Benchmarks are data points that let you compare your business against similar ones. What I share here today is a significant update to the last benchmark data points I shared, in 2023.
Gross Profit
For product sales only — exclude agency business revenue and costs.
- Traditional newsagency average: 28%–32%
- Transformed newsagency goal: 40%+
The traditional newsagency has no future.
The gap between traditional and transformed businesses keeps widening. Smart newsagents that have moved into clothing, artisan gifts, and other categories. They have products hitting gross profit margins of 50% to 65% on those lines. Businesses still leaning on legacy categories are finding that model harder to sustain each year. The 409% overall goal is a good low-point and attainable target for a business that is actively managing its mix.
Minimum Stock Turn
Stock turn is how many times you sell through your inventory in a year — current stock holding divided into total annual revenue. These are minimums. Below them, a department is not earning its keep.
- Cards: 3 (the channel average is 1.55 — too low)
- Gifts: 6 (tight range, fast movement)
- Toys: 5
- Plush: 5
Gift Revenue to Card Revenue Ratio
Minimum: 100%. Goal: 200% or more.
If cards bring in $50,000 a year, the target is $100,000 in gifts. Gift revenue is growing in businesses that have committed to it. It deserves floor space and buying attention.
Revenue Per Employee
Minimum: $250 per hour.
Labour costs have kept rising. This target matters more now than it did three years ago. Count the owner at fair market rates — a business that does not is not measuring itself honestly.
Revenue Per Square Metre
$4,500–$8,500. Where you land depends on location (country versus city), tenancy type (high street versus shopping centre), and product mix. Higher gross profit means you need less revenue per square metre to stay viable.
Revenue Mix Targets
- Cards 25%
- Gifts / Toys / Plush. 35%
- Stationery 10%
- Magazines / Newspapers 5%–8%
- Other / Emerging. 22%–25%
Print is in terminal, structural decline. Magazine unit sales are down around 10% year on year. Newspaper unit sales in capital city stores are down as much as 13%. That floor space and buying budget needs to go somewhere more productive.
Clothing, coffee, homewares, and more are generating real money in transformed stores — some close to $100,000 annually from a single category. Build your own target here based on what is actually working.
Category Notes
- Stationery The best stationery is that which people love, more so than the stationery they need. This type of stationery can attract a higher price, and higher margin. .
- Magazines Niche and special interest titles are holding up far better than mainstream ones. Curate, if they let you.
- Greeting Cards Lifestyle cards should be more than 40% of total card sales, with at least 12% year-on-year growth in this segment.
- Counter Impulse Sensory and impulse lines should be more than 10% of toy and related sales. Engaged stores are growing this category. The product works; the question is whether you are backing it.
- Online Revenue Online not an optional.
Floorspace Allocation
- Cards 20%
- Gifts / Toys / Plush 35%
- Stationery 8%
- Magazines / Newspapers 5%
- New and emerging traffic lines 10%
- Other products 12%
- Counter / office / back room 10%
Newspapers should be is low cost space, away from the front door and counter. Keep the back room small — it does not generate revenue.
Mark-Up Goals
- Stationery: 125%
- Gifts: 110%
- Plush: 110%
- Jewellery: 300%
- Clothing: 120%–150%
Occupancy Cost
Target: 9%–11% of total revenue (product sales plus agency commissions).
A shopping centre site will sit higher in that range than a high street one — that is expected. You control both margin and revenue. Both sides of that equation are your responsibility.
Labour Cost
Target: 9%–11% of total revenue (product sales plus agency commissions).
Use tools that handle repetitive work so your team can be on the floor. Count the owner at fair market rates. If you are not doing that, your numbers are not telling you the truth.
A Final Note
These are targets, not rules. Set your own based on your own situation. But think about it.
The stores doing well right now are run by people making decisions based on data and broader retail trends. Not on habit. Not on what suppliers suggest. On what is actually working.