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

Month: May 2011

Fairfax delays implemenation of TV Guide changes

Fairfax has this evening contacted NANA President Andrew Packham and advised that they will delay the implementation of the delivery changes for the TV Guide for a week.  They will post details on the Connect site for newsagents.  NANA will have more to say about this tomorrow.

Hopefully, commonsense will prevail and Fairfax will take on board the details of challenges associated with their proposed TV Guide move as articulated y NANA, the ANF and many newsagents through forums like this place and not proceed at all.

Click here for the original post and all the comments by newsagents.

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newspaper home delivery

Were supermarkets treated better than newsagents with Woman’s Day Royal Wedding magazine stock?

royalwedding-super.JPGNewsagents are frustrated that they have been unable to access sufficient Woman’s Day stock this week to meet demand while nearby supermarkets have had plenty of stock of this popular issue.

Newsagents I know received an increase of between 15% to 16% in supply of Woman’s Day.  One major supermarket representative I spoke with said they received an increase of 45%, claiming this was across the board.

If these numbers accurately reflect allocations for the Woman’s Day Royal Wedding issue, newsagents have every right to be frustrated.

I understand that the Royal Wedding presented unique and considerable challenges to ACP and other publishers.  It also presented tremendous opportunities for all of us in the magazine supply chain to do good business and attract some new customers with a hope that some of these would stick.

I would like disclosure of the allocations increase for supermarkets and newsagents for Woman’s Day.  I would like to know if supermarkets received an allocations increase more than twice the size of that provided to newsagents.

I visited a Woolworths supermarket early yesterday morning and took this photo of their display.  While they had sold out of Woman’s Day, this stand was full for almost two days as were plenty of other pockets in-store.  They did a bumper trade.  The nearby newsagent was out of stock from early Tuesday.

The photo is important for a few reasons – the amount of stock on display, the difference between this display and the display unit provided to newsagents and the terms under which this display was provided to supermarkets.

My supermarket contact told me that this display unit was placed at a cost to ACP, that the supermarket groups which took the display were paid a fee for the price location placement.  If true, this demonstrates a significant difference to the financial terms under which supermarkets trade for magazines compared to newsagents.  However, that it not my core concern.  No, my core concern is about stock.  We can’t sell what we don’t have.

Newsagents are told by magazine publishers that our channel is vitally important.   The allocations increase by ACP of Woman’s Day this week appears, if my numbers are accurate, to fly in the face of such claims.

We sell more magazines in our channel than any other single retail channel in Australia.  This should have seen us provided a bigger increase than a smaller channel, supermarkets.

The only way any newsagent supplier should demonstrate the value of our channel to their business is in their business decisions.  This is how newsagents should judge suppliers, by their actions.

ACP will say that it is easier to deal with supermarkets in that you can negotiate with a couple of national offices and cover off around 2,000 stores whereas with newsagents you have to deal with 4,000 owners for 4,000 stores.  While I can appreciate that, I ask at what cost?  What do supermarkets do for the suppliers – nothing unless they are paid.  What do newsagents do – plenty without being paid.  We do more to promote and engage with brands and magazines than supermarkets every day.

I am sure, too, that there are other factors at play here, factors which I will not see from my small business perspective.  ACP needs to do what it needs to do for its business.   Newsagents need to do what is right for our business.  If I am right on the allocations increase percentages for this week’s Woman’s Day then I don’t feel as strategic to ACP as I did a week ago.

If I was ACP, I would have backed newsagents ahead of supermarkets, with a 40% increase in supply.  I would have given supermarkets a 20% bump.  My justification would be that newsagents are more important to my future – they are more flexible, more engaged with my products, more important to the overall health of the magazine channel and cost me less to deal with.

I don’t know if the supermarkets asked for the 40% (or more) increase or if its was just offered.  The net result is that in this week of a huge spike in shopper engagement with magazines, newsagents were left looking like the poor cousins of supermarkets.  That is not a healthy situation for our businesses or for the magazine marketplace as a whole.

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magazine distribution

Promoting The Australian Women’s Weekly wedding special

wedding-knox.JPGCheck out the terrific display created by the team at my newsXpress Knox store promoting the latest issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.   This display is one of four for the title in the store at the moment – we are making the most of the opportunity in the first few days when interest is at its peak.  We are committed to buying stock elsewhere to ensure that we can satisfy shopper demand.  We have taken this stand because of the challenges that the split delivery looks set to bring.  It is more important to us that we satisfy shopper demand and stop leakage to nearby supermarkets than it is to provide 100% accurate sales data to Network Services.

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magazines

Well done desktop magazine

Kudos to the folks at desktop magazine for better engagement with newsagents.  They are offered 40% for their March and April issues to drive engagement.  They also provided clear advice on title placement – with ART & Literature/Design titles.  Specific placement advice such as this is helpful.

