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

Month: April 2012

Ethically impaired newsagent suppliers don’t deserve our support

I am disappointed by practices I consider to be ethically questionable by several newsagency suppliers, practices where the suppliers have made promises they have not kept. Practices they knew the newsagents involved would most likely not take legal action on.

These product suppliers, not distributors, have got away with letting newsagents down and we, those of us who have seen their behaviour, have let them get away with it.

I will not name names here because two have threatened this.

If I won’t name names why mention it? Because I am frustrated that we let these people put on a fake smile , sometimes pass out a bit of money to cover up their misbehaviour toward others in our channel.

While it would be impractical to create and police I would love to see an ethical newsagency supplier tick awarded to indicate suppliers who have met and continue to meet criteria set and judged by newsagents , newsagents with no conflict or perception of conflict, newsagents not involved in industry politics.

So what am I doing about this? I have closed my account with two suppliers. With a third it is not that simple because of how their products come to me. I’m working on that.

I note that suppliers I am writing about would vigorously argue that they have done nothing wrong and that they have simply focused on growing their respective businesses. I suspect that some newsagents would agree if presented the facts. I see it differently. I expect people to be true to their word.

The purpose of this blog post is to raise the issue of supplier ethics and to encourage newsagents to consider this when selecting suppliers they support.

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Ethics

Weekend Fin. promotion from Virgin Australia

I received an email yesterday from Virgin Australia offering a copy of the Weekend Financial Review delivered to my home. The email was simple and the offer very easy to accept – well executed by Virgin and Fairfax, much better than others I have seen where you have to jump through hoops.

As a customer I love newspaper offers like this. It adds excellent value to the relationship I have with Virgin. As a retail newsagent I guess I am frustrated but, hey, deals like this have been done by Fairfax and News for many years. It makes sense that they pursue circulation through corporate partnerships. It’s better than them putting bundles of the newspaper on a street corner and letting people help themselves.

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Newspapers

Tapping into the Titanic interest

We are promoting the Titanic themed issue of National Geographic, with the hundred-year anniversary a couple of days ago and the TV mini series starting on the Seven Network last night this is a title to have in a good location for driving impulse purchases.

Our key effort is making sure that the whole cover is on show as just the top quarter does not tell the story. Tomorrow, we will have the title with newspapers, between our two dailies, for a couple of days. This usually works a treat.

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magazines

Promoting crosswords at the counter

We are giving crosswords a run at the counter for the next week. While sales growth for the category has been good, we want more – hence this move. It’s very simple as the photo shows.

We are letting the titles speak for themselves as we have found this works best with crosswords. Putting the titles in the way of shoppers is the best way to drive incremental business.

I plan on leaving this display up for a week. We also have some crosswords with our weeklies as well as the usual crossword section.  Crosswords account for 8% of our magazine sales.

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crosswords

Paywalls and the future of news publishing

The Nieman Journalism Lab has published a fascinating article by the respected Ken Doctor pin the future of news publishing. Doctor pulls no punches in assessing where we are at today:

Until recently, the holy grail was summed up in two words: replacement revenue. Now the jig’s up. No matter how fast you shovel digital dirt into the chasm of print loss, you can’t recreate the past; you can’t fill the hole.

I’d agree with that. Here in Australia we have the two main publishers taking quite different approaches. News is putting much of its content beyond paywalls because it thinks people will pay to access it. Fairfax has a mixed paywall model and has a number of sites from which it derives income and can grow this significantly further.

I am surprised we have not seen significant digital-only start ups in the news space here. Seven or ten, for example, leveraging existing resources to provide digital only news outlets focused on their respective target audiences. Okay we have the publishers of Crikey investing in a number of sites. But not much else happening – unless I am missing it.

But I digress from Doctor’s article. It’s a fascinating read on options for news outlets and how they could generate requisite revenue for a future. I’m not aware of the six ideas he covers being pursued here in any big way. If you;re in news publishing it’s certainly worth a read.

From newsagents perspective, all of this is interesting because it shows that we must have a strategy for dealing with dramatic changes to products which have been at our core for decades.

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Media disruption

Crazy One Direction fans

I stayed at the Sofitel Hotel in Brisbane last night, the same hotel as One Direction as I was to discover thanks to the girls outside on the street screaming for the members of the boy band. They were possessed. Seriously.  Fanaticism is a very powerful commercial driver … as we have seen with magazine sales.

