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

Month: May 2014

Why I don’t feel sorry for Australia Post

I am surprised at the easy run journalists and news outlets have given Australia Post over the last few days, reporting on the decline in the use of letter mail, that AP will open Saturdays and that the organisation faces challenges that if not met could require financial support from government.

The decline in mail is not unexpected – I’ve been reading about it for more than ten years. Australia Post leadership should have been factoring this into their plans for at least that long as should their shareholders.

As for the comment that they could be in a position of needing government support, Australia Post has, as I understand it, provided the government of the day with excellent dividends. Why did the organisation and or politicians plan for structural change and retain some of these funds to help it navigate changing circumstances.

Australia Post government owned retail outlets in shopping centres have had a dream run for decades, trading under the protection of government ownership while they targeted family run newsagencies. I know from personal experience they were not forced to open in low trading periods when penalty rates applied. My newsagency was price checked by government employees as they sought to take sales from us.

Special treatment by the landlord is one of several benefits they had as an ‘essential service retailer’.

No, I don’t feel sorry for Australia Post.

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Australia Post

Officeworks is not cheap for ink or stationery

oworksI posted an update on Linked In connecting to my blog post yesterday about Officeworks price comparing ink. Almost straight away an ad on my Linked In page appeared for Officeworks. Creepy. Then I read the ad – 20 years of helping businesses grow. Yeah. 20 years of trying to take business from small business newsagents using clever advertising that makes Officeworks look like it has good prices when it waits for others to pitch on price and all Officeworks does is says ME TOO!

I think Officeworks is lazy when it comes to advertising. They know people are price sensitive and will buy from where they think they will get the best price. They also know there is a difference between someone thinking they will get a good price and them actually checking to ensure that they really do get a good price.

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Competition

Good old Collingwood!

groanpiesShoppers pressing an AFL team button caused that team’s club song to be played. last Saturday I had them all set and for some reason in my outer suburban newsagency nine times out of ten it’s the Collingwood song shoppers selected. Those crazy Collingwood fans! If only they bought more of the buttons.

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Customer Service

Officeworks calls the newsagency to check ink prices

officeworkspricecheckSomeone from the local Officeworks called my newsagency Saturday morning to price check a couple of ink cartridges. They said they had a customer there who buys ink from us and Officeworks wanted to price check because of their cheapest prices guarantee.

I was shocked when I heard the story from a team member who mentioned in passing.  I was more shocked, however, when the team  member told me they gave Officeworks our prices! They won’t do that again now they realise what happened. I have ensured we have a policy that all team members are aware of regarding price checking now.

But back to Officeworks. talk about lazy marketing. They don’t advertise the lowest prices, just that they will undercut anyone else. Our small business newsagency goes out there with genuinely competitive ink prices, generating good interest and Officeworks stands on the sidelines saying they will beat our low prices – if customers ask.

I bet most Officeworks customers do not ask to compare prices.

It is cheaper for Officeworks to spend big on general advertising of beating prices than advertising genuinely low prices. I think they do this because they think shoppers are suckers when it comes to pricing and that they will think because Officeworks advertises the price comparison they must have good prices to start with.

Officeworks is expensive for ink! I think their calling businesses like newsagencies to price compare is unethical.

This experience makes me want to work smarter and harder competing with Officeworks.

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Competition

This card is not pornographic

cardsaspornWhen a customer placed another card from front of this one in the photo on Saturday I thought it was in error so I put the other card into its pocket. The same customer a couple of minutes later randomly picked a card and put it in front of this one. I asked why and they said because it’s pornography. I explained that many customers thought the card was funny the customer said I don’t care and walked out.

Another customer who saw what happened laughed and briefly clutched my arm – in comfort I think.

I’ve thought about both interactions a bit since it happened. Beyond the reminders that we serve a broad cross section of people in our shops and that our shops are public places, I have found myself questioning the ethics of what we sell.

I have no issue with this card. Indeed, I think it’s hilarious, and certainly not pornographic. But if someone does think it is pornographic then what do they think of other things we sell and what do they think of the business as a result?

While I don’t want to pander to fringe or extreme views, it is worth thinking through – to know where you stand.

I also wonder if this customer from Saturday is the person who slips Picture on the side so it can’t be seen? Are they the same person who covers DNA magazine? because someone does these things.

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Ethics

God selling magazines

godmagazinesWe have both New Scientist titles next to each other (in the thinking magazines section of the newsagency) right now as they appeal to the same shopper with the questions posed in their God / spirituality related cover stories.

