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

Driving sales of health related magazines

Last week, we introduced a range of health related magazine titles for display in the section under our women’s weeklies titles.

This location receives the highest traffic in our magazine department. sales of the health titles placed here should increase. For each title it’s the second location in-store.

We use this space below weeklies to feature titles outside their usual location.

For most titles we run here it works, delivering incremental sales of the featured titles.  The times it does not work we learn for the future.

The biggest success we had was when we move craft titles here. In fact, the success was so great that we found a space to permanently locate the category opposite the weeklies. We made that move seven months ago. The result has been a 52% increase in sales for the category. Craft titles now account for 10% of all magazine we sell.

We can make more money from magazines.

Click on the image for a larger version.

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magazines

Expanding what we offer the Mollie Makes shopper

With Mollie Makes such a success we have been seeking out other titles at the high end of craft titles and came across embellish, an Australian magazine distributed through IPS. While not a perfect fit for the Mollie Makes reader, it’sclose – hence our placement. The shoppers purchase more magazines than on average the more valuable the basket.

Our interest is more in margin dollars per sale than margin per item.

The decision to find titles to leverage the success of Mollie Makes is another example of how we can make more money from magazines.

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magazines

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: wear a product you are promoting

Choose an item you want to sell and get one or two staff to wear it with a sign … sticky tape, a stapler, a new pens, a new magazine. Since staff don’t usually wear products, the product should be noticed and, hopefully, purchased.

This is a crazy idea. I can’t think of anyone who would try it. I doubt I would. And that’s the reason to try – because it is so crazy. What’s the worst that can happen? – customers will laugh. And the best? They buy the product.

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marketing

Sunday newsagency management tip: Optimism as a attitude can help your newsagency grow

It’s easy for us in the newsagency channel to be drawn to a mindset pessimism. History gets some to this point while unjust and inequitable treatment by some suppliers gets others there. Once we there, in a pessimistic mindset, it’s hard work to get to an optimistic outlook.

While I am no psychologist, I know that running a newsagency through a fog of pessimism is more likely to lead to poor decisions that make the business situation worse and guide you to fulfilling a pessimistic view that the business is dying. Running your newsagency through a mindset of optimism, on the other hand, is more likely to lead to decisions which are positive for the business and those connected with it.

The challenge is how do you switch from one to the other?

As I noted, I am no psychologist.  For me, if I feel pessimistic about a situation or overall, I focus on what I can change in and about my business. Sure I complain about suppliers, often in this blog, but once the complaint is given breath my energy is spent on climbing over or digging under or around it. I make a deliberate choice to leave the feeling of pessimism aside as I know that it is an emotion that wastes time and pulls focus from what can be achieved. I make a choice to see the opportunity – in any negative situation.

No matter what we are faced with, there are aspects we can control and act on and others we cannot. Focus on what you can act on. Celebrate the small steps. Share a positive comment with a team member and take energy from their joy at recognition. Play your favourite music. Wear something because you like it. Have the extra cup of coffee. Count your smiles for the day. Do things you know will make you happier and hope and work at these small steps helping you to focus on an optimistic outlook instead of a pessimistic one.

A difference I have noticed between businesses navigating change positively and growing and those that are not is the attitude / mindset of the leadership of the business. Work at choosing optimism over pessimism and it could be that challenges acting as a barrier today and in your rear view mirror tomorrow.

Amy Neumann has published a slide show documenting 19 ways to be more optimistic. It’s pretty cool.

I touched on this topic in Sunday management tip: what if you hate your newsagency? in May last year.

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Management tip

Tobacco age-checks on the increase?

I heard yesterday that some tobacco retailers in NSW have this week been tested in an undercover operation over the sale of tobacco to underage shoppers.

This is a timely reminder to newsagents selling tobacco products – if your newsagency software has age check features that causes a pop-up question to check age – use it, remind your staff to be vigilant and make sure your age restriction signage is clear. take these steps, especially the software step, and you have a stronger defence if a mistake is made.

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Newsagency management

Thoughtful product placement drives sales

I’ve found that placement of items targeting an occasion works better for some situations than keeping products together by brand or supplier.

Take aged birthday items, like these items for a 21st birthday. They work better in this display than placed by supplier – i.e. all glasses together and all frames together.

This type of placement tells our shoppers that we have the opportunity covered. It also helps them purchase more than one item from the range. Oh, and it makes shopping easier.

Placing by brand, and not occasion, makes it harder for shoppers to shop and this will discourage some – especially guys.

