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

Author: Mark Fletcher

Reusing a supplier stand can confuse newsagency shoppers

chupstandI was intrigued by the tins of Chupa Chups on the stand I noticed in a shop (not a newsagency) yesterday. On closer inspection I discovered that they were tins of shortbread biscuits on a Chupa Chup branded stand. The message was confusing.

If I was this retailer and I no longer had access to the Chupa Chup product for this stand and I wanted to reuse the stand – at the very least I’d remove the Chupa Chup branding.

Too often small business retailers including newsagents use stands for products they were not intended for. Take magazines in our channel, I often see Pacific titles in Bauer supplied stands and Bauer titles in Pacific supplied stands. Such misplacement of stock harms our suppliers and us.

We need to be more diligent about supplier supplied branded stand use. Suppliers spend money promoting our brand and if we work against this is dilutes what we can gain from their investment.

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Ethics

Report published by News Corp. says newsagents will be gone in five years

Michael McQueen, writing for news.com.au in a report published this morning says, among other things, newsagents will be gone in five years:

Newsagencies were once a gold-plated business. They had a bulletproof revenue model centring on the exclusive rights to distribute and sell the magazines and newspapers we all purchased on a daily basis. Then came 1999 — the year of deregulation. From this point onwards, newsagents no longer enjoyed the protected market they once did and business began to get tough.

Today, newsagents have one remaining cash cow — lotteries. With increasing noise from governments that lotto could also be deregulated in the coming few years just as it has in other countries, this may be the last nail in the coffin.

It is entirely likely that the only newsagents still standing in five years time will be those who have diversified to the point where their business model is almost unrecognisable by today’s standards.

I have written here many times over many years about this – the need for diversification, the need for new traffic generating products and services as well as the danger in relying on a single product or service like lotteries.

The stronger newsagent retailers are more likely to not have lotteries as they do not have the considerable labour, space and capital demands that come with this.

I know of newsagency businesses today that are growing. Maybe News could publish some reports about these.

I am optimistic, not out of desire but out of what I see some doing. Our channel will continue to shrink but those remaining and those entering will be stronger and more successful.

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Newsagency challenges

Gifts for the frankie shopper

gorjussThis Gorjuss range from Artique appeals to the younger frankie magazine reader. We’re using it to attract possible frankie customers and to be purchased by a destination frankie shopper.

Gorjuss is out of the UK. It has achieved extraordinary commercial success.  The keys for the brand to work in a newsagency are to have a broad range of products and that they are displayed to leverage the brand. The floor display unit from Artique helps us do this.

I am mentioning Gorjuss today as an example of how gifts and magazines can speak to the same shopper and support each other. That’s our goal for this new brand to our newsagency.

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Gifts

How to use plush and known brands to drive newsagency traffic

kxbrandsFollowing my recent post about Hubbed, newsagency software company POS Solutions responded on their blog in a welcome addition to the discussion. In their post they said they did not believe plush was a destination product.  As a retailer, I say their claim is not supported by the facts. Plush can be a destination product. I have one store achieving $80,000 in sales a year, much of this from people deliberately coming to our shop for their purchase.

Click on this recent photo of the front of my newsagency for a high res version and look right to left.  This is what you see – it’s how we attract shoppers to my newsagency and how we pitch our business as a destination business:

  1. Beanie Kids are often purchased by collectors. Many of our Beanie Kids shoppers come to our centre and to our shop to purchases these from us.
  2. Beanie Boos. More than half our sales are to collectors who come to us as their destination. Wh know from our own data.
  3. Disney Princess. An international brand attracting traffic and once in-store and with a first purchase made they come back and these subsequent visits are destination purchases.
  4. AFL (on the far left). Well, we’re in Melbourne and it’s AFL season. We are known for our Beanie Kids, Hallmark cards and other AFL products.

But there is one more important point to this discussion about plush and destination business: You have to work at making products destination purchases. You do this with an excellent range of known-brand product, well-located and regularly refreshed with new lines.

You also give your customers a reason to come back for a destination purchase. This is where our discount vouchers work wonderfully for us. Every time you bring a shopper back to purchase another item in their collection is a mother link in the chain connecting them with your business.