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magazines

Small business tax change could help newsagents

I like the idea of the small business tax change apparently being considered by the federal government and covered in the weekend’s newspapers. It could be particularly useful to newsagents when undertaking considerable investment in the business, such as a shop fit.

I  note that some in big business have complained about the fairness of tax help for small business being funded by big business. Hmm.  The TV networks, car makers, many major manufacturers, miners and other big businesses are regularly helped by government with funds taxed from small business.

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Ethics

Promoting the Pacific Magazines Barina competition

I was in a newsagency in Brisbane last night talking about magazines and training newsagency team members about best practice. One of the best opportunities we have in this area right now is with the pacific Magazines Barina car giveaway. This is a newsagency exclusive promotion, targeting the top 1,000 newsagencies in the country. If you are part of the promotion, go hard as it’s likely to be exclusive to you in your area.

Click on the image to see a large version of the display I created in a location to be seen by all shoppers in the store.

While the promotion has only been running two days, it looks like a terrific sales driver.

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magazines

Woman’s Day out this Friday in some states

ACP is publishing the next issue of Woman’s Day early, this Friday, with an exclusive interview with Share Warne and Elizabeth Hurley.

This special issue includes: Shane’s first ever magazine interview, never seen before photos (9 pages) of Elizabeth and Shane’s Family, the couple talking about marriage, babies, wedding plans, plastic surgery and more.  It also includes part 2 of the Royal Wedding lift out.

Here are the details on when this special issue will be available: NSW/VIC/QLD on Sale Friday 20th of April; SA/WA/FNQ/NT/TAS will remain on sale Monday 23rd of April.

We have will give prime space to this issue.  The supporting TV and other promotion should drive bonus traffic this Friday.

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magazines

Newsagents need to shock Australian shoppers

Over the last week I have been helping students from several universities with research projects they are undertaking on the Australian newsagency channel – the challenges we face, how we are dealing with these and what the future holds. On the weekend, after answering some questions about how we think we are perceived by Australian consumers, I caught up with this video from Britain’s Got Talent. Take a look…

What struck me about this, beyond wondering when Brits will look beyond the physical before they judge someone, is what can happen when your actions go way beyond what people expect of you.

The young guy and girl walk on stage and their physical presence sets expectations. Their performance shatters those expectations and forces the audience to see them in a completely different light.

Our history has set consumer expectations about newsagents and newsagency businesses. I think those expectations are out of date with retail today.

For each of us and the newsagency channel collectively to have a future we must shatter consumer expectations. Achieving this starts in our individual businesses. I think we each have to ask ourselves, are we shattering consumer expectations about newsagencies in our own newsagency? If not, why not?

If you think this is too hard then you must ask why you remain in business … and then get on with shattering the expectations of those who shop with you, pas by your front door or for any other reason think about your business.

We need to deliver to Australian consumers the experience delivered by the two young singers in the video.

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Newsagency management

Promoting Women’s Health Training Guide

We have been promoting the Women’s Health Training Guide with the Women’s Health magazine in our women’s aisle. It’s selling well, very well in fact.

These health related titles are in the middle of a bright sales period in part thanks to the weight loss shows on TV. Just about every night there is a show promoting exercise and fitness. I try and leverage this by making sure that we give the health and fitness titles, men’s and women’s, prime positions in their respective areas. The result is good sales growth.

Check out where you have Women’s Health Training Guide. Make sure the full cover is on show. Try it with your weeklies – I am sure that this placement wiklkl drive impulse purchases.

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magazines

Cakebaking title a hit

We have been promoting the new Cakebaking title which is part of The Australian Women’s Weekly cookbook series out the front of the newsagency as part of a cookbook promotion. It’s selling well.

Since newsagents have this title available around six weeks before supermarkets it makes sense for us to go strong and promote it outside the usual cookbook section, making the most of the blue ocean opportunity.

Once we move it from the front of the newsagency we will give it a run with our women’s weeklies titles for a week or two.

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magazines

Pacific Magazines launches newsagency magazine promotion

I’m thrilled with the latest Pacific Magazines in-store sales newsagency specific promotion. With the opportunity for a shopper and a newsagent to each win a Barina, I am certain we will see a sales lift.