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magazines

Newsagency sales benchmark study results for January through March 2014 vs. 2013

Here are the results of my analysis of sales data from more than 140 newsagencies for January through March 2014 and the same period in 2013. While there is mixed news, the news is good for newsagents who work their businesses as engaged retailers.

Customer traffic. 61% of newsagents recorded an average decline of 2.3% in transactions. 17% reported no change and the rest an average growth of 3.2%.

Overall newsagency sales decline. 52% reported an average revenue decline of 4%. Of those reporting growth, the average was 5.8%.

Basket depth. 55% reported a decrease in basket size (items in the basket) with an average decrease was 2.3%. 4% showed no change. The rest achieved 1.7% growth.

Basket dollar value. 38% of newsagents an average increase in basket value of 2.2%.

Discounting. 11% of respondents engaged in discount based loyalty marketing.

The gap between growing and contracting newsagencies must be of concern to those dealing with newsagents nationally as it is more obvious than ever. Newsagencies are not once size fits all. There are some doing very well and others doing poorly.
It would be wrong to talk about newsagents and make a common statement about how they (we) are doing as there is no common situation.

Benchmark results by key departments:

1. Magazines. 67% of newsagents reported an average decline (in units) of magazine sales of 6.9%. 5% reported no change and 28% reported year on year magazine sales growth. The average growth was 4%. This is the headline: NEWSAGENTS CAN GROW MAGAZINE SALES.

Looking at the 28% reporting magazine sales growth, most growth was outside the weeklies with less than half of those growing this all-important category.

Partworks played a big role in the growth achieved by those achieving growth. In some cases, partworks accounted for close to 20% of all magazine sales.

2. Newspapers. 86% of newsagents reported an average decline of 5.8% in over the counter newspaper sales. HOWEVER: for most, revenue from newspapers was up! This is a reflection of significant cover price rises.

3. Greeting cards. 63% of newsagents reported average growth of 2.6%. Of those reporting a decline, the average was 4.7%. Everyday counter cards dominate card sales with this category accounting for between 50% and 60% of all cards sold in most newsagencies.

4. Stationery. 65% of newsagents reported an average decline of 3.1%. Of those reporting growth, the average was 5.8%. Notice the gap there?

5. Ink. 41% of stores report ink separately. Of these, 58% reported growth of 3%.

6. Gifts. 74% of the newsagents have a separate gift department. Of these, 78% reported average growth of 8%. In eight newsagencies, gift revenue exceeded card revenue.

7. Plush. 8% of newsagencies report on plush sales separately. I recommend this. A reasonable sales benchmark for plush is revenue equal to 25% of card revenue. In stores reporting on plush, sales are up on average 30%.

8. Tobacco. 82% of stores with tobacco reported an average decline of 13%.

9. Confectionery. 53% of stores reported an average decline of 7%.

10. Toys. 53% of stores with the department reporting growth of 6%.

The strong are getting stronger and the weak are getting weaker.

There is no geographic or demographic barrier to growth from what I can see. One newsagency in a town with tough economic challenges and competing with several newsagencies achieved excellent year on year growth – by owning their situation and being proactive.

Product mix shift. Embedded in the data I receive is information about unit sale and revenues contribution between all product categories. I can see a shift from the traditional print, lottery, card and stationery mix to a broader appeal by some. It is fascinating seeing the results of deliberate actions on the shop floor to attract more shoppers to a business.

In one business, looking back over some years, gifts have grown from accounting for 1% of revenue to accounting for 11% of revenue in three years. This achievement on the back of overall revenue growth reflects a significant shift in focus in this business.

Looking at my own newsagency for this quarter: calendars are up 61% off a good base, gifts are up 93% off a good base, card sales are up 11% with everyday counter cards up 17% – off an good base, magazine sales are up 11 off a good base, weekly magazines are up 4% and they account for 24.8% of total magazine sales, plush is up 44% off an extraordinary base – we did over $21,000 in plush in the quarter.

I mention that the numbers are off a good base to provide context. The growth I claim off a low base would not be as good as these results off a good base.

Number of sales, number of items per sale and average sale value all increased. Individually that is good. Compounded, as happens, it is excellent. The benefit to the bottom line of such compounding small steps is wonderful.

I include my own data here for comparison and to illustrate that I walk the walk with newsagents. When I encourage newsagents to try things it is because I do in my own business. I put my money where my mouth is.

This newsagency is in an outer suburban Westfield centre in Melbourne with around 300 stores including majors, another newsagents twelve gifts shops – plenty of nearby and price competitors for cards, gifts, magazines and plush.

