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

Nevada approved online gambling

Nevada has become the first state in the US to approve online gambling and while this is not expected to open online gambling in the US just yet, plenty of people are watching the moves.

Chatter among watchers of the online gaming and offline gaming spaces is that there are governments keen in the US to leverage online gaming as a revenue opportunity. Border challenges are stopping this at the moment.

Once the online gaming business is up and running in the US expect it here – lottery tickets and instant scratch games on your mobile devices. This is the opportunity and challenge with online, borders matter less.

0 likes
Lotteries

Promoring InStyle and Oraton gift

We are promoting the latest issue of InStlye magazine and the free Oraton gift with this in-location placement.

We looked at a couple of approaches for promoting this and decided that the two brands – InStyle and Oraton – were the key to promotion. So, instead of using collateral this time, we have gone with the product itself.

As the only magazine promoted above the pockets in the aisle it stands out.

1 likes
magazines

A quick survey: could you sell more newspapers if…

I’ve put together a quick survey for retail newsagents about newspapers – how we treat them and what we’d like to help us sell more product. Please click on the link to take the survey – it will only take a minute.

Newspaper publishers are predictable in their promotional activity both with the product and in coupling the product with junk food and other items as the freebie. I’d like to see newspaper publishers more creatively engage with retail newsagents to foster engagement with the product for its inherent value.

Please take the survey and share your thoughts. I will share the results here.

3 likes
Newsagency management

What is it with newspaper publishers?

The people at The Newcastle Herald wrote to newsagents at the start of this week announcing a price change from next Monday. They didn’t tell the software companies though. The people who help newsagents with what is significant change were kept in the dark – left to find out by accident.

It’s frustrating that publishers often only think of themselves. Involving others could result in better handling of their product. It’s what partnership is about.

5 likes
newsagent software

Starting Easter 2013

This is the start of our Easter 2013 display before we add any eggs or related product.  The display connects with our commitment to and success with plush – a commercially important department (yes, department) for us.

We have some other elements to add – what’s in the photo is a start.

The display was created by two guys in our newsagency business. I mention that to note that anyone can create a display.  Yesterday afternoon, as this was completed, shoppers were walking across the mall to see it – commenting how much they liked it.

The fake grass and picket fence make the display, providing context for the animals corralled.

Just out of the shot on the left is our range of Easter cards.

6 likes
Gifts

Who can predict partworks sales?

While the animal farm partwork has been slower than expected, sales of the first issue of the helicopter partwork has been good. However, I suspect sales will face quickly because of the price point and highly specialists nature.

Cake Decorating is the best in recent history. I do wish these things were more predictable so we could manage space and time more effectively.

1 likes
partworks

Really News Limited? A Sunday edition of The Weekend Australian?

News Limited is offering a one-off Sunday edition of The Weekend Australian for March 3.

No one thought to ask if it was something newsagents wanted, had the capacity to execute or could technically handle.

No one thought to check if newsagency software, operating to the standards established by News Limited, could handle such a one-off offer.

No one has suggested anyone is paid extra for this News Limited promotion.

So, newsagents, software companies and maybe others gift their time to help News Limited with a promotion of dubious value.

This promotion does not make sense to me at all.

While newspaper publishers need to engage in marketing their products, they ought to listen to the ideas of retailers for driving over the counter sales. Retail newsagents could sell more newspapers if only publishers would listen to them and offer commercially valuable reward for effort.

8 likes
Newspapers

Is Big W dishonest in claiming they offer Australia’s lowest prices?

Big W has a catalogue out now in which they are promoting ink under the headline of Australia’s lowest prices. The problem for the company is that all their ink prices are not the lowest prices. Some maybe, but not all, not even half. Within a few minutes of checking competitor prices Big W would see that their prices are not the lowest.

While those of us beating Big W on ink and other prices can complain to the ACCC, history has shown that the corporate watchdog is less that strident in pursuing what I would call false and misleading advertising.

Small businesses, like newsagents, suffer from the marketing spend by national price-focused retailers like Big W. The Big W pitch appears to be built on the premise say something loud and long enough and people will believe it, regardless of whether the statement has any truth to it.

Politicians can show the strength of their commitment to small businesses by supporting us on this type of big business campaign that they beat others on price. It’s cheap, lazy and an affront to the small businesses that can’t afford to show that often times they (we) are actually cheaper.

