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

Month: June 2009

Books and magazines share challenges

The New York Times has a sobering report about book sales in the US from the Book Expo America, the industry’s annual convention which ended Sunday in New York.

I found the report interesting on a couple of fronts: the evolving challenge of print and the reliance of the channel on mega brands – Dan Brown and Stephenie Meyer to name two.  In the magazine space we are challenged by mega brands too, the top selling titles account for most of our sales.The opportunity newsagents have had for years is to focus on range.  We have not done this well and now that it really matters we are losing out.  I know people who will travel to a Borders for range of magazines instead of to their local newsagent.

Newsagents can embrace range and build a marketing campaign around this point of difference – if we are serious about our future in the magazine category.

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Book retailing

Embedding newspaper content

Google web elements is one reason newspaper publishers don’t like Google so much. Embedding newspaper content via Google is easy.  Newspaper publishers don;t like not having control over their distribution channel.  The thing is, if they refuse their content to Google they will lose eyeballs on their brand. The element below aggregating news with the keyword newsagents was created in seconds.

Thanks to BuzzMachine for the tip.

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Media disruption

Pitching Australian Women’s Weekly at the counter

fhn_aww_jun09.JPGWe are featuring the Australian Women’s Weekly at the counter this week.  While this space is reserved for titles with a free gift we have not received any new stock which qualifies.  We created the AWW display primarily using covers we copied – in the absence of anything from the publisher except for one poster.

Complaints aside, this issue of AWW has sold well and we are only one week in.  This second week promotion at the counter should help our sales nicely.  Indeed, all issues of AWW have sold well this year except for May which was average.

We support AWW with a waterfall display, front of shop co-location for the first two weeks and an ACP basket builder pocket near one of our registers.  This extra activity is because we have found it is often purcahsed on impulse.

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magazines

The Age for half price

run_melbourne.jpgThe Age has pitched an exclusive subscription offer to participants in Run Melbourne, a half marathon (and other distances) event on June 28.  They are offering 20 weeks of Monday to Friday home delivery of The Age for $70, less than half price.  I don’t mind this offer since they are not using retail sales to promote it.

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newspaper home delivery

Green Living performs well

green_living.JPGGreen Living magazine launched around six weeks ago has performed well for us.  85% sell through in five weeks.  We had Green Living in a prime position, located next to Better Homes and Gardens.  It was in a column with four other green titles in the same column.  Hopefully, the success we have experienced with the first issue will continue – this is one of the better magazine launches.

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magazines

Business Solutions magazine not performing

business_solutions.jpgAustralian Business Solutions is not performing for us.  We are lucky to sell one copy per issue yet the distributor (Network) has increased supply.  We have supported the title with a good location, tried co-location and also promoted with posters.  It is time to cut our losses and quit the title.  I wonder if sales are impacted by sameness of covers.  Look at the two issues in the photo.  Regular browsers will struggle to notice a difference unless the take the latest issue out of the display pocket and look at the whole cover.

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magazine distribution

Chasing a flexibile newspaper stand

bartuf_newspaper_stand.jpgWe are planning to replace the purpose built newspaper stand at our Frankston newsagency with a smaller footprint unit on castors.  Something along the lines of the Bartuf unit in the photo which they developed for the WH Smith group in the UK.  We have been using a larger mobile unit at our Forest Hill location for years but that is too big for what we need today – and it does not support the variety we now want.

The unit we ultimately go with will be strong, flexible, movable and able to display multiple categories: newspapers, magazines, confectionery and even a line of greeting cards for special promotions.

It is changes like this, at the core of our businesses (the newspaper stand) where newsagents need to begin the transformation.  While some publishers may push back on these changes, time will show that they will not lose sales.

We installed our first flexible and movable stand at Forest Hill around nine years ago when we were required to have a  purpose built stand.  We were given permission and agreed to change if sales were affected.  They were not.  Our stand stayed.  In the meantime many newsagents were forced to build a boat anchor of a stand which can be used for nothing else.

There are rules we need to break.  There are fears we need overcome.  The newspaper stand is a good place to start.

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Newspapers