I am happy to show my data to anyone who asks. I’m also happy to explain why my numbers are so strong. My phone number is 0418 321 338 and my email is mark@towersystems.com.au.

Newsagencies are good businesses to own. This study supports this belief. That many newsagents are reporting growth is magazines sales is a testament to the active engagement of those newsagents and their employees in this traffic-critical category.

The best type of newsagency to own is the one where you have the most control over what you sell and where you generate traffic for several product categories where average gross profit is 50% or higher.

The most important advice I have for newsagents has not changed: Run your business today as if today is your pay day. Too many newsagents continue to run their businesses as if their pay day is when they sell. This will not happen.

Newsagents: look at your business, your sources of traffic, your average GP. Your success will come from many small steps.

Suppliers: Get smart in your engagement with newsagents. Trust them. Treat them with respect. Share their mission to grow traffic and GP and basket value. Give newsagents complete control over what they sell of your products.

This year on year same store newsagency sales benchmark study is an analysis of sales basket data from 147 newsagencies – city and country, shopping centre and high street, banner groups (various) and independent. To be included, the businesses must have been using the same software for both analysis periods and to be compliant with industry software standards. I have done these benchmark studies for many years, drawing on my experience with the Tower Systems newsagent community. As the owner of Tower I have easier access to the data – not automatically and not without permission from newsagents. Around 63% of newsagents with a computer system use Tower. I have eliminated data from businesses where I knew that unique local factors impacted on the sales data.

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Newsagency benchmark

Grab yourself some extra sales of MOJO magazine

princemojoThe latest issue of MOJO magazine is an excellent opportunity to gain incremental sales for the title. The Prince cover story and free CD make this an excellent purchase for Gen X and some baby boomers who love their music. This issue of MOJO is an excellent example of investing a small amount of time i a title and getting extra sales as a result.

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Newsagency management

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: find out who has the best handwriting

Between now and Father’s Day in September we have no major retail season. While some will have mid year and stock take sales, they are not as strong as Mother’s Day, Valentine’s Day and the like. So, here is an idea for creating more traffic just for your business.

Run a competition looking for the person in your town, village, shopping centre or area with the best handwriting. Create an entry form on to which an entrant writes something abut themselves and what they like about handwriting.

Run the competition for a month. Put the entries on show somewhere in the shop (but hide entrant names) and get your customers to vote.

Where you place the entries on show promote writing pads, envelopes, pens and markers. Don’t be afraid to create a commercial connection with the competition. Make sure your logo and address are prominent on entry forms.

To extend the reach of the competition, circulate entry forms to local schools, retirement villages and community groups.

You could consider a variation by having entrants write something about your local area. Another option could be that you have prizes for different age brackets. Play with it appropriately for your situation.

I am suggesting a month to give the competition time to take hold and for you to get entries up so that interest builds.

The goal here is for you to do something different that those competing with you i the stationery space would not do.

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Competition

Sunday newsagency management tip: streamline your counter to maximise sales

mdayentryRetail is detail as they say and there is no place in a busy newsagency that benefits more from detail as the main sales counter. It’s where the action is.

Too often, newsagents so much fill counter space with products, too many product, that it looks like a junk heap. Products that they can’t place elsewhere mixed in with items they are afraid shoppers will steal. This leads to a commercially ineffective counter, a busy counter, a counter giving off a mixed message.

I see the counter as a workplace where efficiency is important as is the success of the space in extending the shopping basket. Every item we have at the counter needs to be there for a reason, every item has to add value.

Often I’ll chose to use counter space for something other than products. Take the lead up to Mother’s Day. We placed the entry form for our $500 Mother’s Day give away in prime position at the counter – to drive entries. Each pitch we made for a free entry was a reminder that this was a newsagency where customers won prizes. I treated the pitch and the space for the entry form as marketing activity.

We need to be deliberate about how we use our counters. get it right and profit grows. Get in wrong and we tread water or fall behind.

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Management tip

Proof magazines work as Mother’s Day gifts

mdaymagsHere is a receipt from one customer I served earlier today who spent $47.30 on six magazines, two copies each of Better Homes and Gardens, New Idea Masterclass and Delicious. The magazines were purchased by this customer as Mother’s Day gifts for her mum and her partner’s mum.

We actively promote magazines as gifts for major seasons. It works as this transact shows! I encourage a  newsagents to do this – for every major season.

Newsagents can grow magazine sales!

The customer purchasing these magazines is not a regular shopper with us. She was thrilled with the discount voucher on her receipt and said she would be back for sure. She asked if this was a Mother’s Day promotion and was happy when I said it’s all year round.