Every newsagent selling ink should get their hands on the latest Big W catalogue and compare prices. If you are cheaper, tell your customers – through a big poster in-store or in the window and over the counter.

This is just like the recent Officeworks claim. They don’t have the lowest prices everyday despite what they claim.

Newsagents who can prove that Big W’s current ink prices are not the lowest in Australia should complain to the ACCC. Click here for addresses and contact points.

10 likes
Ethics

This is a bank?!

I was drawn to this window by the Lego helicopter on the shop floor – I like a good Lego construction. I did not immediately notice it’s a bank.

Yes, it’s a Westpac Bank branch. Amazing. Innovative.

There is a kids play area, a cafe down the back, bright colours and a totally inviting and calming look and feel to the place.

I stood at the window in awe of the redefining of the look and feel of a bank. Whoever came up with this ought to be congratulated. It is stunning  … redefining what I would expect from a bank and leaving me with a story about Westpac.

What I saw Wednesday night has left me wondering what a newsagency could look like if you want to break free from the tradition and restrictions of the past and how consumers perceive us. This is what Westpac has done, they have created a bank that completely plays against what we expect – and thereby made their business more accessible.

7 likes
Newsagency management

The New Zealand Herald tabloid size looks good

I got to see The New Zealand Herald tabloid size yesterday for the first time – even though it switched from broadsheet late last year.

The newspaper is better for the move in my view. Not only have they done a good job maintaining the quality feel of the newspaper (this is a title no nasty publisher campaigns or junk stories here) – they have created a fresh, clean, design with a terrific masthead well suited to the size.

I don’t know why broadsheet titles like The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald have not moved sooner. From a retail perspective tabloid newspapers are easier top promote and sell.

Click on the image to see a larger version.

1 likes
Newspapers

Chips with magazines

Check out the placement of a range of potato chips next to magazines, including women’s fashionntitles, at a bookshop / magazine shop / coffee shop in Auckland.

This is one use of space … but you’d need to sell plenty of chips to pay for the space.

0 likes
magazines

Promoting Women’s Health

We are promoting the latest issue of Women’s Health magazine with this aisle-end display facing onto the dance floor.

We also have the magazine with health titles (next to women’s fashion) and will run it for a week with weekly magazines. We tried placement next to newspapers but have found co-location with weeklies works better for us.

0 likes
magazines

Companies don’t deliver customer service, people do

I had an awful experience with Jetstar Tuesday and experienced exceptional customer service as a result.

My usual expectations of Jetstar are that I arrive alive and that the service does not totally suck. It’s a cheap airline and you get what you pay for.

Briefly, I had to get from the Sunshine Coast to Auckland Tuesday afternoon and the only option was Jetstar to Sydney for a connecting flight to Auckland. At the Sunshine Coast airport Jetstar announced a 10 minute delay due to operational requirements and then another. Operational requirements? It’s airline speak for we’re late and not going to tell you why.

After the second delay announcement I explained that I had an internatipnal connection. The person at the gate told me the truth of what had caused the delay and gave a believable estimate of the new departure time. A passenger departing the incoming flight has dislodged and broken an exit sign cover. A replacement was being driven from Brisbane.  I was going to miss my connection and was not happy but kept that emotion internal as this person was not responsible and was honest with me.

I was sent back to the check in desk where the duty manager took on sorting something out for me. It’s this person who showed me what great customer service is all about. She was on the phone navigating Jetstar and Qantas to find the best way to get me to Auckland.  The only option was to get the delayed flight to Sydney and then SYD-AKL Wednesday morning.

The customer service was good because I saw her efforts for me. This Jetstar representative was transparent about the situation, clear in her communication and doing everything in her power to help me. Despite the delay and missing the connecting flight, the customer service experience was far better than I had ever expected from Jetstar.

I was thinking about this when sitting on the delayed flight to Sydney a few hours later and realised that the excellent customer service was not delivered by Jetstar but by the person representing them. Sure companies can have staffing levels and processes to deliver the customer service it is commercially prepared to deliver, the actual experience comes down to the individual, the customer-facing person working on the issue you bring to them. The right person can make even a mediocre company look good. The wrong person can make an exceptional company look bad.

Indeed, my inner glow about Jetstar was adjusted during the flight to Sydney when I saw a member of the cabin crew act rudely to a passenger, treating them differently to others and publicly rebuking them in an offensive way and then openly complaining about it to a colleague on-board. Thud! I was back in this is Jetstar mode – all because of unnecessarily poor customer service delivered by an individual most likely acting outside the requirements of the company.

