national broadcaster terms, the ABC has been a pack leader for months.

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    Podcasting

    Newspaper circulation rorts II

    The crikey.com.au coverage on newspaper circulation tactics has been getting coverage at Andrew Landeryou’s blog. The best way for this to be dealt with is through full and frank disclosure – before it gets too much coverage in the blogosphere – the place your more likely to see accurate coverage on such a topic.

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    Newspapers

    Newspaper circulation rorts – Fairfax under scrutiny

    crikey.com.au has been running stories about newspaper circulation tactics used by our two major newspaper publishers News Ltd and Fairfax. Fairfax are receiving the most recent attention as a result of the pallet loads of newspapers offered free to people attending sporting events, gymnasiums and the cinema.

    I own a newsagency and make a living selling newspapers. My success is tied to the value of the mastheads. The more newspapers given away the lower the value of them masthead in consumer eyes. This is a practice which ought to stop not only because of the devaluing of circulation figures but also because of the damage it is doing to businesses like mine.

    If the newspaper has a price tag of a dollar then sell it for a dollar. If it is to be free then make it free for everyone.

    This game being played at present is nuts and Australia’s independently owned small business newsagents are suffering as a result.

    Newsagents are angry but will not speak up publicly because of fear of retribution.

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    Newspapers