We are promoting the competition at the entrance to our busiest magazine aisle and several other locations in-store.  We are also promoting the competition as well as at the front of the newsagency to attract traffic.

We are ensuring that all shoppers who visit understand the opportunity and respond by purchasing more magazines.

I love that the marketing collateral from Pacific Magazines lists all of their titles this helps shoppers and newsagency staff. After all, the promoting is about driving sales of Pacific titles and making people aware of the range is key to achieving that.

We have a range of creative activities planned to support this promotion, to keep it fresh beyond the initial launch.

The real prize for us is the customer database made up of entries.

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magazines

Promoting Cleo

We are promoting the latest issue of Cleo magazine with this terrific looking aisle end display by the team facing the dance floor. We are also supporting Cleo in-location with a half waterfall.

I like Cleo but would like to see more genuinely valuable gifts. Model & Co. gifts are now too regular so they so do not feel as special as some other gifts.

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magazines

Tower Systems purchases NewsPOS newsagency software business

Newsagency software company Tower Systems has agreed acquisition terms with the owners of the NewsPOS newsagency software business.

NewsPOS serves a loyal community of newsagents in Queensland and New South Wales and has offered best-practice low-cost newsagency software for some years.

Under the terms of the transaction, Tower Systems will assume full responsibility for the NewsPOS software and customer service from next week.

“We will maintain the NewsPOS software, price model and support services and not pressure NewsPOS users to switch” commented Tower Systems Managing Director Mark Fletcher. “Our development and help desk teams will be trained in NewsPOS so that we can provide easy access to quality support for as long as is needed.”

“I am thrilled to have found a place where NewsPOS users can continue to use the software without pressure to switch” commented David Groth, the founder of NewsPOS and the force behind the business. “I am looking forward to working with Tower, training their people and introducing them to NewsPOS customers.”

The acquisition by Tower Systems extends its newsagent market share, pushing its newsagent customer numbers to more than 1,800. The next largest newsagency software company is POS Solutions with an estimated 600 newsagents as customers.

The Tower software serves newsagents in the retail management, stock control, theft management, sub agent and newspaper home delivery areas.

With consolidation of newsagency businesses and newsagent suppliers very much in play in 2012, this acquisition is not expected to be the last in the newsagency software space.

Newsagents using the NewsPOS software are welcome to contact David Groth on 0412 079 308 or Mark Fletcher on 0418 321 338. Once the hand over has been completed Tower Systems will email and fax help desk contact details to all NewsPOS customers.

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newsagent software

Latest newsagency sales benchmark study results

I have completed the analysis for the latest newsagency sakes benchmark study.  While the results are not unexpected, they present challenges which newsagents need to sep up to.

As I note in the full newsagency sales benchmark, I am concerned about the widening gap between newsagency businesses in this country.  You can’t excuse the gap as being the difference between city and country or between shopping mall and high street. No, the gap I am concerned about is the gap between professional retailer and those who don’t care about their business as much as they should.

Now let’s look at the results by key departments.  Note that for some departments I use unit sales and others I use dollar revenue:

Magazines. 18% of newsagents in the study reported unit sales growth with an average growth of 3%.

Of the more than 80% of newsagents reporting a decline in magazine sales, the average decline was 7%.

Looking just at women’s weeklies, the decline is not as great with the average just below 5%.  That said, the difference between businesses is more considerable here. More 25% of newsagencies are reporting growth of weeklies of, on average, 4%. Another 25% and reporting a decline, on average, of 11%.  This is what I meant before about the difference between newsagencies at either end of the scale.

Elsewhere in the magazine department, craft & hobbies is a stand out, often delivering close to 10% year on year growth. I bet many newsagents don’t realize this, that they have such a traffic generating success story on their hands which they could use to support other parts of the business.

Food & wine had a challenging quarter with the average decline across the board at 7% in unit sales. There must be some titles in trouble in this category.

The category with the worst sales results is children’s with an average of 13%.

NOTE: I have no doubt that newsagents can do better. The start is a full magazine relay. I have the data to prove the value of a few hours shop-floor work. This is vital as magazine range is the only channel-wide point of difference we have.

Greeting cards. 68% of newsagents reported an average of 5% revenue growth. Of those reporting decline, the average decline was 3%. This is an excellent result for cards, a department on which newsagents spend too little time.