What our customers think about our businesses depends on the people we employ, train, manage and motivate in customer-facing roles. Our role as business owners is to create an environment that encourages our people to serve customers above and beyond what we want delivered in our name.

12 likes
Customer loyalty

Selling magazines that should have been returned or trashed

Here is photo showing how another newsagent is trying to make money from magazines bagged with titles that have been returned.

This ‘display’ looks dreadful and does the newsagency no favours. The sign does nothing to promote the offer. Product is jammed in.  A couple of minutes effort could make the display more appealing and shopper friendly if you really wanted to sell this type of trash.

While bundled magazines frustrate me because of the expensive cost to newsagents of freighting returns, it is unethical to remove old issues and put those on the shop floor for $2 as is being done here. We should behave better than this.

3 likes
magazines

Newsagents need to explore all gift opportunities

As recent newsagency benchmark studies have shows, many in our channel have embraced gifts and are enjoying good results. The challenge with gifts is that it’s a broad a category and one that needs considerable management attention.

The other issue / challenge with gifts is what products you choose to sell. The gift fairs provide an excellent opportunity. But newsagents need to look beyond the core offering at the gift fairs. Take the fair starting this weekend in Sydney for example. Make sure you get to the Home and Giving Fair in Homebush.

At Home and Giving, run by the AGHA (the channel association), you will get to see a broader range of gifts that, at the moment, many newsagents would not carry.

I know a bit about Home and Giving as my newsagency software company has exhibited there for years and is a partner of the AGHA. The trade show floor is always full of excellent ideas.

So, if you are going to the Sydney Gift Fair this weekend, get to Homebush as well.

3 likes
Gifts

US stationery giants to merge

US stationery chains OfficeMax and Office Depot have confirmed they are to merge their businesses. This would reduce competition yet create a stronger competitor for the Staples business.

Recent sales data out of the US indicates stationery retailers doing it tough.  It’s a challenging marketplace. This from the Reuters report:

Office supply retailers, often seen as a barometer of economic health, have suffered as demand for their products fell after the recent U.S. recession. They also face strong competition from Amazon.com Inc and Wal-Mart Stores Inc in selling everything from pens and notebooks to furniture to government, businesses and individuals.

The stationery challengers newsagents face in stationery besides supermarkets, Big W, Australia Post and Officeworks is Staples. If / when Staples really lets loose in Australia we will face a fight unlike any seen so far.

0 likes
Stationery

Giving up the newspaper home delivery customer connection

As News Limited and Fairfax migrate more newspaper customers from newsagent acquired newspaper home delivery to publisher controlled subscription arrangements and the management of distribution of newspapers moves from inside the newsagency shop to separately run depots, newsagents need to let go of their customers.

Losing ownership of the direct customer relationship is proving difficult to navigate for some newsagents. It won’t work some say, how can they help customers from so far away others say, they don’t know our area others day.

None of this matters of course as the decision is made and the course of action set. Newsagents need to focus on letting go in a way that respects their long-term customers yet serves the business decision made by newspaper publishers.

The new arrangements don’t give newsagents the opportunity to provide the level of customer service they have provided in the past. This is the way of the world being pursued by newspaper publishers. So, let go in a way that helps customers understand and still think good of the newsagency.

Newsagents facing this, losing ownership of newspaper home delivery customers at their shop, need to develop a strategy for navigating this. Such a strategy needs to have at its heart good customer communications – explaining what is happening and why and how the business will continue to serve them in other ways. At the same time, the newsagency should have a process or mechanism of keeping any predominantly newspaper delivery customers engaged with the business – for the future of the business.

I see too much energy being spent complaining about what is happening and not being spent on how to mitigate the situation for the newsagency and its customers.

Newsagents transitioning to retail only need to focus on that and let go of distribution customers. Newsagents focusing on distribution need to be clear about what they can manage and control and focus on that. Publishers who want to own the customer need to take responsibility for that and own it through professional processes that do not harm the supply and service chain.

12 likes
Newsagency management

E-Cigarette push heats up

The latest issue of Convenience and Impulse Retailing magazine has a cover story and coverage inside on Logic, a new e-cigarette product for the Australian marketplace.

As I have mentioned several times over the last year, the e-cigarette space is a hive of activity overseas. I have seen the products in mainstream retail outlets in the UK, the US and some Asian countries.

