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

Month: June 2007

Free OK! magazine offer

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OK! Magazine is running a promotion which should drive some good traffic to newsagencies. Anyone purchasing the Music & Lyrics DVD at Sanity, Virgin or HMV will be given a voucher to redeem a free copy of OK! from a newsagency.

Smart newsagents will scout out the participating DVD retailers in their area and remind them of their location.

In our newsagency we’ll be handing over the free copy of OK! with one of our Magazine Club Cards with the first magazine clipped – making it an extra reward.

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magazines

Knitters magazine success a risk for newsagents

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I am no knitting expert but Knitty seems like a great magazine for knitters. It’s free, published quarterly and only online. That’s right – no print edition. In fact, there are at least ten other knitting magazines which publish online editions – some free, some online only. Knitty seems to be the market leader from what I can tell – probably because it is by knitters for knitters and feels less advertiser driven.

Newsagents have taken comfort in recent years that the titles we carry in our stores which no one else will touch – such as knitting titles – will continue to drive traffic for us. We hold these special interest titles up as our point of difference. There was a time that being the magazine specialists mattered. Now Google is the magazine specialist and it provides access free of charge from the comfort of your own home.

Knitty demonstrates the risk to our businesses if we rely on these special interest titles to guarantee foot traffic. As more special interest areas are well covered online customer traffic to our stores will fall. Hence our need to focus on building our own success while we carefully monitor and manage the resources we invest in special interest titles.

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magazines

Dealing with declining newspaper sales

Journalist Philip M. Stone has written an excellent article at followthemedia.com about how the San Francisco Chronicle and other newspapers are dealing with the “flight of classified advertising to the Internet”. Stone asks whether it is cuts by bean counters resulting in lighter newspapers which are leading to declining sales rather than the migration of classifieds online. He also talks about the place of advertising over editorial – a topic dear to my heart given my frustration at the desecration of the mastheads of The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald by Fairfax over the last few months.

In business schools across the world students are exhorted to build products of substance and quality in a field of dreams type way – build it and they will come. Better newspapers, delivering a valued point of difference over alternative channels, would be more successful in my view.

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Newspapers

Pauline Hanson ought to be ashamed

I’ve now read Untamed & Unashamed by Pauline Hanson. Politics aside, this has to be the worst autobiography I have ever read. I’m ashamed that I had it on the shelf in my newsagency for sale. No wonder it did not sell. Give up Pauline, your 15 minutes is over.

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Uncategorized

OzLotto jackpots, drives Tuesday traffic

For years Tuesdays used to be the newsagent’s day off or at least the day to get out of the shop work done. Now, with regular OzLotto jackpots the pattern has changed. With the $20 million not going off last night, newsagents can expect a 20% or more lift in traffic next Tuesday andnice kick on Monday. It’s a good problem to have – scheduling staff to cope with the additional traffic and to make the most of the opportunity.

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Lotteries

Free daily newspapers news

Check out the latest Free Daily Newspaper newsletter from newspaper innovation. It offers an excellent update on the state of play in the Free Daily Newspaper world. I suspect we will see much more activity in this free daily space in Australia in the next year or so. Being informed about what is happening overseas can prepare us for the impact – especially for newsagents in the distribution space.

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Newspapers

Magazine and newspaper posters for today

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Posters have been important to promoting magazines and newspapers since … forever. Publisher research shows that a good poster boosts sales. However, posters are becoming out of date. With the costs of plasma and LCD screens dropping so much it is only time before newsagents entirely replace printed posters with electronic versions.

I’m involved in a new newsagency where we have no provisions for printed posters and instead are locating four large plasma units at the entrance.

The photo above is from a restaurant in Hong Kong – the menu display draws attention. It changes, too, promoting the business across to the other side of the mall. These units will lure more people than printed posters could.

This is on my mind today because current ‘best practice’ in the newsagency channel is having a certain number of print poster units. Best practice, for the future, ought to be based on elimination of printed posters and their replacement with an integrated set of plasma or LCD displays.

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magazines

Heavy newspapers take their toll

A colleague told me a few days ago that they are giving up their newspaper home delivery business because of heavy newspapers. In this family run business the husband delivers the newspapers and has done for years.

OH&S standards require that they use two drivers to handle the run. Unfortunately, delivery fees – controlled by publishers – do not provide sufficient revenue to cover the cost of two drivers. The husband has injured his shoulder and cannot continue. No one wants to buy the run so they will give it up.

The question is what has caused this? Is it overweight newspapers – especially the weekend newspapers which often weight more than 1kg? Is it the economics of home delivery driving newsagents to overwork rather than take a bigger loss by employing more distribution staff? Are the many cheap subscription offers the cause – driving newsagent return down in some areas?

