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

Month: June 2012

Find a way or fade away

This art from Deviant Art is relevant to newsagents (retail & delivery).

FIND A WAY OR FADE A WAY.

It’s what we have to do in our own businesses and collectively if we want to have a collective.

And the way? A way forward, the future.

If we stand still we will fade away. Our channel has grown up being told what to do, what to stock, what to sell it for, everything we have to do with deliveries, how to merchandise … hell suppliers have even done this for us.

Our businesses today are more under our control than at any time in our past. Our future really is up to us.  This is why the T-Shirt art from deviant Art resonates.  We must…

FIND A WAY OR FADE A WAY.

This is why I am now scheduling more Newsagency of the Future sessions.  I don’t have answers as these depend on the circumstances and opportunities for each business. However, I have information and ideas which can be useful for newsagents who went to plan for their future.

Wether you have a distribution business, a retail business or a mix of both in the one, planning for your future is the single most important time investment you can make today. No one else is doing this for you.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagents embracing ParcelPoint opportunity, building strong network

Newsagents are embracing ParcelPoint, the parcel pickup service I announced here recently.

I know of newsagents who are handling the collection of parcels, appreciating the new traffic the opportunity brings to their business.

Adam McArthur from ParcelPoint says:

We are thrilled with the level of interest from newsagents across Australia.  We have over 300 signed up and we are adding more every day, reflecting this great opportunity to develop extra income and bring in new customers.  Parcel volumes are rising steadily and customers are telling us they find the service more convenient than going to the post office.

I got involved with ParcelPoint because the service is courier company agnostic. This flexibility is important.

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Newsagency opportunities

Seen this Herald Sun offer?

The Herald Sun offer at Newslink at Melbourne Airport is interesting. Not such a great deal financially given that I can buy two bottles of the Mount Franklin water for $4 elsewhere but interesting tapping into the paper and water market given that bottled water is confiscated at security. It’s an ideal transit outlet offer.

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Newspapers

Nothing like a sealed section to sell a magazine

A customer purchased a copy of NW magazine while one of our team members was creating this display. I have to buy it for the sealed section they said.

This is a clever promotion from ACP, perfect for retail, even better for promotion at the counter to drive impulse purchase. The collateral worked a treat to make the most of the opportunity of titillation.

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magazines

Promoting Top Gear

We are promoting Top Gear magazine in location with this display. Giving the title ownership of an entire section of the car area makes it the hero title for the area. We are also planning placement with our newspapers from Friday for a few days.

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magazines

Taking an honest look at the performance of a newsagency

My newsagency software company offers newsagents a free newsagency business health check service which provides me an opportunity to look at business data and provide feedback. I have permission from a recent participant to share my feedback to them here. I thought other newsagents may find it interesting.

