Luxury Travel oversupply by Gordon and Gotch fails
Two months ago I wrote about the unjustified increase in supply of Luxury Travel magazine by magazine distributor Gordon and Gotch. The title has failed to work, it did not sell. It has spent the two months on the shelf, taking up a pocket, not selling a single copy. And, yes, we gave it time in the best spot in travel titles.
While the magazine geniuses at Gordon and Gotch will no doubt say that there is a reason they increased my supply from 2 copies to 5 and that I am wrong to complain here, they will have no evidence to support their position. They made the wrong decision to increase my supply. Indeed, it looks to me like a cash grab – they had spare stock and had to place it somewhere since I suspect they make more money shipping magazines out than holding them in the warehouse.
Magazine publishers wondering why newsagents early return their stock need look no further than this blog post. It is this type of unjustified magazine oversupply which causes some newsagents to struck back, early returning product without looking at sales data.
Fix whatever caused the unjustified oversupply of Luxury Travel and you take a good step toward fixing magazine oversupply.
Let’s look at the consequences of the Gotch behaviour with this title. They increased my supply from 2 to 5. They supplied on the last trading day of December. They got their distribution fee and they will get their return fee. They also got my cash for the extra 3 copies for a while. There are some newsagents who think this is the key game of magazine distributors – cash management.
All I know is that Gotch has failed yet again and no amount of spin from the top of the company can excuse this appalling and on-going behaviour. The evidence speaks for itself.













