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

Soap as a sympathy gift in a newsagency?

Comments on a recent thread explored gifts for sympathy cards and it got me thinking about what we sell today that could work in this situation. This terrific range of soaps from Victorian business B Gentle would work as sympathy gifts – when you want to give something beyond a card.  We sourced this range to appeal to our older customers and those who buy for older people. The range sells very well.  It’s something to suggest as a sympathy gift.

When working with a newsagency business to explore gifts they could sell, I look at card and magazine sales as guide. These two categories can tell us plenty about a newsagency.

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Gifts

Resurgence of interest in the Hello Kitty brand

Several newsagents commented on Hello Kitty when the new partwork was launched recently. From what I can see in Australia and overseas Hello Kitty is alive and well. The mega-brand is being enjoyed by a new generation. But the older generation has not forgotten it by the looks of the window display I saw last week in Vans store.

As I mentioned here, we’re enjoying good success selling Hello Kitty gift lines along side the Hello Kitty partwork.

Brands are vitally important in retail and even more so in newsagencies as we transition our businesses from being general stores into more specialist focus retail outlets.

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Brand retailing

Frustrating bagged magazine pack from Bauer

I heard from my newsagencies yesterday about the bagged discount pack of Woman’s Day and AWW. It frustrates me that I have no control on receiving these bagged discount packs. They take time and space & are loss-making for us. It is unreasonable that I’m forced into this situation. Every newsagent ought to be able to cancel these bagged discount packs if we wish.

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magazine distribution

Promoting Pink on the cover of Women’s Health

We’re promoting the latest issue of Women’s Health magazine with this aisle-end display at the entrance to our magazine department. This issue should sell especially well thanks to Pink being on the cover – she has been on a sell-out tour of Australia for months. Her face on the cover alone should drive sales. Hence the prime placement for us.

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magazines

Business performance analysis for a traditional newsagency

I was asked to look at the performance data for what I’d call a traditional newsagency recently. As the following brief report shows, this is an older-style newsagency dominated by lottery sales. The sales mix is very concerning as too higher a percentage of income is coming from one source.

I have looked at your Monthly Sales Comparison Report for April through July 2013 compared to the same period in 2012.

I can see from the data that the business is struggling. Your main traffic generator is lotteries, accounting for 61.76% of your traffic. As lottery sales migrate online your situation puts you at risk as you’re not generating traffic for any other significant product line.

You need to act urgently to repurpose the business. The easy route would be to play in the convenience / agency space. The problem with this is that it’s nothing special and nothing you control as your own. With Australia Post nearby and offering high tech solutions in parcels, bill payment and other areas, I can’t see how you can compete with their mature and nationally marketed offer.

Once I strip out lotteries, dry cleaning classified ads and instant scratch ticket sales, you’re at $5,550 in sales. If I take out low margin and falling (at 16% YOY) tobacco sales you’re well below $5,000 a week.

I think you would be better off creating a pint of difference around other opportunities. For example, your data shows several opportunities I’d be interested in if I were you:

  1. Magazines. Motoring titles account for 13.28% of sales and sport at 6.9%. So, your shop has a reasonable male shopper skew. What gifts do you offer for males? I can’t tell because your gift sales data does not provide this detail. Women’s Weeklies magazines account for 23.8% of total magazine sales. Are you catering to women in your gift offer?
  2. Stationery. You’re doing $250 a week in stationery sales. If you have more than $3,000 invested in stationery stock then you;re grossly under-performing in this space.

Your business, in the data, looks like an old style newsagency, one that was built i the day of regulation and tradition. It’s time for you to break free and be a retailer exerting control over the business. You have to stand for something other than lotteries and magazines, something extra to generate net new traffic for you. the question is what is that? What can you offer that will bring shoppers to your business?

I can see you dabbling in gifts at $150 a week in sales. What’s working, what are the expansion opportunities.

You will do far better attracting shoppers for gifts and other items at 50% and more GP than if you focus on agent type business that earns you far less and relies on others to generate traffic for you.

The biggest challenge is whether you want to take control of the business, to break free from being a shopkeeper and becoming a retailer with a business plan. It’s hard work. I’ve seen it succeed in the most unlikely situations. The key is to engage aggressively targeting your goals and not what others say your goals should be.

Your data suggests that you need to act with urgency.

While I’d rather write a more positive report, this could become positive if the owner recasts the business to generate traffic for themselves, from their own initiatives and in pursuit of better margin. I understand how hard this is and that such a change takes cash and time. However the challenges of today’s newsagency are not unexpected.