I looked at 15/2/12 to 15/5/12 compared to the same period for a year earlier.
  1. TRAFFIC (CLOSED SALES): Down 3%.
    1. What are you doing to attract new customers and bring existing customers back more frequently.
    2. You need a traffic growth plan.
    3. This can be done even on a low budget.
    4. You have to do something to arrest the decline.
  2. SALES: Down 4%.
    1. To have sales fall more that traffic is a worry even by a small amount. It’s a trend you want to arrest.
    2. You need to get shoppers spending more.
    3. Turning browsers into shoppers and getting existing shoppers putting more in their basket.
    4. Again, you need to plan for this.  Every high traffic touch point has to be about getting customers to spend more.
  3. CARDS & WRAP. Your results here are worse than the industry average.
    1. I’d get your account manager in and request an immediate range review.
    2. Is your card range current?
    3. Are your cards easily accessible?  Too often newsagents have thinks in front of cards, making the category hard to find and shop.
    4. Do you offer to help customers with cards?
    5. Who puts your cards out? In my shops my staff do this. They learn more about the cards that way.
  4. TOBACCO. Slight decline. better than average I am seeing.
    1. While you can’t market the range you can manage it for efficiency.
    2. Make sure you reorder using the software.
    3. Get rid of dead stock.
  5. CONFECTIONERY. Bad decline here – below average for the store.  Something is wrong.
    1. When was the last time you refreshed your confectionery offer?  The data suggests it is either tired or being poorly managed.
    2. Make sure that these products are easily seen, well merchandised and under shopper noses.
    3. Look at your category breakdown. Get chocolates, gum, mints and cough lollies right. Look within these categories what products work the best.  Maybe focus on them.
  6. GIFTS. Great result.  Good year on year growth.
    1. Your sales of Russell Collection products show what you can sell. I’d focus more on this.
    2. Get products out of MISC. and into more meaningful categories so you can more easily understand what is working and what is not.
    3. I get the feeling you could expand your gift range.
  7. MAGAZINES. Good result, within industry average.
    1. Special interest magazines account for 11.79% of your sales.  This is excellent.  These customers are sticky.  Keep at your special interest range.
    2. Have you done a relay in the last two years. If not, get it done. Create a fresh magazine department.
    3. Co-locate to promote ranges shoppers forget about. The categories which respond well to this are: crosswords, food, crafts (quilting, crochet) and hobby / sports like fishing depending on the area.
    4. Always have a magazine offer at the counter – but uncluttered.
    5. Always have a magazine promotion facing the front of the shop to attract customers.
  8. LOTTO. Good growth.
    1. What are you doing to leverage lotto sales for other sales?
    2. Do you offer an up-sell to Lotto customers?
    3. Do you reward lottery customers in any way?
    4. Are you promoting any other products at the lottery counter?
  9. STATIONERY. Bad result. Sales declining too much.
    1. What is it with all the categories. Way too many.  No more than 20 otherwise you can;t manage.
    2. Ink is your stand our stationery category but it is declining for you. This needs regular external price-focused promotion.
    3. You have a great range of stationery by the looks of it.  Use the ranked sales report to see what you have not sold in the last six months. his could help you cull to something more financially rewarding.
    4. What’s your margin position? If people think you are expensive, are you – maybe you could charge more.
    5. be very careful of some of the old school products which people are purchasing less of. remember, you really need to turn each item five to seven times a year to justify time, space and stock investment.
  10. GENERAL.
    1. Do you know your top ten selling products?  If not, find out – use the 10 x 10 report.
    2. Make sure that you are promoting other items with your top sellers.
    3. With newspapers: Better Homes and Gardens for the weekend, AWW for the week it comes out, other titles which you know will sell but which shoppers will not look for – put these next to newspapers.
    4. What’s your counter look like?  Go around to the customer side and try hard to look at it as they look at it. How many messages are there? Do you have any old product there? De-clutter.
    5. Do you have products left over from seasons? If so, why haven’t you quit them?  Okay if they fit in with a regular department maybe. But if, for example, you still have easter specific product in the shop get rid of it.
    6. Consider asking your staff what they would change if they owned the business. Listen to them, consider what they have to say.
    7. No change in a newsagency is permanent, especially in this time of considerable disruption.

What I look for is small steps in traffic, basket size and margin.  These three combined create a health business.

I appreciate the opportunity to look at your data.  I hope this helps.  I’d be happy to discuss any of this with you.

While I see newsagents facing challenges ahead I do think that these present us with opportunities.  It is up to each of us to chase these … aggressively. I really do believe that we make our own success.

I hope that newsagents reading this look at their business performance data with critical eyes, and talk with others about what they see. Anyone wanting help with this should contact me … 0418 321 338 or mark@towersystems.com.au.

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Newsagency management

Kudos to Pacific Magazines for marriage equality campaign

marie claire from Pacific Magazines is showing wonderful community engagement and leadership with their I Do campaign, which also engages GetUp! and Sunrise on the Seven Network.

Check out the letter from marie claire Editor / Publisher Jackie Frank and get a feel for the passes from the top for this issue.

Besides the value and importance of the I Do campaign from a community perspective, engagement such as this on an issue with strong community support is important for the magazine commercially. It demonstrates that marie claire cares about issues. I think that is something people look for in brands. It is certainly something people can empathise with.

Magazines titles are hubs of communities. Reflecting and supporting the opinions and emotions of the community better connects a magazine to their community.  What they are doing on this issue is instructive for newsagents considering how to engage with their communities on issues.

What has changed in this era of Twitter and Facebook is how we engage in and with social issues. My sense is that we are more engaged, or at least we feel that we are more engaged.

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magazines

Promoting motoring magazines to newspaper customers

This display of a selection of our car / motoring magazine titles faces newspaper shoppers as they turn from the newspaper stand to head to the counter. We created the simple display on the weekend as part of a series of moves to promote magazines outside of their usual location.

I chose car magazines for this spot as the majority of our newspaper shoppers are male and around half of them do not venture further into the business – where car magazines are located.

We have placed car titles here previously and sold extra copies as a result.

This placement will be up for around a week.

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magazines

Shoppers love cash promotions

We are promoting the Zoo cash promotion with this in-store display and an off-location display. We know from other weekly titles which have run cash promotions that shoppers love them and the opportunity for a cash prize. It’s simple, easily understood and easy to promote. The collateral from ACP for this Zoo promotion is good – making displays easy to create.