This is a serious problem for city based newsagents with fewer than 500 daily home deliveries for it is those under this number who appear to be most economically challenged by the current delivery fee structure. I say city based because in the country there are mechanisms which can lead to delivery pricing based on cost of service.

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Newsagency challenges

Riding the elevator with James Packer

I was in an elevator on my way down to dinner at my Hong Kong hotel tonight and James Packer stepped in. No, I didn’t ask why he has retreated from the old media companies his family name has been connected with for so long and what he felt newsagents ought to take away from this. I didn’t say anything. It wasn’t the place or time – and an elevator ride is so brief.

My questions have answers through the actions of PBL. James Packer sees a brighter future or an easier ride – or a mix of both – in new media; newsagents currently have no role in new media. Like James Packer has done for his own assets, newsagents need to make entrepreneurial business decisions which put their needs ahead of others.

For more than a year I have been contemplating the newsagency of the future. Based on many conversations with newsagents across the country, I know that newsagents are expecting suppliers to guide them to the future. Riding in the lift with James Packer I knew that there was no point in asking the question. I don’t begrudge his decision to sell down his old media interests, not for a second.

Newsagents cannot rely on anyone, including long term suppliers such as the formerly Packer controlled ACP Magazines, to deliver their future. Just as James Packer is doing for his interests, newsagents need to follow their own path.

Some are already pursuing a brighter future over which they have more control, many are not. How does one get that message across, how do we turn newsagents from the process workers many have been for decades into entrepreneurial business people? I have some thoughts and will explore these here soon.

In the meantime, the diversification of the Packer interests including a focus on new media (online) offers some pointers newsagents would do well to consider.

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Newsagency challenges

Magazine and newspaper convenience in Hong Kong

Newspapers and magazines are very accessible in Hong Kong – from newsstands and convenience stores mainly. Below is a typical newsstand I encountered in Central this morning – one and sometimes two on every block. Only rarely are these stores branded. Most have product stacked plainly on tables.

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All the Circle K convenience stores have magazines right at the front or even on the street like this one. As I noted yesterday, the range of titles is excellent. Watching traffic at this store for a few minutes in the morning rush and the magazine rack is very popular.

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7-Eleven serves the magazine and newspaper category well here too. This store is typical of the street level stores – yesterday’s photo was of a 7-Eleven in one of their skyways.

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Of course, the c-stores cover magazines and newspapers well because they are the newsagencies here. Sure the street newsstands are well represented but in a more traditional store based setting, there are no newsagencies as we know them. Hence the opportunity for c-stores to shine in the category. This is what would happen in Australia is newsagents no longer owned the magazine category.

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magazines

Lazy reporting in the Daily Telegraph

Under the headline Lotto agents cheat alert, Kelvin Bissett, Investigations Editor for the Daily Telegraph demonstrates poor reporting skills. It’s what I’d call cut and paste journalism – there was no investigation. I’d say that someone had fed Mr Bissett the story and that he has published it without adequate investigation.

Is there a problem with newsagents cheating lottery customers and NSW lotteries? No!

Have agents been convicted? No!

So, what’s going on here? NSW Lotteries has always had control over the process of paying out major prizes. Their processes have been found to be flawed. Yet I the face of evidence of the flaws, NSW Lotteries did not act. Lottery licencees in other states did not and do not have the same process flaws as NSW Lotteries. NSW Lotteries knew this yet they persisted for years with prize claim processes which made it difficult for newsagents to protect customers.

NSW Lotteries has acknowledged culpability in this area by changing its prize claim processes in the last year. While the changes bring more certainty to the situation, they are not as robust as, say, Tattersalls where the customer must deal direct with Tattersalls for any major prize – over, say, $4,000.

A professional investigation by a professional journalist would have revealed that there is more to this story. They would have also uncovered other problems with lotteries, system problems at their end, which also have resulted in prize claim disputes.

no, this report in the Daily Telegraph reads like it has been placed. Maybe it is an attempt to spin public perception following the recent court case in NSW.

Newsagents are honest hard working small business people. Shame on the Daily Telegraph for running a half baked story targeting this small business group and ignoring the role played by the State Government owned NSW Lotteries.

Why was Bissett fed the story and by whom? What is really playing out here?

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Uncategorized

Discounting Time magazine

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Time magazine and the Pacific Coffee House group here in Hong Kong have put together a deal whereby you get a free 12oz coffee of your choice when you purchase the special issue of Time magazine for HK$38.

It’s an odd deal since coffee is the product of the venue promoter – Pacific Coffee House – yet their product is provided free. Usually, the freebee is the product you don’t usually sell. Pacific does not usually sell Time magazine. I am guessing this promotion is being run the other way around to get around circulation audit requirements.