I accept plush isn’t for everyone. All I am recounting here are stories from my own newsagency business.

Oh, two other things I love about plush: people buying plush items are happy and the products themselves are great to hug!

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Management tip

US retail giant Walmart enters the convenience store space

Walmart has opened its first convenience store / petrol (gas) station in the US – as reported by Liberty Voice.

This move by Walmart is not new from an Australian context with the moves here already by Coles and Woolworths. What we are seeing in Australia now is further evolution of the petrol and convenience models by the supermarkets.

Newsagents playing in the convenience and agency business space need to watch the supermarket businesses. Coles has lotteries sorted out. I expect they will want to add more agency business, to drive even more traffic. In these P&C outlets they can deliver a more personal experience than in their supermarkets.

Newsagents can’t ignore these developments in Australia and overseas. They/we need to consider them in the context of our own business planning.

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Newsagency challenges

Newsagents – 4WD fans love this magazine!

mag4wdtouringThe publisher of 4WD Touring Australia magazine sent me several issues to take a look at. I shared these with friends in to four-wheel driving. Each of them said they love the magazine and asked where they could get it. This is an excellent special interest magazine. I encourage newsagents to stock it.

I’ve not been asked to say this – I’m saying it because I mean it … this is an excellent magazine.

The Facebook page has over 7,000 likes and it’s growing. Connecting with the 4WD community can open not only magazine sales but also gift and other product sale opportunities. It’s all about understanding the customer and the more clear their interests the better for us in terms of product socking decisions.

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magazines

Hubbed versus Australia Post price comparison inaccurate

I’m told the price comparison published under the namers of Hubbed and POS Solutions to newsagents last week contains wrong pricing for Australia Post. Here is the correct pricing from an Australia Post LPO this morning:

  1. 3 kg Parcel Post satchel from Aust Post is $13.40 compared to $13.95
  2. 5kg Parcel Post satchel from Aust Post is $16.70 compared to $16.95
  3. 3kg Express satchel from Aust Post is $14.80 compared to $14.95
  4. 5kg Express post satchel from Aust Post is $23.60 compared to $23.95.
  5. You also get a discount of buying in packs of 10 from Aust Post.

This pricing came into effect two weeks ago.

UPDATE: (23:29) Another contributor here has advised that the Australia Post price above does not include a signature on receipt whereas the Hubbed price does. (You can see this in their comments).

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Australia Post

A story of wonderful customer service from a newsagency employee

Here is an inspirational email received by a colleague newsagent a couple of days ago.   This is customer service!

Dear Sir/Madam

I visited your store this morning to purchase The Australian newspaper and to submit X-Lotto tickets for tonight’s X-Lotto. I was greeted and served by your staff member, Louise.

Louise was extremely helpful in explaining to me that the Winners Circle card had expired and that the completed tickets were no longer able to be used and handed me some new X-Lotto forms to be filled out. She aptly renewed my card and provided me a membership change of detail form.

Whilst I was completing the new forms with my chosen X-Lotto numbers, I listened to Louise as she interacted with other customers. She was friendly, respectful and courteous, a rarity in today’s society where customer service does not seem to be an important factor in so many small businesses.

My Husband and I are passionate about customer service and having been in small business ourselves understand the importance in customer retention and staff members play such an important role, congratulations on choosing such an appropriate young individual to represent your organisation.

We would like to use our experience with Louise in a case study for our business which is targeted at guiding small businesses at taking an inward look at how they meet the expectation of their most-important aspect, their customer.

Please pass on our gratitude to Louise for her exceptional customer service.

Great customer service begins at the top of any business. Louise deserves kudos for excellent customer service. Her managers also deserve kudos for excellent management.

In our businesses we are only as good as our weakest link. Good customer service is results from good management. Poor customer service results from poor management.

From the top down we need to make our businesses deliver more Louise experiences so more of us get emails like this.

Thank you Louise for your great service that lead to this inspiring story.