Stationery. 63% of newsagents reported an average decline of 4% in stationery revenue.  This is not good for the channel.  At the other end of the scale, 20% of newsagents reported average growth of 13%.  This is further evidence of the problem for the channel. This requires leadership to address. NOTE:  I took a moment to look at stationery in some more detail. Pens and paper remain at the core. They usually account for close to 50% of sales. The sales losses are at the fringes, where stock turns are lower. There are some fundamental challenges for newsagents when it comes to stationery. The data shows that we are all over the place – some have a great story while others do not. This confuses shoppers and ensures they cannot have a consistent stationery experience in a newsagency.

Ink. 48% of stores participating in the study separate ink sales data allowing further analysis.  59% of stores reported ink revenue growth with 6% the average increase.  Of those reporting decline, the average decline was 3%. Ink continues to be an important product category given the habit nature of the product. Win an ink customer on price and or service and you have them for life.

Gifts. 53% of the stores in this study have a gift department and reported on this separately.  70% of these reported an average sales increase of 8% in gift revenue.  Of those reporting a decline the average was a concerning 12%.Gifts are a challenge in that they require considerable attention. We have to create an offer that respects the core nature of our business. If we go too far then we risk magazine, newspaper, stationery and lottery business.

Newspapers. 51% of newsagents reported a decline in newspaper sales.  The average decline was 1%.  The average increase was 2%.

In the last study it was capital country newsagencies which were most challenged.  In this study the differences based on geography are not as strong. That said, there is no doubt that shopping centre newsagencies remain vulnerable.  This speaks to the fickle nature of shopping centre traffic performance.  While am no economist it could be that they are the first to experience trends.

You can download the full newsagency sales benchmark here.

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Newsagency management

Making use of One Direction magazine display space

We kind of did a bad thing this weekend by using the One Direction one-shot title collateral from Pacific Magazines to promote other magazines with One Direction content. We didn’t want to take down the collateral as we are hoping to get more copies of the One Direction one-shot from somewhere. But we wanted to try and monetize this prime location display in some way.  Hence our placement of the latest issue of Dolly magazine (with a 1D poster) and the Total Girl Star Awards Poster Book (with a 1D poster).

The placement achieved sales which I am sure we would not have got had we not taken this action. In fact, seven magazines sold as a result of this. Nice extra sales.

We prefer (and always try) to respect marketing collateral from a publisher by using it only for titles from that publisher. This is a unique situation with the One Direction one-shot and we hope that Pacific Magazines understands.  If we can’t find extra stock by mid this week we will, sadly, dismantle the display.

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magazines

Tasty cover for Feast magazine needs showing off

The cover of the latest issue of Feast magazine is one of the best magazine covers I have seen recently.  It captures the slice of cake beautifully, showing off the colours in a mouth-drooling way.

This is the type of magazine cover we need to put in the spotlight in our newsagencies, so that shoppers get to see the whole slice of cake and not just the Feast magazine masthead.

In one of my newsagencies we are using an acrylic stand to place this issue of Feast just above our weeklies, at eye level. Our plan is to short the full cover display to sit next to newspapers later this week.

Of we see ourselves as magazine specialists we need to engage with magazines in a more personal yet professional way than the supermarkets and others who do the bare minimum to support any title.

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magazines

Sunday management & marketing tip: learning from the Ben Polis situation

Ben Polis has had had a rapid and damaging fall following the outing almost two weeks ago of offensive posts he had made on Facebook. His former (he sold his shared after quitting) business, Energy Watch lost suppliers and customers and was dumped as major sponsor for the Melbourne AFL team. There are questions as to whether it will even survive.

The Ben Polis story is a reminder that each of us who leads a business is central of the brand of the business. What we say directly effects the business and how people perceive the business.

Some newsagents have used this to great effect, building their personal brand in their local community and, though this, the brand, and success, of their business.  Others have missed the opportunity and therefore missed out on some business.

Living and breathing your brand in your community, whether it be geographic or congregated in some other way, is vital in today’s marketplace. I say vital as people are more connected than ever before. This means that how we live goes beyond our home and our street, it gores to our Facebook posts, Tweets and comments published by us and about us by others on all matter of social media sites.