While am in no advocating their sale, I mention the product here since newsagents with strong tobacco sales will be keen to find a viable replacement for the tobacco shopper.

I am curious, however, about the names they are choosing for these products. Logic … what does that imply?

0 likes
Tobacco sales

Using Sally Field to sell Mindfood

We have been using the Sally Field cover shot on the latest issue of Mindfood to give the magazine more time in the spotlight. Field’s lauded performance in Lincoln and her resulting Oscar contention has given us reason to chase where the magazine is located.

Mindfood is one of those titles that can be hard to place. We have found that ideal placement is so much about the cover subject. That’s what we are doing here.

2 likes
magazines

Green shoots in magazine audit results

Sales of Your Garden magazine 8.71% in the latest audit making this title worthy of the attention of newsagents. The adult result show shoppers like the title – placement is the key to getting your piece of this. With Burke’s Backyard now closed we have more space in the garden segment to play with.

Newsagents need to think and act on these opportunities as they represent increased sales for us.

0 likes
magazines

How one newsagency was managing for failure

I am fortunate to get to see plenty of newsagency businesses. I visited one recently that was losing several thousand dollars a week. Without identifying the business, here are my comments in the interest of challenging more than the owners of the business I visited:

The business is far from best practice. Indeed, shop floor decisions being make appear to be more about pursuing failure than success. Simple opportunities have been ignored and your key traffic generators disrespected.

Like many newsagencies, you have excellent core traffic drivers and like many newsagencies you are not leveraging these for success with other products. I can’t understand why you would do this.

Retail is all about the in-store experience. The experience in your shop is muddled at best. There are no easily identified zones, no shopping experiences, no sense of you pursuing success.

Here is a summary of the key items we discussed yesterday, things I would immediately change to make better use of your 250 sq metres:

1. Front of store. Standing out in the mall, looking across your entrance, I see a confused message, too many messages in fact. You have posters up for items being sold elsewhere in the business. Some posters are unnecessary. For example, I’d remove the newspaper poster unit altogether. Try this and I am certain you will not see a drop in sales. The lottery poster, too, feels unnecessary – given that your counter is close to the front and carries your key, current, lottery messages. Big signs and posters at the front can be a barrier. If you give up front of store space to a poster it needs to have a clear message.
2. Discount space. You have some Christmas stock, back to school stock and other items being discounted. But they are spread across the store. I’d create a discount zone, on the left (when facing the shop) side of the shop. Put everything discounted there. Make a compelling visual message around this. Be bold. Visually separate it from the rest of your shop.
3. Cards. Open up the entrances to the aisles. Let those passing by in the mall see your depth of range. Cluttering the entrance to your premium card aisle with a spinner full of cheap cards is the wrong message. This big spinner and your collection of other spinners hide the card department.
1. Stop your card merchandiser putting out cards. Do this yourselves – checking each order as you go … reject stock you do not need.
2. Use your merchandiser to add value to the card offering.
3. Put in place a process where you formally authorise each order.
4. Claim an immediate credit for any stock not ordered.
4. Card supplier. I was shocked to see you so overloaded by one of your card suppliers. This is your fault, you have let them get away with it. While you can complain that the supplier has done this to you, I suggest you are better off taking responsibility as a change in your processes can stop it happening again.
5. Valentine’s Day. You have Valentines product in three different locations, making it hard for a shopper to understand your position for this season. seasons are all about a strong and purposeful presence. I don’t see this in your store. Place it all together with a simple display that makes buying a card and gift easy. Your best Valentine’s Day shopper is a guy. Guys feel comfortable shopping in newsagencies. They need to be guided (by you) though. Place Valentine’s Day at the front, in the centre, facing into the mall.
6. Plush. You have a small but strong range. This would do better if you brought it all together into one space and somewhere your target customers for plush could see it. Personally, I’d replace Valentine’s Day Friday morning this week (Feb. 15) with a kick-ass plush display. Show people that you really are in the plush space.
7. Darrell Lea. You have this product in three locations, diluting the value of any brand pitch. Outside of key seasons, the value of darrell lea is not obvious in your business data.
8. Newspapers. While these are well positioned, it does not make sense to have them next to Girlfriend and Dolly magazine. Do you expect your newspaper customers to purchase these titles. Better Homes and Gardens would be better next to the newspapers. This is a good example of the need to take a moment to think about adjacencies. By putting something that will appeal to your average newspaper customer next to newspapers you are likely to get more value from newspaper traffic.
9. Magazines. Your layout was last re-done more than a year ago. You need to do another relay. Follow your instincts. Create guy areas and girl areas – keep them separate.
10. Gifts. You need to bring these together and to tell a story with what you stock. You have excellent traffic yet gifts could do better. By creating an anchored department focused in your average shopper will lift gift sales. I’d get the products off the back wall and to the front. People will not come to you thinking about gifts. Use the back wall for what people will come to you for.
11. Stationery.
1. Switch to Canson for your A2 card. It’s better quality. Stop selling at $1.30 and go immediately to $2.00.
2. Get your A2 card into a display unit that promotes the product rather than hides it. What you have today is an homage to a shop-fitter who knew little about retail.
3. Stop your stationery rep ordering for you. order yourselves.
4. Put in place a structured mark-up policy. Given that much of your stationery is sold because of convenience, you can charge more that you currently charge.
5. Review the stationery you carry, look at when you last sold each item in stock. If it’s been on the shelves for six months or more you have to wonder why you carry this.
6. Stop reps ordering for you. Use your computer system. that’s what it’s there for. Printing a reorder report for a rep, based on good data, takes seconds. You will find yourself with less stock that does not sell.
12. Roster. If this was my business, I’d be spending at least 25% less on the roster than you currently spend – based on your sales. The business owner needs to control the roster. In your case, it’s accounting for considerable more of your GP than I’d expect in an average newsagency. Cutting the roster is urgent.
13. Overall. You have lots of signs, posters and messages hanging from the ceiling and on walls. Each sign must serve a purpose, a call to action to shoppers. Too many signs can confuse. I think that is what is happening with you. I’d cut the number of signs in half. Your best sign placement is what you have in your card aisle – a single message repeated.
14. Discount space. To the left of the shop, in the space where we talked about you placing everything on discount, make sure that your signs are clear and impactful. If you have a JB HiFi in your centre, go copy what they do. They are the masters of the discount signage.