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Customer loyalty

A successful counter line for your newsagency

angelflamesA single pocket of Angel Flames candles at the counter can add valuable margin dollars to a purchase. We have done this many times over many years and each time we bring out the Angel Flames we get a terrific result. The pack is small, you could find room in any counter situation. The purchase opportunities are many. While the most obvious is a purchase with a greeting card or a gift, we have newspaper and magazine customers buying a pack or two on impulse.

Where we place product matters as much as keeping the offer fresh. This is why we don’t keep the candles at the counter all the time.

Check with your usual party goods supplier for these or similar products. Placed in the right spot, they can be tremendously valuable for your business. Customers will be thrilled – that’s a reaction I often see.

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Gifts

Newspaper covers-up lead story

telecoverupThis is one of the worst cases of newspaper editorial cover-up I have seen. The Sunday Telegraph in Sydney yesterday had an ad for Quickflix stuck over the front page headline. So much for news selling newspapers. Shocking. Shameful. I wonder how the editorial team feel.

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Uncategorized

Newsagency social responsibility tip: help job hunters

With unemployment on the rise, think about how you can help people looking for work.

Consider offering discount copying and discount faxing for those looking for work. Get known as they place they can come to copy and send resumes. Show yourself off as a business person seeking to genuinely help those looking for work.

Promote the service, welcoming job hunters with open arms. Show them you care. Let your Facebook and Twitter followers know. Your goal has to be to get job hunters talking about your service. Be generous in your giving.

I first pitched this idea to newsagents twenty years ago in my book, Marketing Your Newsagency.

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Customer loyalty

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: wear what you sell

This could be a brilliant or really crazy idea. Have a day where everyone working in the shop wears an article of clothing made from what you sell. For example, a shirt made from crepe paper or jewellery made from paper-clips or a hat from cardboard or a dress made from greeting cards (thinking of the Catherine Martin Amex dress).

The idea of this idea is to get you and your team thinking about what you sell differently and then to get your customers thinking about it differently.  I’d expect that by engaging in this idea you come up with other ways to better connect with what you sell and through this to grow your business.

Like any marketing idea – HAVE FUN!

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marketing

Sunday newsagency management tip: quarterly P&L recommended

Too often newsagents get their accounts done annually, long after the end of the financial year. My recommendation is that you get your accounts done quarterly within a few weeks of the end of each quarter as this provides visibility of potential issues with theft and other business challenges.

With accounting systems today and the ability to automatically feed data from your newsagency software getting accounts done is not as complex as it once might have been. Talk to your accountant about streamlining your process so that you have better information on which to base your business planning and decisions.

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Management tip

Male customers react differently to discount vouchers

dv-maleWe have been tracking shopper reaction to and engagement with discount vouchers by gender. Males react  differently to females. Those who will use the voucher tend to want to spend the money on the voucher right away. Knowing this is helping us with near to the counter product placement as male shoppers tend to be lazy.

In addition to placement is the pitch of how they can spend. For example, a guy with a voucher for $1 might say what can I get for $1 and I’d say – put it toward a magazine you don’t usually buy. Some go into the magazine department and do just that. Suggesting how to spend the money works!

Suggesting items guys can buy with a voucher is key – BUT the items need to be things they have to give us more money for, beyond the voucher value.

Guys shopping with their wives and girlfriends are a treat to watch as there can be a fight as to who gets the voucher. The banter is fun for us and for them – connecting our shop with a good experience.

Discount vouchers are continuing to drive excellent results for us – deepening baskets and bringing shoppers back more often.

The key to success continues to be how it’s pitched to customers and how you setup the store with opportunities for spending the vouchers immediately.

These comments could relate to any voucher created with any software or even created without a computer system.

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Newsagency management

Playing with a product drives purchases

sandThis self-cntained display unit for smart sand is terrific for encouraging shopper engagement with a product you need to touch and feel. The moment parents or kids play with the sand they purchase it. The stand is ideal for driving this shopper engagement.  It’s fantastic: small footprint, holds a good amount of stock, shows off the product in the best light.

Rather than telling parents to keep their kids in line, going the other way and encouraging playing as this unit does drives business for us and the partner supplier. It also brings fun to the shop floor and that’s a delight!

There are several suppliers with sand like this. But not all have the floor display unit.