I hope that newsagents noticed the opportunity and engaged.

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magazines

Royal Wedding magazines on eBay

ebay-royal-wedding.jpgIt is interesting to see the New Idea Royal Wedding issue from this week on eBay already for $9.99 and the Woman’s Day pre Royal Wedding special on sale at $13.00.  Both are priced at a significant premium to retail prices.  Both titles are still available in newsagencies.  Good luck to the entrepreneurs behind these premium offers.

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magazines

Women’s Weekly split delivery hurts newsagents

I feel for newsagents on Queensland Country magazine distribution runs who are yet to receive the latest issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly.  Many are finding their local supermarket has stock while they, the competing newsagent, does not.  Newsagents are often told how important they are to magazine publishers.  This situation with supermarkets supplied while a neighboring newsagent is not demonstrates that words can be hollow.

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magazine distribution

How serious is Time about Australia?

time-wedding.JPGWe received two copies of the special commemorative issue of Time magazine this morning.  If ever the magazine was going to sell significantly more copies than usual it would be this issue … oh, and the Osama Bin Laden death special which is coming.  Why the people who manage allocations for Time did not increase supply, especially for proactive newsagents, is beyond me.  We have ordered ten extra copies.  I am confident we will see out of all twelve copies.

If Time is serious about growing sales in Australia it would have ensured that it had processes in place to make the most of the Royal Wedding opportunity.  It would also ensure that it makes the most of the Osama Bin laden opportunity.

So, I ask the question, how serious is Time about Australia?

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magazine distribution

Great Mother’s Day promotion from ACP

mothersdaypromo.jpgACP is running a terrific Mother’s Day promotion at their magshop.com.au subscription site.  Up for grabs is a trip to Italy valued at $25,000.  The headline is right, this is a ‘perfect Mother’s Day gift’.

I’d love to have been able to offer this type of prize in-store.  Entry could have been open to shoppers buying, say, three Mother’s Day related titles.  In other words, using the in-store campaign to encourage shoppers to purchase more than would usually be the case in a single visit.  I am certain that the campaign would have been commercially viable, delivering necessary incremental business.

ACP has a track record for running excellent promotions around major seasons through magshop.  From what I understand, they work very well, helping to deliver excellent incremental business.

Now before people think I am having a swipe at ACP, I do understand the role subscriptions play in the overall circulation mix.  ACP is doing what I would do if I were them.  That said, I think that they could look at more newsagency specific proportions – we are the more engaged and less expensive retail channel after all.

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Magazine subscriptions

Promoting triple j magazine

jjjmagmay2011.JPGWe have been promoting the triple J magazine at the counter with this simple yet tactical display for the past week.

We gave triple J this prime location because of the Chris Lilley cover, he has been in the news in the run up to the launch of his new TV series, and because the publisher is supporting newsagents in promoting the title.

We figured that it was important to promote the title outside of the usual music magazine location as it is likely to appeal to those who may not usually purchase it.

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magazines

More Justin Bieber stock helps drive sales

bieber-more.JPGWe were able to get more stock of the Justin Bieber one-shot from Pacific Magazines and so we recreated this simple tactical display at our counter.  It is already selling again.  I wonder how many other newsagents are doing this – chasing extra stock of a one-shot special interest title like this when it sells out.  Some newsagents I know refuse as they see the sell out as the end of their obligation. My view is that if I can make money by ordering more why not!  While Bieber’s star will wane (please!) I am happy to make money from good basket building impulse purchases by our customers.

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magazines

Hallmark TVC drives Mother’s Day traffic

The TV commercial by Hallmark cards promoting recordable Mother’s Day cards and the range of recordable story books is driving traffic.  It is terrific having people come in specifically as a result of the TVC.

These interactive products have delivered excellent results over the last couple of years. Expect to see more innovation around interactivity.

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Greeting Cards

Fairfax takes the only option available

The announcement today by Fairfax to make cuts is the only decision available to the newspaper publisher.  More changes will be essential if the company is to weather the changes it is having to deal with.  Fairfax is not alone, all newspaper publishers are seeing a shift reader engagement and a shift in revenue … on the back of considerable cost pressures.

While I feel for those losing their jobs from today’s announcement and the announcements to come, the company has no choice but to reconfigure its operation in response to today’s marketplace.

Newsagents need to be making similar moves, changing the core of our businesses to make them more responsive to today’s marketplace.  If we were making the tough decisions like Fairfax management has just made we would:

  1. Cut the magazine department in our retail stores to something between 700 and 900 titles in all but a few newsagencies.
  2. Set the terms for which magazines can be supplied to our businesses.
  3. Quit home delivery.
  4. Cut all stationery lines which are not cash flow positive.
  5. Remove full time managers from newsagencies with retail sales (outside of lotteries) of less than $1M a year.
  6. Expand into new product categories which fit with the traditional newsagent customer.
  7. Start making business decisions based on real numbers.