If a product is not working for you, think about how you are treating it – is it displayed and placed for success, are you managing the product with pride? I’ve seen situations where product failure is driven by poor shop-floor placement.

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Gifts

Here’s a way to reduce shopper theft

Check out the way a drug store (pharmacy) in New York lets shoppers know they are being filmed. I like the text they run under the screen.

I’ve been a fan of screens like this in-store for ages but have not used text to provide context. Seeing it as I did some months back – the text makes sense. Providing safety and savings … video recording in progress.  I bet they have this because the text coupled with the screen achieves more than the screen by itself.

I’d forgotten I had the photo and now I’ve found it again I’m placing text like this for under our in-store security screens.

Newsagents who have a security system but no screen in-store – I’d urge you to place a screes so customers can see you are filming them. The more people feel they are likely to be caught the less likely they are to try and steal from you.

Click on the image for a larger version to see the text.

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retail

Good product placement management

Check out the planagram established for accurate placement of Bauer products into a floor display unit in a Woolworths supermarket. It shows the title placement plan, guiding those responsible for stocking the unit to get the right products in the right location. If you click on the image you an see the detail.

I suspect we don’t have processes like this in newsagencies as our space, for off-location display units like this especially, is not purchased by suppliers. In some respects I wish we did have this. It makes getting placement right easier.

Many years ago ACP did allocate space in newsagencies this way, not any more.

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magazines

Magazine price wars in the UK

New TV listing magazine in the UK, TV Pick, is dropping its cover price from 40p to 20p next week.  Through the launch period, newsagents are on a 90% margin. I am not sure I’d jump at a short term gain from a title that could well cause losses in the long term.

I can understand why publisher Northern and Shell, is using a combination of cover price and bonus margin to grab prime retail space. It’s disruptive. The challenge is that it could come back and bite them over time.

The only price pressure we see here in Australia at present is the package deals from Bauer and, for the most part at the moment, these are outside the newsagency channel.

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magazines

Customer service is only as good as your worst customer service representative

At a Woolworths supermarket a couple of days ago, after the required questions of: How’s your day been? and Got much on tonight? the checkout person handed me a new Freddo biscuit product from Cadbury. Here she said and continued scanning my purchases.  I’m sposed (SIC) to give everyone one she then said with a sigh – it sounded like an excuse. I dunno why she continued, rolling her eyes and shrugging her shoulders.

I hope Cadbury is not paying Woolworths to hand out these sample packs. If their goal was to get them in the hands of shoppers to sample the product I guess it worked … but you’d want it done with some professionalism and grace, you;d want it to be respectful of the brand.

If their goal was to make us feel good about the gift or to be given it with any context, it failed.

Through her execution of the promotion this checkout person told me she didn’t like her job, would do the bare minimum required and even undermine attempts by her employer to grow sales.

The experience was out of synch with the current Woolworths TV commercials promoting friendly service. It was also our of synch with the promotions run on their in-store radio.

The whole experience was a reminder of how much we rely on our employees to pitch our message and meet our customer service objective. It left me wondering if there was something this employees supervisor, manager or some other person could do to have her better reflect the customer service experience Woolworths advertises I will get.

Oh, yes, the Freddo biscuit was a treat.

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Customer Service

That’s Life scratchie promo works

Run a cash prize promotion with That’s Life and Take 5 and you get a lift in sales. This is why we are giving the current issue of That’s Life additional spotlight attention – the winning scratchie ticket promotion is an easy way to drive sales. Full cover promotion with our weekly magazines as well as promotion with newspapers is helping drive sales of this issue.

See the placement of That’s Life Puzzler. This placement with the magazine is a key factor in double digit sales growth of this title for us. While we have it in two places, it’s this placement with the title that is generating the growth.

There is money to be made from magazines.

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magazines

The Mollie Makes juggernaut

The latest issue of Mollie Makes took less than a week to reach a 75% sell-through. We’re increasing our standing order again. This title generates traffic as shoppers come to us seeking it out. These same shoppers purchase other items. It’s an excellent example of a magazine delivering margin dollars beyond the 25% of the cover price newsagents often would think of.

There is money to be made from magazines.

 

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magazines

Further information from News Limited on T2020 changes

Further to my blog post this morning about News Limited’s T2020 newspaper distribution consolidation trial, News Limited published further information, in a letter today to newsagents. They have also published a Q&A document.

Tomorrow, a new website, www.news4newsagents.com.au, will be launched. It will be a forum for News to communicate with newsagents on a range of initiatives, and newsagents will be able to send their comments to us through a feedback form on the website.  Newsagents also have access to direct email contact: newsagents@news.com.au.