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magazines

Promoting Prevention and weight loss

We are promoting the latest issue of Prevention magazine with this display at the entrance to our women’s magazine aisle. The Lose the wheat lose the weight mini mag promoting a weight loss of 4.5 kgs in 2 weeks should attract plenty of interest.  The message for shoppers is very simple.

If we still have stock when the display comes down we’ll split this between the usual location for the title and our weeklies.

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magazines

News Limited announcement was expected today

There were reports last week that News Limited would announce details of a restructure today. Over the weekend the timing was said by News reps to be off. Either way, cuts are coming – on the back of a number of cuts to News businesses in Australia last week. And on the back of cuts announced within Fairfax last week.

These moves are relevant to newsagents who are facing uncertainty of a different kind – what the structure of newspaper home delivery will look like under new contracts soon to be presented by News Limited.

Footnote: It is fascinating watching how Fairfax and News report on each other and that objectivity takes a back seat.

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newspaper home delivery

Promoting gameinformer magazine

I created for gameinformer magazine on the weekend when I saw the cover of the latest issue for the first time. I wanted to show off the amazing cover. The display pops visually more than is reflected in the photo. I went for a monochrome backdrop to help make the cover pop.

The display is in our men’s / sports / tech area of the store. People leaving this area see the display easily.

While gameinformer sells well already, I wanted to see if we can lift sales beyond what we usually achieve – hence this feature display which we will leave in place for a week.

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magazines

New Idea Masterclass opportunity tomorrow

Put New Idea Masterclass in your counter this week as Barbara Northwood New Idea Food Director will be appearing on Channel 7’s The Morning Show Tuesday to demonstrate a recipe from the latest New Idea Masterclass. This is an excellent opportunity to drive impulse purchases from shoppers who see the show. The photo shows what we are doing at one of my newsagencies – we got in with this placement from Saturday.

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magazines

Deadbeat very popular

We experienced a run on Deadbeat magazine on Friday. So much so that we have ordered extra copies. We have looked inside to see if we could work out why this issue is more popular that other issues – based on our sales history and patterns through the on-sale.

I’d love to know if other newsagents experienced this sale surge.

We have Deadbeat in two locations usually – hot rods and tattoos.  It works from both locations for us.

I like Deadbeat magazine. It certainly generates traffic. It’s also unique to newsagencies. This makes it valuable to us as it reflects a point of difference for us.

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magazines

Sunday marketing / management tip for newsagents: how local is your newsagency?

With the pace and extent of changes in retail – how, why, when and where people shop and what they purchase – today more than ever we need to focus on delivering a compelling reason for people to shop with us.

For newsagents, the most compelling reason for people to shop with you is location. You’re local and have what they want at a price they can justify.  (If it is not location what is it?)

My question is, how well do your leverage your location?

Too often, newsagents want to look like capital city retailers, chasing a me-too model. This is not a plan, it is not leveraging what is probably most unique to your business – your location.

So, how local is your business. How connected is your range to the local community? How connected is the business to the local community?

The way to test this is to ask yourself – what if an international chain opened a corporate newsagency next to yours and offered the tradition range of newsagency products – would they take customers from you?

You could say probably not because shoppers like you and your staff?

Okay, what if they dropped their prices slightly or did something else to separate their business from yours? Would they take customers from you?  Probably some.

You may comfort yourself that an overseas business is not going to open a newsagency next to yours to take your customers.  I’d agree with that.  However, it is happening today. Supermarkets, convenience stores, petrol outlets … they are all doing this, eating away at your business, offering something else you don’t offer.

That newsagencies are losing business to supermarkets, convenience stores, petrol outlets is a problem we are not addressing as a channel.  Hell we are, for the most part, ignoring it. I think we can address it by being more locally focused, by serving the local community better, by ensuring that they see, understand and feel our local connection – in a way supermarkets, convenience stores, petrol outlets cannot make the local connection.

This is not easy stuff for newsagents to think about or respond to but respond we must. We must address the complex and relentless areas of competition – that we see and that we don’t – as well as the changes in retail. we do this by making more valuable and compelling businesses which serve shoppers in our own backyard.

How seriously local is your business?

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marketing tip

Ink sale driving nice traffic lift

We are into another ink sale which is being promoted to 15,000 homes around the shopping centre with a catalogue and sure enough we are seeing a nice traffic boost as a result. We are promoting: best deals in the area for ink, brands you can trust and wonderful customer service .

Ink accounts for 40% of our stationery sales and I see this increasing.

It surprises me that there are still newsagents who are not into ink. Lost opportunities.

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Stationery

Advice on Linked in for newsagents

A couple of newsagents have asked me this morning about Linked in, a social and networking service for business people. I have been a member for years.  150 people are members worldwide. It’s  terrific way to connect with people you know as well as people who know people you know. Through it you can broaden your network of contacts.