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Impulse lines

Recasting the magazine aisle end for the weekend

magswinacarweekendHere’s how we have adjusted our WIN A CAR aisle end promotion for the weekend. Subtle changes to make the most of more fresh titles. That’s Life and Who placed on the top and to the left for easy selection. BHG rounds out the top section here plus we have it in two other locations for the weekend.  Note Women’s Health and Men’s Health together – very important. Strong and consistent branding with WIN A CAR collateral too helps drive shopper engagement.

We change this display on a Monday and a Thursday through the duration of the promotion – reflecting titles on-sale.

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magazines

Promoting InStyle and the gift with purchase

magsinstyWe are managing the bulk of the Neutrogena gift with purchase with InStyle by Careful placement within our magazine fixturing. The title is selling well so the additional space allocation will not be for long. I’m happy to take the space as the gift shows us off as a retailer offering additional value. It’s a good point of difference for us.

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magazines

More questions about Hubbed following newsagency marketing campaign

The ANF endorsed and promoted Hubbed is being promoted to newsagents today via a six page note sent under the name of Hubbed and POS Solutions.  It reads like a joint promotion, with bold claims to try and drive interest.

For those not familiar I declare I own Tower Systems, the newsagency software company with 1,900+ newsagents as customers. POS is my competitor in that business.  They had around 600 newsagent customers last time I checked. I mention the numbers to provide context, not disparage.  But this post is not about competing with POS, this blog is not about my business.

This post is about questions newsagents should have after reading the Hubbed marketing material.

I do not want to see newsagents lose money on something that is not based on sound research. I am not saying that applies to Hubbed as I have not seen anything approaching research. If they have good research then they should share the facts.

On page one there is this claim: The ConnectPOS system is designed exclusively for newsagents top offer a new range of products and services to customers.  Newsagents already have access to parcel service and prepaid visa cards. Okay, bill payment is new but there is no commercial upside in that from what I can see.  They then say ConnectPOS provides growth with new products, services and increased revenue.  Why don’t they quote the growth achieved by the newsagents who have been running this for six months and more? The rumour is it’s not generating worthwhile commercial results. Only data we can verify can counter such rumours. I’d happily publish the data to counter the rumours.

When quoting newsagent results they need to indicate the terms on which those newsagents accessed Hubbed. It is important everyone can be certain all are on the same playing field.

The flyer on page 1 claims Hubbed also offer high commission to the newsagent with the cheapest prices to the customers.  maybe there is a reason others charge more and have a more modest commission structure.  I’ve been told by someone I’d expect to have good knowledge that Hubbed people met with representatives of a major logistics company who refused to deal with Hubbed because they model was flawed. I’d like to know if there is truth in this report.

On page two of the fax they say newsagents with Connect are selling between 10 and 30 parcels a day. They should publish the details of all Connect newsagents so this claim can be verified.

On page three is the claim that POS Solutions has worked exclusively with Hubbed to create ConnectPOS.  It is exclusive. Hubbed did not approach any other company I am told.  I am told the exclusivity arrangement is for no more than six months.  I’ve seen the integration. I think it’s pretty lame. But for a couple of keystrokes you could do this on any computer running any newsagency software.

Page three ends with – join the growing list of newsagents that are embracing POSBrowser with integrated ConnectPOS! Newsagents should ask for this growing list so they can verify the claim. Otherwise, it remains a sales pitch without evidentiary support.

Page five says: Over the years Newsagents have watched staple product sets that belonged to them in large part become commoditised with other retailers now taking the significant share.  While this is true, none of the Hubbed products are in this space so I am not sure why they would make the statement other than to sell through fear.

Fear is a massive factor here. Newsagents who are not great retailers want someone to fix their businesses for them. Hubbed is being pitched as this. But it will not fix a troubled business.  The only way for a newsagent to fix a troubled newsagency is for them to take control of their business, embrace change and plan in the budget, on the shop floor and through buying for a brighter future.  In my own newsagency my sales are up double digits year on year. I don’t have Hubbed or anything like it. I’m doing this on the back of flat traffic in the centre and extraordinary competition from small and large businesses.