There is more I could add to this list.  What I have written is a start.

Like the folks at Fairfax have discovered, now is the time for some tough decisions in newsagencies across Australia.  The opportunities are tremendous if we seize them.

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Newsagency management

EFTPOS fee briefing paper released by the ANF

The ANF has released an EFTPOS fee issue briefing paper to help newsagents in their engagement on this important issue.  Click here for a copy of the briefing paper which the ANF has given permission to publish.

I urge newsagents to download, print and read this briefing paper.  Then, I urge newsagents to engage: contact your local federal member, contact senators for your state, contact your local newspaper, talk to fellow small and independent retail, traders.

Any newsagent does not engage will have no right to complain when they are hit with new fees.  Now is the time for us to act.

I appreciate the ANF engaging and giving permission to share this paper.

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EFTPOS fees

Newsagents: make the most of the news today

With the death of Osama Bin Laden we have a great opportunity today to promote the news aspect of our newsagency businesses.  I’d suggest that newsagents:

  1. Ensure newspapers are in a prominent, traffic generating, position.  They have tended to drift to the back of newsagencies in recent years.
  2. Engage in co-location to drive incremental business.  In addition to their usual location: with weekly magazines, at the counter.
  3. Encourage team members to offer the up-sell.  Maybe consider a deal.

Too often now newspapers are sold not on the basis of news but for competitions, celebrity coverage and other reasons.  Today we have a chance to sell newspapers based on news.

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Newsagency opportunities

A relaunch for MasterChef magazine

mc-displmay2011.JPGWe have a terrific new display unit for promoting MasterChef to coincide with the launch of the latest TV series on Sunday night.  We’ve placed the display unit at the counter, next to newspapers, to make the most of the opportunity.

The display unit, additional collateral and supply boost equate to a re-launch, of sorts, of the MasterChef title.  Given the ratings for Sunday’s show I am happy to have the material necessary to connect with the brand.

The display unit is great because it is easily moved and holds plenty of stock.  This helps us make the most of the opportunity without high labour or floor-space overheads.

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magazines

GRAZIA shines!

grazia-may11.JPGGRAZIA magazine shines this week with its Royal Wedding coverage.  We have customers specifically asking for it, something I cannot recall happening for this struggling title.  This tells me that people understand where the title sits in the marketplace.  Maybe it’s that we don’t have enough every-woman glam our events to drive weekly sales.  We are promoting GRAZIA in multiple locations to make the most of the heightened interest.

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magazines

Making the most of Royal Wedding opportunities

royalweddispl.JPGWe have been promoting New Idea and Woman’s Day next to each other given that the Royal Wedding coverage is more likely to drive customers buying both titles in the one sale.  We have made sure to do this throughout the store, not only for New Idea and Woman’s Day together but also for other Royal Wedding titles – where we still have stock.

I am keen to grow total magazine sales and not just one title taking sales from another.  Hence the importance of ensuring the titles are placed together.  Newsagents don’t win from such churn.

Yesterday was frustrating with both magazine distributors, Gordon and Gotch and Network Services, saying they were out of stock of the Royal Wedding issues.  The demand appears to have been a surprise to everyone.  Thankfully, I was able to find some floor stock for those in need.

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magazines

Kobo e-reader a popular Mother’s Day prize

reader.JPGWe are giving away a Kobo e-reader to one lucky Mother’s Day Hallmark card customer this year.  There is strong interest in the Kobo prize, especially among younger shoppers.  I served one customer yesterday in her teens who thought it would be really cool to win this for her mum.  A few minutes later she dragged her brother in to buy his Mother’s Day card from us. They shared a laugh about teaching their mum how to use it.

While some may question the value of a business which relies on print giving away an e-reader as a prize, I like it because the prize shows we are being relevant in today’s marketplace, it demonstrates innovation as well as good value.

Promotions like this are vitally important in reinforcing the premium nature of our card offer over supermarkets, discount stores and other outlets.

There several hundred Hallmark newsagents each giving away Kobo e-reader this Mother’s Day.

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Greeting Cards

The Osama Bin Laden newspaper opportunity

While is may appear ghoulish, it will be interesting to see what the news of Osama Bin Laden’s death does for newspaper sales tomorrow.  This is the type of story which newspapers cover well with plenty of analysis and commentary.  It is an excellent opportunity for the medium.  So, I wonder if the opportunity will be seized.  For our part, we will take extra care to ensure that more visitors to our newsagencies see the cover stories.

UPDATE (4:50PM) The herald and Weekly Times has advised a supply boost tomorrow in light of this story.