This offer is reminiscent of the Starbucks Fairfax deal where The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald are sold for 50 cents at Starbucks outlets. As a retailer actively promoting newspaper and magazine brands, I’m not happy when I see such heavy long term discounting. It gives off a confusing message.

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magazines

Magazine convenience offering

hk_711.JPGThis 7-Eleven store in one of the skyway malls – kilometers of above the ground walkways connecting buildings and public transport i Hong Kong – has a great range of magazines. Probably the best range I have seen in a 7-Eleven anywhere. Magazines are in the window and draw good attention.

This store is different to where we see c-stores place magazines in Australia. Also, Australian c-stores do not have this range. The display in this Hong Kong store is U shaped and they have, I am guessing, around 200 titles – more than I expected.

For some newsagents this could be their newsagency of the future? A smaller but more efficient convenience offering with magazines a key category but other products also drawing traffic and providing margin balance.

While some Australian newsagents already play in this space the execution, I suspect, is not as structured as this store in Hong Kong.

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magazines

Jumbo Magazine House – the magazine specialists

Jumbo Magazine House in Hong Kong is a magazine oasis – plenty of titles in various languages.

Their display varies between full cover, horizontal overlap and vertical overlap. They fit a lot of stock into a limited space. What is interesting is that they pre-bag many of the magazines – you can see the stacks at the front of the shop.

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I am sure there is an operational reason for this. It must be labour intensive though. I took these photos yesterday afternoon and there were two people in the shop busy putting magazines in plastic bags.

See the flat stack on the left – two deep.

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Walking away from the shop I wondered if this was the newsagency of the future for some – a small footprint shop in a high traffic area. Doing some quick math for a 50 sq metre shop and I reckon it’s a model worth considering in some centres. Some are playing in this space – Magnation – but the Jumbo Magazine House is different to that model.

For years we have been adding to the retail newsagency model and maybe, for some, the future is to be found by taking away and becoming more focused on one or two core categories. As Chris Anderson writes in his excellent book, The Long Tail, there is good money to be made selling small numbers from a large range and if, sometime down the track, there are fewer magazine retailers of range, who knows.

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magazines

Bright magazine display

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Wow! How’s that for a bright magazine display. It is as bright in real life as the photo shows. The magazines are a beacon. This place is in Hong Kong in one of the skyway malls above the road. The only reason I notices them was the brightness of the display.

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magazines

The Chaser sticks it on Fairfax

Thanks to a colleague newsagent I can give you the link to The Chaser TV team confronting Fairfax CEO David Kirk about the awful stuck on ads they persist in selling to cover the mastheads of The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald.

Apparently there is another stuck on ad today – I’m in Hong Kong at present and so cannot record a photo here.

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Newspaper marketing

Online lottery sales barrier

NSW newsagents are lucky that the legislation under which they operate lottery and instant scratch ticket games explicitly prohibits the use of credit cards for the payment of these products. This serves as a barrier to the sale of the products online. While it’s easy for NSW residents to purchase Tattersalls and others products online, the lack of marketing in NSW means uptake will be much slower than elsewhere.

Newsagents invest prime real-estate promoting lottery brands and without a share of online sales (except for Queensland for a limited time) recognizing this development and promotion work, we are naturally concerned about the aggressive online moves by some lottery companies.

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Lotteries

Meetings with newsagents

Tower Systems serves over 1,400 newsagents and staying in touch can be a challenge. Our current national user meeting tour is coming to a close with meeting in Perth on Thursday June 14 and Darwin on Friday June 22. Both start at 10am. These sessions will include a newsagent business roundtable discussion followed by a Tower user meeting. By the time we finish in Darwin.

Any newsagent is welcome to participate – it’s a great way to check Tower Systems out without the sales pitch – these are user meetings after all. Email bookings@towersystems.com.au to reserve a spot.

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newsagent software

Rupert Murdoch, newspaper proprietor

The Wall Street Journal has published an edited version of an interview it conducted with Rupert Murdoch a week ago. It is a wide ranging interview, a compelling insight into the most important newspaper proprietor in Australia. He loves newspapers:

I’ve been a newspaper person since I was a baby, practically. I found it riveting. I just love newspapers, and that’s not any exaggeration. And the frustration of my life has been as the company has grown bigger, and we’ve taken opportunities, I’ve had less time to pay any detailed attention to them.

He also understands the challenges:

And I think we’ve got to pour some money into digital. We’ve got to do a lot of things there… There’s so much going on on the Internet. We’ve got to find new ways and new business models to get revenues. Or else the world is going to be owned by Google.