There was a time when a business leader had to behave at the local pub and in the local shops. Now, scrutiny is 24/7. This is a good thing as it means that we need to live authentic lives, lives which genuinely reflect what we stand for in our lives and our businesses.

This is where we can learn from there Ben Polis situation. It is a reminder that we need to be authentic 24/7. This builds trust and respect and from these comes loyalty and loyalty is key to the success of any newsagency.

Being authentic means being true to our brand and what it stands for 24/7 – in Facebook posts, Tweets, everywhere. But it goes further. You can use these social media outlets to more publicly define yourself and your brand and thereby help more people find you and your business. But to do that you need to be certain of your brand and what you stand for first.

I don’t feel sorry for Ben as he said what he said and has faced the consequences of his actions. This is as it should be.

If the newsagency you lead is not a leading business in your town, on your street or in your shopping centre then it should be. This should be a goal for you. You need to be out the front of the business leading it to this situation. By living a committed and authentic life which speaks to the principles of the business.

Get this right and it could / should differentiate your business from others. If shows you off as being more valuable to your community than, say, a major retailer who ships profits out of the town or even overseas. If shows you as understanding the local community and reinvesting whereas others just advertise they do it.

But it has to be real. This is where what you say is how you have to live. Otherwise you could be outed like Ben Polis and your business suffer as a result.

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Ethics

New Idea Puzzler magazine popular

We have been promoting the New Idea Jumbo Puzzler title with newspapers this past week and it’s worked a treat. We also have the magazine with our crossword titles as well as a pocket with our week lines, sitting just above New Idea. I’d encourage newsagents to get this title into several locations. Some people who will purchase this title are not usual crossword purchasers – we have to chase them down.

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crosswords

Wellbeing magazine responds to better position

The latest issue of Wellbeing has been out a while and this would have some newsagents thinking there will be no more sales. I moved the magazine to a better location and sold a copy almost immediately.  Some titles sell all through the on-sale. Wellbeing is one of those. If we consider ourselves to be magazine experts we need to act like and be aware of how titles sell right through the on-sale.

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magazines

Newsagency of the Future workshop dates

I have added a regional round to the Newsagency of the Future series. This next round will go further than the round just completed, benefiting from the discussions had already and feedback from newsagents. Click here for details and the booking form. You can also book online here. Here are there new dates.

  • Gold Coast. April 16. Marriott Resort Surfers Paradise. @ 11am.
  • Geelong. May 1. Mercure Hotel Cnr Gheringhap & Myer Sts, Geelong. @ 11am.
  • Launceston. May 2. Colonial Hotel Cnr of George & Elizabeth Sts, Launceston. @ 10am.
  • Newcastle. May 3. Crowne Plaza, Cnr Merewether St & Wharf Rd, Newcastle. @ 10am.
  • Townsville. May 8. Rydges Southbank Townsville, 23 Palmer St, Townsville. @ 1pm.
  • Albury. May 10. Quality Hotel on Olive, 579 Olive St, Albury. @ 11am.

Anyone is welcome including newsagent suppliers and publishers. Attendance is free.

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Newsagency management

A TO DO list for the week

Looking back on the past week, the issues I’ve written about and talked with newsagents about, there is only one which matters the most as it connects with everything we do in our businesses every day: reducing debt.  I see this as mission critical for individual newsagents as well as the channel as a whole.  We have to find a way to get more people engaged in this for the strength of the channel. Newsagent suppliers especially should engage in this … otherwise they will have fewer newsagents to sell to.

Go back to my post for a suggested list to work on if you want to reduce debt.

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Newsagency management

Shortening the supply chain

Finally got around to watching Media Watch from the ABC last night and was fascinated by how the AFL is developing a model of providing content which would usually have been produced by news outlets. While the development of iPad and similar platforms is shortening the supply chain of news and information, this move by the AFL is another thing entirely. To see the program click here.  The link will stop working in 9 days BTW.

Newsagents should be fascinated by the AFL model as it is the next evolution of the news model – dramatically reducing the supply chain between content generator and news consumer.

Newsagents should be equally fascinated with what Herald Sun editor Simon Pristel has to say about the pay wall and where it is expected to sit in the News Limited model of the future.

Newsagents have survived as middle men (people) for over a hundred years. the AFL story shows how dynamic our world is.

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Media disruption