What you have is the basis for a good newsagency, one that is more successful than what you are experiencing today. The first step toward achieving greater success is to take control of the business and all who work in it. It’s your business, your money. You are responsible for everything in there.

Accepting personal accountability for a situation is a challenge for anyone. My experience is that it is the first step in the road back, the road to recovery. Your situation today is 100% your responsibility just as your success from here will be your responsibility.

While it can be easy to feel daunted since you are relatively new at this newsagency game, trust your instincts. I don’t care if you have employees who have been in the business more than you. It’s your business and your money. You have to allow yourselves to make mistakes. The current approach of giving your employees more say than they should have is not working.

I apologise for the directness of my comments. My only intention is to help you create a more successful and valuable business.

I’d be happy to answer any questions you may have.

Please note that I’ll likely publish a sanitised version of this on the newsagency blog (without any identifying information) to help other newsagents look at their business differently.

Each of the areas noted above is within the control of the business owners. Too often, newsagents complain about parts of their business they do not control and ignore the parts they can control. More core message is to manage what you can manage, every day.

Manage to drive shopper efficiency.

Manage to attract new traffic.

Manage to keep costs low.

Manage to bring shoppers back.

Manage to leverage your core traffic traffic generators.

The headline of this post – How one newsagency was managing for failure – is, in itself a wake up call for this business and many others. Suppliers will not resolve or fix the challenges of the channel. It’s up to us – now more than ever.

Footnote: this post is not about the business I have written about. No, it’s intended to help newsagents look at their businesses through these, critical, eyes.

24 likes
Newsagency management

Beanie Kids attract shoppers

With a window between major seasons requiring chunky shop floor space we have taken the opportunity to promote Beanie Kids at the front of the newsagency, facing into the mall. The result is a boost in sales. Indeed, the result is a reminder of the value of moving stock around – reminding shoppers what you have in-store.

Besides the traffic Beanie Kids attracts, I love the value of the brand. I think brands are important to newsagents … our channel was built on some major brands and shoppers still respect us for some of these brands today. Where possible, we choose brand name products over generic.

1 likes
newsagency marketing

Winners are grinners

We always get a photo of customers picking up prizes. This is great for Facebook posting, promotion in-store and for our scrapbook of winners. Customers are happy to pose too.

Delivering local prizes as promotions for major seasons is more important in my view than a national prize won by a customer in some stare far away from mine.

0 likes
newsagency marketing