For decades our channel was protected and we could get away with being average and with others generating traffic for us. Today’s reality is that our further in each of our businesses is 100% up to us.

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Management tip

Blackhawk gift cards preferred by shoppers

While we offer an in-house gift card as well as a Visa gift card, it’s the retail branded gift card range from Blackhawk that works best for us. Shopper feedback is that they feel like they are giving more of a gift by giving a retail store branded gift card whereas the Visa card might as well be cash.  Shopper feedback has encouraged us to look at the range of branded gift cards we sell. We’re talking with Blackhawk about expanding the range.

In our shopping centre there are three other outlets selling the Blackhawk gift cards. Since we sell more greeting cards it makes sense for us to get more of the gift card business.

Any newsagent can sell Blackhawk cards.  There is no stock cost so the financial risk is minimal.  The free merchandising makes selling easy.

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Gifts

Using magazine mastheads to signpost sections

I am often asked by newsagents for advice on laying out magazine departments. The best advice I can give is to change, change and change some more. It all starts with a magazine relay as I outlined in a long article on the topic ages ago.  That said, one thing we consistently do is to use key titles in a section blocked so as to draw attention to the section – as shown in the photo for our home and living section. Laying these four titles out in this way with double pocket allocation makes them the hero titles of the section.  I’ve never been in a newsagency where such space can’t be found for this type of beacon branding.

The titles we place in this way change through the month depending on what’s just out and whether the title is well known to our shoppers.

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magazines

Sunday newsagency management advice: take control of your pen range, chase sales growth

This photo shows a pen wall in a newsagency I was in recently. The pen offer in this high-street newsagency is less than ideal: much of the stock is old, the fixtures are vey old and the overall offer unappealing. There is no story being told, no pride being shown.

Get pens right and they account for around 33% of all stationery sales and they deliver year on year growth of between 5% and 10%.

Getting pens right means having a good range of current stock fixtured in clean and fresh units well signed and in a location noticed by most who shop in the newsagency.

It’s not hard work to get pens right but it does mean exerting control: controlling what is ordered, how it is displayed and how it is sold. Suppliers make it easy by providing reps who will order for newsagents. This can be a bad move.

My Sunday newsagency management tip today: look at your pen offer and take control. Expect sales to increase.

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Management tip

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: use colour blocking in your window to attract shoppers

The front window of a retail newsagency is one of the most important marketing investments for the business.

A good window display will attract shoppers into the business and drive sales of the items prompted.

W good window display will surprise shoppers and challenge their expectation of what the business sells.

A window I saw last week stunningly used colour blocking to show off the range of products they sell. While colour is a key theme of this business, the window itself is inspirational for newsagents since we could try this given the colour of products we sell.

Colour blocking in a window display could see magazines, cards, gets, stationery and toys in the one display – getting shoppers to see items they did not know we sold.

Here’s another window from the same shop in my example. Fewer colours – vertically blocked. These are ideas we can play with – not all the time but enough to get new traffic for our businesses.

A window display like this for a newsagency would see us challenge customer perception about us and what we sell.

A window like this is easy to create.

Allocate limited time to create the display and be sure to measure the results.

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Colour blocking

Getting attention at the counter

These Jelly Rings sell better at the counter if one in the display unit is turned on. One flashing attracts attention and attention = sales.

From Independence Studios, the Jelly Rings are part of a range of counter and candy-lane products we embrace. While not for everyone, they work for us as we are surrounded by retailers with discounted candy.

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Counter offers

Shooting a video of the GNS Market Fair presentation

I’m shooting a video of the presentation I gave at each of the GNS Market Fairs over the last two months, to make the content accessible from the GNS website and from here.  GNS is loading videos of all the presentations. The video content will be an advance on what I covered at GNS thanks to questions and feedback. It will be skewed more to independent newsagents as that’s who tended to take part in the sessions.

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Newsagency management

VANA advises newsagents to not sign the Hubbed contract at this time

VANA yesterday advised Victorian newsagents that they should not sign the Hubbed contract at this time.  here is their announcement in full:

VANA’s position on Hubbed
By VANA News | September 13, 2013 | Nparcel Leave a comment

There has been much talk within the industry lately about the ANF’s endorsed company ‘Hubbed”. VANA also understands that the Hubbed team are visiting Victorian Newsagents to introduce the platform to them. As expected, VANA is receiving enquires from members as to our position and recommendation.

The VANA Board was given a presentation by Hubbed CEO David Mclean at our May Board meeting, and has also had many conversations with ANF CEO, Alf Maccioni in relation to the platform.