This type of interaction adds even more value to what was already a valuable sale. I love it!

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magazines

Harvesting customers for marketing

harvestcustomersA wonderful side benefit of a major season like Mother’s Day is the opportunity to harvest shopper contact information for future marketing. We do this following the privacy regulations and respect customer wishes if they opt out. The photo shops entries packed into one hallmark Mother’s day competition entry box. It has been interesting pitching this today with around a third of shoppers declining for various reasons. But those who enter often do so with excitement for the opportunity of the prize – which we have on display at the counter.

While the prize is important, the shopper data is equally so.

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newsagency marketing

Today is going to be crazy for plenty of newsagents

Today will be just about the biggest day of card and gift sales of the retail year for plenty of newsagents. If it is like other Saturdays before Mother’s days many newsagents will do ten, even twenty times their usual Saturday card sales. And plenty of those will do just as much in gift sales. It will also be a day of excellent magazine sales as magazines make a great Mother’s day gift!

So, as you strap on your armour, lead up with caffeine and paint on your happy face think about the joy you’re bringing shoppers, they work you;re giving your team and the money you’ll make.

Today is a good day in retail. Enjoy!

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Gifts

Mugs lead in Mother’s Day sales

mumscupsThese mugs have been an even bigger hit for us this week leading up to Mother’s Day. Customers say they are an easy gift.  In fact, yesterday it was like people were lined up to buy them. It helps that they are merchandised in a spinner and that they come with a box – making them an easy gift to wrap.

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Gifts

Leveraging Nirvana interest to drive Rolling Stone sales

magsnirvanaNirvana and Kurt Cobain have been in the news over the last week so it makes sense to ensure Rolling Stone Nirvana-themed special collectors edition is displayed to drive impulse purchases. That’s what we are doing in our music section and for a week with newspapers. I like how the band name features ahead of the Rolling Stone masthead.

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magazines

Using Coach magazine as the beacon brand

magscoachA beacon brand is the one you use to signpost a section of your magazine display. That’s what we are doing with the latest issue of Coach. It has been placed at the top of our men’s health and fitness titles in a way that it draws the attention of shoppers to this area.  The line of copies of Coach acts as the signpost. Being thoughtful about magazine titles you use and how you use them can drive magazine sales.

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magazines

Bauer Media launches reader rewards to encourage newsagency magazine shoppers to purchase Bauer titles

The Bauer Media Connections program has launched Reader Reader rewards, an App-based loyalty program for Bauer titles purchased in participating newsagencies. Consumers are rewarded with free magazines – collected ar participating newsagencies. Funded 100% by Bauer. Click here to read more about this program and see a couple of videos and see how it will work in a newsagency.

The program in its current form is designed to encourage readers to purchase Bauer titles. If it does this to the detriment of non Bauer titles then newsagents would be concerned.

Bauer has been running road shows around the country over the last week.

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magazine distribution

Free tip on selling plush with cards in a newsagency

booscardsCheck out how a clever and handy team member integrated plush with cards. Using a $4.00 stand for a hair-straightener they created a platform onto which to place these Ty Halo Beanie Boos that are appropriate to Baptism, Confirmation, Holy Communion cards.

It’s a few weeks since this was put in place and I can report it’s working. People purchase from here. With a bit of work we are able to better integrate plush and cards.

Our success will come from many small steps, like this one. each step alone will seem almost insignificant but when added and when the compound on each other, the value to our businesses will be tremendous.

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Newsagency challenges

New fun collectible plush line for kids

ittybittyThe Itty Bitty characters by Hallmark offer another way newsagents can get into plush and collectibles. The initial range is enough to start collectors – the roll-out plan is timed to bring them back.

We are promoting the range of Itty Bitty characters with this display unit placed at the front of the newsagency, on the lease line, facing into the shopping mall.

The licenced Itty Bittys connect nicely with other products in-store.

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Plush

Tatts needs to promote its retail network

tattsozCheck out the Tweet from Tatts Tuesday promoting the purchase of OzLotto $10 million lottery tickets direct from them. Tatts could have easily supported its retail network in the tweet. Tatts retailers are required to invest heaving in the tatts brand. The least tatts could do would be to reciprocate in support through social media.

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Lotteries

Inside Out magazine promoted being everywhere

insideouttweetThe publisher of Inside Out magazine has tweeted wide availability including at newsagents and on a range of digital platforms. While I understand their need to do this, they and other publishers need to understand the need of newsagents to manage magazine space, labour and time investment in this new world.

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magazines