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Newspaper distribution

Opportunities for newsagents in the News Limited T2020 decision

I spoke with Catrin Thomas – Director of Retail Circulation at News Limited, this morning about their decision to suspend the T2020 newspaper distribution consolidation trial in Queensland.

The trial itself is what has led to the decision to suspend T2020 as planned and to move to a more free market approach. News will shortly announce details of how newsagents can engage in their locally-driven territory consolidation models. They will also launch a new website to support this.

Catrin advised in the call that News remains committed to consolidated territories but that they will not set a size requirement for a consolidated territory.  They are also committed to their public statements regarding financial viability of distribution newsagents.  News also remains committed to the separation of distribution and retail activity.

Newsagents will be invited to submit proposals to News.  While I expect that Associations will suggest that proposals come through them, I’d encourage newsagents to develop plans and submit them directly through processes to be announced by News.

The challenges encountered in the trial remain and some newsagents who do not navigate these challenges will find themselves in difficulty in the more competitive world that will now emerge. The extent of difficulty will depend on geographic situation and other factors. News is not saying this – it’s purely my observation / speculation.

What has changed are the trial itself in Queensland and the roll out by News down the Eastern Seaboard. The goals and principles remain the same. The move to a more market driven approach will provide proactive newsagents an opportunity to move sooner.  It also opens up the prospect of competition from outside a territory. This could play out well for existing newsagents but it could equally intensify the challenges they face.

There is no reason for a distribution newsagents to adopt a wait and see approach. Now is the time to be on the front foot, pursuing change, pursuing what is best for your business. No one can tell you what to do in terms of your business other than the fact that you now need to do something – the timing is yours to embrace.

Footnote: It’s been suggested to me that one or more associations may create a commercial entity through which newsagents bid for and or drive consolidation. I’d see such a move to be outside their role as an association. They have no role to play in operating commercial enterprises.

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Newspaper distribution

Promoting Better Homes and Gardens

Better Homes and Gardens had a terrific audit with sales up 2.5% off an already excellent base.  We are promoting the latest issue with this aisle-end display, placement next to our top selling newspaper as well as a waterfall display in the usual location for the title. Friday through Sunday we will also have the magazine at the main sales counter.

Newsagents who want to grow sales of Better Homes and Gardens will do the same things and promote the title in two, three and four locations in-store. This extra work will drive incremental business for us. This is one of the easiest titles to grab extra sales of.

I urge newsagents to promote this issue and track sales performance over the next four weeks. Grab sales for your business and bank the results.

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magazines

Easter Beanie Kid almost sells out for us

We have sold 22 of these Easter-themed Beanie Kid bunnies in less than a week. An extraordinary result further demonstrating the value of the Beanie Kid range for us. This excellent stock turn has strengthened our Easter return and further boosted our confidence into the next part of the season, a season that continues to grow for us.

While I understand Beanie Kids are not for everyone, we’re enjoying excellent results as these latest numbers show.

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Gifts

News Limited suspends T2020 newspaper distribution consolidation

News Limited has announced the suspension of the T2020 territory consolidation trial under way in south east Queensland.

News Limited now moves to a voluntary consolidation model.  This is particularly appealing to Victorian newsagents who have been at the forefront of territory consolidation for years and have been held back by the News T2020 process.

While there will be speculation about the reasons for the decision by News and claims by associations that they have driven this decision, I am certain the company made the decision because it suits them at this time. This is their decision and not something forced on them by anyone.

I see it as a pragmatic decision based on the challenges experienced in trying to consolidate territories in a state where newspaper home delivery has been in crisis for some years. Just over a year ago I claimed that the company was in crisis in relation to newspaper home delivery. They vehemently denied this at the time and engaged in an offensive pitching that they had a plan. Months later, T2020 was the plan.

While T2020 as planned will not happen, I am certain we will see consolidation, maybe faster than the company actually planned.

The needs of News Limited which were driving their pursuit of T2020 remain. Newsagents need consolidation. Indeed, many need the ability to hand back their runs urgently.

In the meantime, there are newsagents in Queensland in the middle of consolidation under the T2020 rules /guidelines who need attention from News. There is even an argument for compensation given the commercial impact of the now suspended changes that they had had ti live with for many months. These newsagents need independent professional advice.

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Newspaper distribution

How efficient are traffic drivers for your business?