VANA received a copy of a Hubbed contract and VANA’s solicitors have given us a list of issues and concerns involving this. On Thursday 29th August, VANA met with the ANF to enquire about these issues and on Friday 30th, a list of issues was submitted to Hubbed CEO, David McLean. These questions have been answered and after further discussions, Hubbed has released another version of their contract.

VANA’s advice to Newsagents today is to not sign a Hubbed contract until the final version of the contract is available for all to see, understand and evaluate. Newsagents MUST seek their own professional advice on this contract if they wish to participate as the platform does commit newsagents to a contract term and at a monetary cost, amongst many other things.

VANA also has concerns over the ANF 5% shareholding in Hubbed and the ANF’s ability to have an influence in making sure newsagents are protected.

This issue will be discussed further at our next Board meeting. VANA will continue to update members if any more information comes to hand. If you have any questions in relation to this announcement, please contact The VANA team.

I have expressed some of these concerns here on August 20 and here on August 26. It is good to see newsagent associations doing what associations should do when a new business opportunity enters their marketplace. This is what members expect.

If the Hubbed offer is as good as Hubbed and the ANF say it is they will welcome the scrutiny.

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Hubbed

Visual merchandising gifts in a newsagency: before and after

We introduced the Melissa and Doug educational classic toy range to one of my newsagencies last week and while the display oin the lease line facing into the mall looked good, I felt it could look better. Here are before and after photos. Click on them for bigger size.

Here is the display as it looked yesterday when I saw it for the first time. The product was well laid out and there was good use of the Melissa and Doug logo. Seeing it though I felt it lacked what I’d call ownership of the space for the brand.

Here is the display after we had made one change, the introduction of a black cloth backdrop covering the beanie Kids fixture behind the melissa and Doug product. This simple change makes a huge difference. Now the Melissa and Doug products own the space.

Visual merchandising is all about making the product the hero, making it stand out to shoppers in your store and walking past your store. While the only test that matters is if the product sells, it will sell if it is displayed in to sell.

Since I am not in the newsagency full time it is easy to walk in and notice things people who are there all the time may miss. I appreciate their patience and cheerfulness in letting me do this and then leave while they change things.

The first display was not bad at all but I knew it could be better. Hence the small change.

sales of melissa and Doug product are excellent. We’ve reordered.

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art supplies

Serving older female magazine customers

Another magazine move we have made this week is to shift our magazines that are purchased by our older shoppers together and placed them opposite our weeklies at the entrance to the magazine aisle.

We are adding more titles here as these customers are valuable for magazines, cards and gifts. We want to better serve their needs.

This posts and others recently documenting magazine placement adjustments and our overall magazine relay strategy demonstrate our commitment to magazines. We are committed because growth is achievable. Magazine customers are vital because they shop by habit.

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magazine distribution

marie claire sells out

We’ve sold out of marie claire as have many other newsagents and there is no spare stock to be found. While it’s a good problem it have it’s proving to be frustrating to regular customers who have not purchased their copy yet. We’re using it as an opportunity to remind them of our magazine putaway service.

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magazine distribution

Disco robot an easy fun sell for a newsagency

I love this disco robot product for the fun it brings to the shop floor and for the easy sales it’s generating. I also love the appeal to a younger shopper and those who buy for younger shoppers.

Robotic products are huge in the US. In fact toy retailers there say the robot category will be the break-out this Christmas across several age groups. We are yet to see the US robot range hit Australia.

Playing a video of the robot in action is proving to be key in driving sales.

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Gifts

Newsagent cleans up Herald Sun newspaper front page trash

Here’s a photo sent to my by a newsagent this morning after they have removed the subscription ads from the front page of the Herald Sun newspapers they were delivered for sale in-store today. Fair enough I say. While I understand why newspaper publishers want to promote newspaper home deliveries, let them do it inside the newspaper and not with an ad stuck over the day’s front page news.

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newspaper masthead desecration

Newsagency performance assessment for a regional small town newsagency

Here is another newsagency performance assessment I have undertaken.  This business is interesting in that they have taken some excellent steps that are paying off and now they want to achieve more.  Here is what I have written to them after looking at their data:

In reviewing the performance of the business I’ve looked at your sales and basket data for May through July this year compared to the same period a year ago. While I understand the business is quite seasonal, I am comparing like for like.

Some comments I make may come across as rude. That’s not my intention. The facts as I see them are the facts. This is where data is vital in guiding business planning and decisions. I see too many newsagencies being run on gut feel and emotion and not enough running based on data.