You can see my Linked in profile here as an example.  There is a group, Aussie Newsagents, just started where people can talk among themselves about newsagent issues. Membership to that group is moderated.

Don’t accept people as connections unless you want to be connected to them and are prepared for them and their friends to see what you’re up to.

Some people use Linked in to connect numbers. They chase volume. I prefer quality, to connect with people I have a real connection with.  So, be careful of connection requests – accept those you genuinely want for networking reasons.

There are plenty of newsagents, newsagent suppliers and people related in other ways with newsagents on Linked in.

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Newsagency management

Hurting our own XchangeIT data

We have a policy in my newsagencies that we will not sell out of a title while it is hot – within reason. We chase extra stock from magazine distributors for as long as we think we can sell the stock.

A good example is the AWW Queen’s Diamond Jubilee one-shot.

Having sold out of our second order for this title and being told there is none left we have purchased stock from a supermarket. We have done this to avoid having to send shoppers elsewhere when our sales are at their peak. To us, the decision was easy. We refuse to show that as a magazine specialist we can’t supply.

The down side is that our actions damage the XchangeIT sales data. This should not be the case. the XchangeIT standard ought to allow show showing that we sourced product elsewhere. We have done nothing wrong other than protecting our business interests when a supplier could not help us.

I am sure we are not alone in doing this.

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magazines

Understanding the challenges for newspaper publishers and print

Gigaom has published an excellent article which explains the challenges US newspaper publishers face when considering moving from a print model to digital. The chart that explains media’s addiction to print contains two charts explaining the challenge. The main chart shows the time consumers spent with various mediums and the ad spend in those mediums. There is a massive gap with print – showing the medium punching above its weight and therefore demonstrating value to publishers.

The most optimistic view of the gap between time spent and advertising dollars devoted to print is to see it as an indication that print is orders of magnitude more effective for advertisers than virtually any other medium — otherwise why would ad agencies and brands spend so much money there?

It’s a good article offering an explanation which publishers would consider in the print vs. digital consideration.

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Media disruption

Promoting Who magazine at the counter

We are promoting the latest issue of Who with this terrific behind the counter display facing shoppers as we serve them. I love the choices made in creating the display, the symmetry and embracing the cover of Who up as the hero.

We ordered extra stock so that we could make the most of the opportunity. We’re all set.

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magazines

Blog posts results in a change to Coach magazine display

The manager of the newsagency where the display was from which I blogged about here a couple of days ago was not happy with the display and replaced it with this one.

I love this new display much more. It’s visually more powerful. It makes the product the hero.  I think it’s certain to drive more sales as a result.

I didn’t ask for the new display to be done. It was done as a result of what I posted here.

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magazines

Eddie McGuire disrespects newsagents

On Triple M Footy on Saturday night (May 26) Eddie McGuire disrespected newsagents when talking about an industry event saying:

it used to be good until they let Newsagents and other clowns attend

Newsagents are clowns Eddie? Nice.

Contact with Triple M Footy and Triple M Breakfast via Twitter achieved nothing. It seems Eddie McGuire is happy to lob grenades but not be accountable for their impact.

It was Eddie McGuire’s personal pitch in mid 2011 which resulted in newsagency marketing group newsXpress committing to a national TV campaign with the Nine Network for more than 4,000 TV ads. I am a Director of newsXpress.  ACP Magazine is owned by Nine Entertainment. Newsagents are important to ACP. Maguire is a major star in the Nine stable. That he has ignorantly disrespected newsagents, even if it was meant as a joke as I expect the excuse will be, ought to interest the folks at Nine.

Eddie Maguire joins Bill ShortenJeff Kennett and Wendy Harmer in making ignorant and offensive comments against newsagents. While these people are entitled to their view, they ought to be prepared to debate them. As it stands today, they prefer to pontificate and run.

I accept that people will make jokes about newsagents and other retail channels and professions. What I will not accept is ignorant jokes and commentary and the refusal to engage in debate about what has been said.

Newsagents deserve better.

We are good people. We are faithful servants of our suppliers.  We serve our community with pleasure.

UPDATE: (Jun. 1) I have changed the spelling of Eddie’s surname to the right spelling. I appreciate the confidential correspondent who let me know of the mistake.

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Newsagency challenges

Nice Time magazine cover shot

I like the cover on the latest Time magazine. It’s good to see a different image of the queen against which to compare all the other cover shots out at the moment. We have taken the opportunity to to place Time next to other titles promoting the Queen’s jubilee. While we have copies in the usual location, I suspect it’s this off-location placement which will work best for this issue.

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magazines