I newsagent colleague shared product efficiency data with me earlier this week which showed that shoppers purchasing transport tickets purchased nothing else 84% of the time.  This is in a business with excellent up-sell opportunities in place at the counter and excellent, engaging, customer service.

5% of transactions included a newspaper. Only .3% of the time did customers purchase anything with a margin close to 50%.

As the margin on transport tickets has been driven down by state governments (of all political sides), newsagents have stayed in the game in the hope that the traffic generated by offering transport tickets translates into add-on business.

The newsagent reporting that 84% of transport ticket sales are for tickets alone is not unique. Indeed, this figure for alone sales is low compared to others I have seen – some are as high as 94%!

On first glance it is easy to argue that transport tickets are not efficient and that we do need to assess their value on the margin made from the tickets and not from the hop of selling something else to the customer. However, we also need to consider whether the transport ticket customer will remember us when they do want something else and come back in and purchase other items.

My view is that transport ticket shoppers are blinkered when they need a ticket or a transport card top-up and that it is unlikely they will think of us when they want a card, a gift or something else. They usually get transport related products from us because it’s convenient when using public transport. That’s the mindset they have when coming to us. They’d be in a different mindset when shopping at a more leisurely pace.

I do not believe suppliers of low margin products and services when they say that we will benefit from the traffic they generate for us. This is an argument we need to challenge as there is no data I can see to support such a case.

Okay, I am no psychologist with insights into the minds of shoppers, not even close. But I do watch shoppers and I listen to them. I suspect that many buying a transport ticket don’t even know what else we sell. I suspect most would not think of us when they do want to buy the other items we’d like to sell them.

So we come to the question: are these slim margin products (anything with a margin of 6% or less) worth it to us? This is a complex question we can only answer for our own businesses considering our own circumstances. It’s a question newsagents need to ask themselves. They need to make a thorough assessment based on their own business data and considering future plans for their business.

For me, my newsagency businesses are less interested in these slim margin traffic generators than we are in lower volume, high margin, more sustained products and services that we have more personal control over – products and services so valued by customers that they will seek us out.

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Ethics

Terrific AFL greeting card opportunity

I love the licenced AFL card range coming from Hallmark. This will go gangbusters. Couples with AFL Beanie Kids and other AFL product we’re set for an excellent AFL season launch in-store – and to sell cards to people who may otherwise not have been card customers. This range makes perfect use of the Hallmark interactive initiative and, for me, it’s another example of Hallmark helping to build my business.

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Greeting Cards

Promoting GQ magazine

We have been promoting the latest issue of GQ magazine with this aisle end display in the men’s section of our magazine department.

This is a terrific issue for promoting because of the Prince Harry cover. This should help sell additional copies to those would not usually purchase the title.

The sports bag with the magazine is an excellent gift.

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magazines

Ease of placement could help drive ‘new’ Fairfax title sales

Good retailers know that placement of products is everything.  Make sure that what you want people to purchase is easily seen and understood – especially when comparative products sit next to each other.

The new tabloid formatted broadsheets from Fairfax allow us retailers to place them such that then can be as easily seen, scanned and understood as their News Limited competitors. Shoppers don’t need to turn their head to read the headlines.

I’d expect this equal-footing placement to count for sales growth for the Fairfax titles – even though I suspect Fairfax and News would not consider the products to appeal to the same shopper. This where the cover comes into play. Previously, shoppers could not easily compare the titles. Now, shoppers can compare and this is where sales growth opportunities lie.

For the first time, thanks to the format change, the News Limited titles have a more equal competitor. This is a good thing.

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Newspapers

Tweet reminds others of our relevance

Click on the image to see an example of how a social media mention can support newsagency businesses. While not earth shattering of itself, here we have a Corey Taylor (lead singer for Slipknot) fan tweeting the fan club about a tweet and seeing the magazine in a newsagency.

If the tweet mentioned a national retail brand they would respond. Since newsagency businesses are independently owned, no one responds to these random tweets – thanking the person for mentioning us. I have on occasion and the response is usually appreciation for noticing.

I love it when newsagencies are mentioned like this in tweets – it maintains a digital presence for the channel.

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Social Media

Nice gift with AWW

Woolworths stores have an excellent gift with which to promote the latest issue of The Australian Women’s Weekly – $12 worth of L’Occitaine Shea Butter. This is a perfect gift for the target AWW shopper.

While I understand publishers cycle promotions through the channels, it is frustrating to see a big point of difference as with the current issue of AWW.

Newsagents in major shopping centres with Woolworths nearby lose out. Indeed, the gift was drawn to my attention on the weekend by a regular shopper.

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magazines