  1. Overall traffic. Down 3%. While this is within trend for newsagencies, you need to be considering what you can do to drive new traffic. This could include promotion outside the business, window displays, community engagement or a host of other ideas. The question you have to ask is: what am I doing to attract more shoppers to my business? I appreciate this is challenging in a small town but take your time and think about what you could do to atract people from, say, 20km away. Don’t restrict your view of your business to only those nearby.
  2. Cards. No change in sales. While this is okay in that sales have not dropped, they have not grown either. 23% of your cards are in unknown category. This needs to be fixed. Call the help desk and your card co to sort out why electronic invoice data is not being allocated. That said, there is some interesting data: 5.88% of card sales are sympathy! Cards overall account for 10% of your sales. It’s vital this is lifted to between 15% and 20%. This can be achieved with a card re-plan, marketing, a change in shopper engagement and maybe a rewards program for card shoppers. With your annual card sales at around $60,000 I suspect you could negotiate a more valuable card supplier relationship.
  3. Gifts. This is a terrific success story you’ve built. Sales of $5,235 – up 24% year on year. The only problem is that you are not categorising your gifts so it is hard to see what is selling and what is not selling. Your ration of gift sales to cards is well above average – this is good news.
  4. Magazines. Your magazine sales are strong. I notice that Home & Lifestyle has 10.73% of your sales. This is above average. If you’re looking for new gift lines consider items in these types of magazines as your customers are in that space. Also you have strong craft magazine sales – 9.79% of total magazine sales. This is another example of guidance for gift expansion. Your magazine data indicates around two thirds of your shoppers are women or they are at least shopping for women. Magazines account for 39.02% of your sales. This is too high. The business needs balancing to higher margin lines.
  5. Stationery. Sales are down 2% which is not bad compared to others. I’d love to be able to provide more insights but your data does not allow this. You have to sort out unknown category by arriving stock electronically and allocating this to categories within stationery. Otherwise you don’t know what you are selling for sure.

Given your location, in a country town with a population of 800, I can imagine that you see your opportunities for growth as being limited. maybe in the immediate area they are. I think it’s important to not be bound by borders as you see them. I also think its important you run your business as if your toughest competitor is right next door. Aim to be the best retailer in town.

Here are my thoughts on how I might approach your situation and desire for growth. Some are easy to implement immediate options while others involve research and planning. Some are mutually exclusive. Consider the list a list of options for your consideration:

  1. Decide who you are. What do you stand for, what is your unique selling proposition? Decide to be the best gift shop in the area, not just the town by the area. Plus the best card shop. Make it so people happily drive half an hour to get to your shop. Yes, this takes investment. Take your time. Develop a plan and make small steps toward this.
  2. Use your windows. From Google Street View I can see you’re in a good situation with excellent windows facing the street. Use the windows to make bold statements. One window could feature traditional newsagency lines and the other window could feature gifts. Retreat from tradition with magazine posters in front and give your windows over to bold create statements about your offer and about community connection. Develop a marketing plan. For example: in one window promote craft titles and maybe a local craft club and in the other window Spring Gifts (if you’re doing the display now).
  3. Entrance. from the front door through entice me into the business. Do this with fresh product placement from inside the door to the key destinations in your shop. Always look at your shop from the perspective of your shoppers. Break with tradition and break their expectations of what you sell.
  4. Look around you. Look at other shops in town that you can compete with. This is retail today, especially for a newsagency. there is nothing you sell that others cannot sell. So, look at nearby gift shops if there are any. They are your competitors. Take them on if you are game. But not directly – be smart. Look at gift suppliers who can help you expand to attract people currently shopping with these other gift shops. This is a long-term strategy. take your time.
  5. Services. Are there more services you could provide. For example, is there a good coffee shop nearby? If not, is this an opportunity?
  6. Tourists. Given the influx of tourism you experience consider what you can do to connect with them. For example, in your data I can’t see much in the way of sales of plush. If your tourists have kids or are likely to buy for kids then a plush presence in store during the tourist season could work well. Your location means you could possible achieve an above average margin too.
  7. Connect locally. In you don’t already: have a local events notice board in-store; promote a local community group; publish your own monthly newsletter; advertise on local radio as it should be pretty cheap.

These are just some thoughts. The real goal of the list is to get you thinking. I’d be happy to discuss these options with you – 0418 321 338.

I spent my teen years in a country town with a population of 2,500 and worked in the local newsagents after school for a couple of years. While that was decades ago, I do have a reference point for country towns.

I am grateful to the newsagents who share their data for comment. I don’t publish all reports here, not even a fraction. Those I do publish I hope speak to others who may be in a similar situation.