And then…

The Internet is a great leveler. All newspapers count for less these days. So … as far as I’m concerned, I want to drive News Corp., as I’ve said, into being the greatest content company, whether it’s in news, opinions, writing or whether it be film or television. I mean there are so many new pipes in how you deliver these things.

This interview ought to be read by newsagents as a challenge or a road map (of sorts) if you will. Publishers are more interested in what is happening online than in print. It’s where the revenue growth is. It can be for newsagents too but for us to unlock that we need to be an insightful as Rupert Murdoch on these things.

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Newsagency challenges

The Australian Women’s Weekly and old age

aww_june07.JPGThe Australian Women’s Weekly, the grand old lady of magazine publishing, could be in trouble if sales data I am seeing is accurate. Despite considerable investment in re-jigging the title by ACP Magazines over the last two years, the title is challenged. While sales remain considerable, they are falling in the newsagency channel. This may not be the case in other channels but I suspect not.

Look at the last year or so: a design revamp, more tweaking, three price points. These changes are unsettling to the traditional AWW buyer. Add to that the new and refreshed titles encroaching on this space: Better Homes and Gardens, Notebook, Real Living, Madison … there are many new titles playing to the same or a similar demographic. Also, habits have changed. We consume in shorter chunks now and AWW is more designed for a longer read.

Talk to executives from competitor publishers and they will tell you they are concerned. The last thing any magazine publisher in Australia wants to see is an iconic title like AWW in trouble. Trouble for AWW will reflect as trouble for the whole category.

If my information is right and AWW retail sales are falling, it will be interesting to see how the new management team in control of ACP Magazines handle this.

As a retail newsagent I need AWW to be strong. It is an anchor title in the most important part of my newsagency. I build other sales around its on sale period each month. But now I have to look for other honey pot titles to drive add on sales – titles off which I can grow weaker titles.

I first noticed that AWW was in trouble in my store a year ago when it was the most redeemed magazine title under our magazine loyalty program. It was the title our customers took as their freebie. To me, someone who failed economics and statistics, this suggested that AWW was a discretionary purchase with many no longer wanting to spend the money.

To try and kick sales we have run over the counter promotions and introduced road block display strategies based around AWW. Each has worked well, adding sales of 25 and more copies on the day – mid through the on sale period for an issue. However, one cannot do this every month.

I have no easy solution for AWW. Rather, I just want to record that AWW is unwell and we – newsagents, ACP Magazines and, indeed, all in the magazine channel – need this situation turned around.

To write this is heresy but someone has to open the issue for discussion.

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magazines

Testing customer loyalty for Take 5 and That’s Life

For the last two years we have run a co-location strategy with weekly magazines – placing them in a second location for the first two days of their on sale period. Ben Kay, manager of my newsagency feels that Take 5 and That’s Life will be as successful without this additional front of house support. I disagreed initially but now I reckon that Ben may be onto something for these titles. So, we are leaving Take 5 and That’s Life in the body of the shop. We’ll measure their sales and the sales of titles near them. The risk with co-location is that you may get fewer add on sales since the customer does not enter deep into the store. I’ll report back how this goes.

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magazines

Delicious magazine supply cut

delicious_june07.JPGOur Delicious sales fluctuate but not enough to have our supplies slashed. This month we are down 50% on last month and with such a small quantity we cannot feature the magazine or co-locate. A reasonable assessment of sales over the last four issues would not have resulted in this cut – it makes me wonder if someone has overridden the NDD scale out systems or whether their systems have a problem. I am sure the folks at Delicious would be concerned to hear about supplies being cut as we have experienced. It could be that I am not alone in the cut this month.

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magazines

Zoo weekly wins magazine of the year

zoo_june07.JPGZoo Weekly was announced as magazine of the Year and Magazine of the Launch of the Year last night as voted by newsagents.

Zoo is proving to be a good add on sale – to newspaper purchases especially. Basket efficiency is helped in our case by a great stand the folks at Zoo organised for us – this has been placed next to our newspapers. I think the key is to get Zoo away from Picture, People and similar publications as they seem to be browsed by different consumers.

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magazines

Newsagents of the year

Congratulations to Chris and Julie Leonadis of South Eastern Distribution for winning the Distribution Newsagent of the Year award at the Australian Newsagents’ Federation annual conference on the Gold Coast last night. Congratulations to Damien, Karen and Phil Vanden Bergh and his parents of West Wyalong Newsagency for winning Retail Newsagency of the Year last night. Both business owners share a common aggressive use of technology to drive their business decisions. They actively participate in user meetings and regularly challenge our us to help them extract more benefit from the Tower Systems technology

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newsagency marketing