Newsagency growth comes from future focused products.  Hubbed products and services are rooted in the past.

On page five they go on: other retailers are good at seeing what is in demand and taking advantage of it.  How does that connect to Hubbed? Other than the parcel offering that we can get through others too, what products and services are in high demand where demand is growing? Here is their fear pitch again.

Back to the issue of what newsagents have lost over the years and are losing today: lotteries, magazines and stationery. These are the key products lost. Where is Hubbed in any of these? Nowhere from what I can see. I make this point to underscore the fear they are using to encourage newsagents to go with them yet they are not offering anything to address the items in their fear mongering.

On the last page is a claim of a special offer from Hubbed and POS Solutions.  My own experience is that something that is exclusive is not as keenly priced as something that has competition.  If Hubbed really wanted to save newsagents money they would have made their platform more available than with only one company, they would have, from the outset, demonstrated an understanding of the commercial reality they write so much about in their marketing material.

Even on the best assessment, Hubbed will not generate the kind of return a newsagent can get from being a good retailer.

Between Jan. 1 and Mar. 13 this year in one of my newsagencies we have increased our plush sales $4,743.18 (ex GST). We are projecting an increase for the whole year of in excess of $35,000.00 in plush sales (ex GST). This will add $19,250.00 gross profit to our P&L from this category alone. There is a correlation between plush sales and gift sales and card sales.  The plush increase will, in fact, translate into close to $48,000.00 additional gross profit from the three categories.

Once you add in 18% year on year greeting case sale growth you have a wonderful business story despite the doom and gloom talk being used in this unfortunate flyer.

My newsagency is in a shopping centre with 300 other shops, several majors, many gift shops that sell plush and several specialist large card shops. Yes, it is a very competitive environment. With flat foot traffic in the centre.

The future of the channel for good retailer newsagents is bright because we can make it so. We can create strong, growing and profitable newsagencies by being good retailers where we have control through what we stock and how we merchandise it. It starts with us choosing to be a retailer and not an agent. Next is you taking a realistic view of your business and building from there.

I acknowledge that some newsagents will like the Hubbed approach and will benefit from it. If you think this is you, I urge you to do your homework and be 100% satisfied with all you are promised. If, once you have done this you like what you see, go for it.

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Hubbed

The devil is in the detail of the Bauer 50% bonus commission offer to newsagents

bauermotherBauer media yesterday sent a flyer and an agreement to newsagents for a Mother’s Day consumer promotion and an on-going Promote and Profit campaign.

While the key pitch of Profit and Promote is an opportunity to earn 50% bonus commission, the agreement Bauer wants newsagents to sign says the 50% bonus commission will be paid on incremental sales – sales in the retail store (not subs) above a sales target.  The sales target is to be set by Bauer.

So, if your sales are $1,000 and your sales target is $1,200 and you sell $1,500, you get 50% bonus commission on $300.

With the average newsagency reporting magazine sales decline of between 6% and 9% year on year, any sales target should reflects and not have a base of greater sales than being achieved today.

The Bauer material says you will receive individual stretch targets based on historical sales. If done properly it should be a forecast based on year on year trend.  i.e. if you are declining it should be reflected in your target. That targets have not been sent with the document means newsagents do not have enough information to sign the agreement.

I am all for incentive programs. However, they must be easily understood, have realistic goals and reflect current conditions. The documentation as presented for Profit and Promote is too complex and has too many unknowns for active newsagent engagement in my view. I’d love others to share their views here.

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magazines

Tapping into vintage interest

vintageshopThe latest issue of Time Out Melbourne is an excellent opportunity to tap into vintage interest and we’re doing just that with the title on show where vintage enthusiasts will see the title and hopefully purchase on impulse. This is another example of a magazine cover giving is a fresh reason to promote the title.

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magazines

Herald Sun MH370 cover-up

hscupIt’s disappointing to see News Corp. stick a discount home delivery subscription ad over the top of the photo for the lead story – on the disappearance of MH370 on yesterday’s newspaper. This sticker and the offer it promotes disrespects news and trashes the brand by making the purchase about price.

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newspaper masthead desecration