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Newspapers

John Sands loses $1.6M on Allied Brands collapse

Greeting card company John Sands has lost $1,600,371.53 million from the collapse of Allied Brands last year according the to Notice to Creditors dated April 11, 2011.  This large loss is thought to primarily relate to the Kenny’s Cardiology business owned by Allied Brands – Kenny’s as since been sold to new interests who are rebuilding the group.  $1.6 million is a large loss to absorb.

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Newsagency challenges

Another politician engages on EFTPOS issue

Alan Tudge, The Federal Member for Aston, the electorate covering one of my newsagencies has responded on the EFTPOS issue.

I appreciate how this can affect a small business like yours in a significant way. I do not know if there is anything that the government can do about it if the company is actually legally. There may be ACCC issues or other issues that I have not considered. I will approach both the Minister and Shadow Minister in relation to your concerns and seek their action on it.

The more newsagents who engage on this issue the greater the chance of it getting the necessary attention to affect change.  Have you written to your local member of parliament?

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EFTPOS fees

Promoting the Woman’s Day Royal Wedding Special Edition

royalwedding-disp.JPGWe were fortunate to receive our Woman’s Day and other ACP magazines yesterday (sorry Queenslanders) and made the most of the opportunity.  Our team put together a Royal Wedding display unit and placed on the lease line facing into the mall.  They also created a well as this terrific display behind the sales counter (see photo) plus tactical placement with newspapers and the magazines in their usual location.

Customer engagement was good.  We certainly sold magazines to weekend shoppers we do not see during the week.

There will be pressure on display space today with New Idea and more titles in – we will be adjusting displays as a result.

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magazines

My Kitchen Rules one-shot performs well

mkr.JPGWhile sales have tapered off, we have been happy with the performance of the My Kitchen Rules on-shot from Pacific Magazines.  The title worked best for us when pushed at the front of the newsagency early in the on-sale.  We sold more than first allocated thanks to additional stock we sourced.  Sales could have been stronger with more marketing collateral – a pretty bland poster was not enough to make the most.  We re-purposed a display unit so that we could be more tactical in our approach with the title.

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magazines

ACP stuffs up Royal Wedding opportunity for Queensland newsagents

Newsagents in Queensland have not received their supply of Royal Wedding feature magazines from ACP today as promised last week.  Curiously, supermarkets in Queensland appear to be unaffected.

The (justified) anger of newsagents directed at ACP is heightened when you consider that tomorrow is a public holiday and traffic is expected to be down.

This is a right royal stuff by ACP.  To be fair, they have sent out an email today to try an explain the situation:

Please be advised that due to production difficulties there has been some delays to the scheduled early (Sunday) delivery of Woman’s Day (Bipad 01135) today.

To maximise the sales opportunity associated with the Royal wedding some production was shifted to QLD. Unfortunately this facility is running behind schedule. Trucks were held back as long as possible but ultimately many had to be dispatched without Woman’s Day.

Based on the latest production schedule Network Services plans to deliver your Woman’s Day stock tomorrow morning (Monday 02/05/2011). Please hold off reporting any shortages until then as at this stage we anticipate supplying you in full.

On behalf of ACP Magazines we apologise for any inconvenience caused.

While ACP often tells newsagents that they are a vitally important channel, that they have delivered today to supermarkets and not newsagents shows otherwise.  This is inexcusable.  The email today should not have been sent.  Why offer an apology without a reasonable explanation of how and why you have given a competitor such a free kick?

The ACP team decided to go early with it’s magazines today.  They promoted this to newsagents last week. Many newsagents made plans accordingly, even bringing resources so that they could create displays to make the most of the opportunity.  They then spend hours chasing answers as to why they did not receive magazines while their competitors did. At 10:43am they get their answer.

If I was affected I’d try and buy up tons of these magazines from the supermarkets.  Too not have these Royal Wedding titles available today would present too much of a risk to the business in my view.  While I shouldn’t have to do this I would.  I’d see no option.

In the meantime, maybe newsagents could consider some form of joint action against ACP for compensation.

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magazines

Frustrating sell out of newspapers by 12 noon

We were sold put of the Herald Sun by noon yesterday.  We chased more stock and our distribution newsagent said they could not get stock.  We bought up copies from Coles and they only lasted a few minutes.  Based on customer queries we could have sold at least double the usual number of copies of the Herald Sun.  By not long after noon at our centre every retail location was out of the Herald Sun.

We sold out of The Saturday Age by around 1:30.  The same deal.  No stock.

I am surprised that Fairfax and News did not see this coming given the extraordinary interest in the royal wedding.  But maybe they did – they make most of their money from advertising. Printing and distributing extra stock costs money.  We only make money from sales, extra stock is essential to us.

Very frustrating.

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Newspapers