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Newsagency challenges

NANA suggests newsagents delay signing with Hubbed

Here’s an announcement from NANA published  yesterday in relation to Hubbed:

NANA suggests delay in signing
Hubbed contracts/agreements for now

The Newsagents Association of NSW & ACT (NANA) has received legal advice expressing concerns about the Hubbed contracts/agreements that NANA has received.

As NANA is legally not able to instruct NANA Members what to do, NANA is suggesting to NANA Members that they delay signing Hubbed’s contracts/agreements until Hubbed has made appropriate amendments.

Some of the key concerns that NANA has learned are:

their requirement to use insurer(s) approved by Hubbed for public and product liability insurance for Hubbed’s equipment at the Newsagent’s premises;
their exclusivity clause; and
their rental and service agreement that is independent of Hubbed.
Naturally, NANA urges NANA Members to use their own commercial judgement when considering Hubbed’s Connect Premium or Connect Lite.

From the outset, NANA remains very supportive of Hubbed’s offerings as it can significantly propel Newsagents into the lucrative parcel shipments business, bill payments, gift cards, and many other current and future products and service offerings.

Notwithstanding, NANA is firstly committed to ensuring that NANA Members’ business/commercial interests are protected. NANA will continue to update NANA Members of its progress with Hubbed in the coming days and weeks.

For any further information, NANA Members are welcome to contact the NANA office on (02) 9744 0400 or by e-mail at nana@nana.com.au.

Regulars here would know these topics are among the questions I raised here.

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Hubbed

Moving craft magazine titles to chase sales

As part of our rolling magazine relay approach the team at one of my newsagencies moved several magazine categories earlier this week including craft titles so they are next to weeklies – to where AWW and our English magazines used to be located.

Craft titles have been doing well for us and it was felt that this change could boost sales further. I’m all for change, especially with magazine layout. There is no golden rule for placement other than to tune layout so that category adjacencies are appropriate to your shoppers.

As with any change we’ll watch sales and adjust as necessary.

For more information on doing a magazine relay see: How to do a magazine relay in your newsagency.

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magazines

I’d like to see Tatts actively promote retailers

It would not be difficult for Tatts to promote retailers when it runs these ads on digital units in shopping centres. I appreciate this advertising is all about brand awareness and retailers promote in-store with the same collateral. What I’d like to see on these digital ads is a call to action like buy your ticket a your local Tatts retailer.

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Lotteries

SK-II gift boosts marie claire

Sales of the latest issue of marie claire are strong thanks to the SK-II gift with purchase. We’ve been promoting this at the entrance to our magazine department as well as the usual location for the title. Thanks to sales we will retreat to the usual location for the title today. we have also been promoting this issue through Facebook.

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magazines

Beware a hoax call re Western Union

If someone claiming to be from Western Union calls you and says they need access to your computer to do a software update it’s most likely a hoax. Get their name and number and say you’ll call them back. It’s likely they will hang up at this point. Do not give them access to your computer. Do not go to any website they suggest. several newsagents have received such a call today.

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Ethics

Newsagents! Control what’s ordered for your business!

If your newsagency is oversupplied with non-circulation stock it’s your fault. You set the rules by which your supplier trades with you and if you don’t you should.

I was in a newsagency yesterday that is over-stocked in a stationery category. In addition to full shelves, they have more stock in the storeroom.  Several suppliers supply this business with reps doing the orders – clearly not based on sales.

The newsagent blames the reps.

I blame the newsagent.

It’s your money being spent, put in place controls that set how supplier representatives spend it.

Too often I find ever-stocked newsagencies where the owner or staff blame the suppliers.  Only rarely would I agree the supplier is responsible.  You need to put the needs of your business ahead of friendships. Use your computer system and only order what is selling. An amazing deal for bulk quantities of an item may not be a good deal if the stock takes too long to sell.

Having too much stock to display, more than you would need for as long as it might take to get extra stock is tying up capital and straining the business. I am surprised some newsagents don’t get this.

Use your supplier as the warehouse and not your back room.

Very frustrating.

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Newsagency management

Online photo printing deals challenge photo printing kiosks

More and more people I know who get photos printed are using online services rather than in-store kiosk printing. Talking with a work colleague recently he said that doing it online was more convenient than going to a retail shop. You upload your photos, they’re printed and posted to you.

A search on Google shows plenty of businesses promoting photo printing services at highly competitive prices. It’s not an easy space for a start-up given the intense competition from so many national retailers already.

Photo printing works for national retailers because they can use the customer database for marketing other items. Newsagents are less likely to do this.

While I can see photo printing working for some newsagents, I’d expect this to be the minority given the floorspace and other costs and given that major players are already well-established in this space.

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Newsagency challenges