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Shop Til You Drop closing

Bauer announced Monday that Shop Til You Drop is to close. I am grateful for the opportunity to be interviewed by Crikey for this story. It covers the topic well:

Closure of Shop Til You Drop signals ongoing crisis for Aussie mags

EMILY WATKINS
Crikey media reporter

The long death march of print is continuing with the closure of fashion mag Shop Til You Dropannounced by Bauer Media yesterday. Just over a year ago, Bauer was still insisting the magazine would not fold, despite closing its website in December 2015. It’s just the latest in a slew of closures both for Bauer and publishers generally across the industry.

Director of newsagency marketing group NewsXpress, Mark Fletcher, told Crikey the news of the closure was not surprising to newsagents around the county.

“Magazine closures are something that have become commonplace,” he said. “We are not getting destination traffic for a title anymore in the newsagencies.”

Fletcher went on to say that the high-volume weekly and monthly titles were the most vulnerable.

“The special interest titles are strong and are doing well because they have their own communities,” he said. “But the sorts of things I’m able to read in (the weekly and monthly) magazines, I can get much better content and more diversity of content online … Why am I going to buy a magazine for this?”

Media analyst Steve Allen said Bauer’s Australian CEO, Nick Chan, is likely to make more cuts to make to the business’s magazine titles.

“He’s been given a very clear direction from the German owners — every masthead’s being looked at and those that aren’t profitable will be closed,” Allen said. “I think there will be more, but we think they’re getting to the end of this clean up.”

Allen believes the titles now most at risk would be motoring magazines, like Wheels.

“A lot of people who are buying motor vehicles now will get roadtest information online, they don’t need to buy these magazines anymore,” he said. “They used to be very important.”

Allen told Crikey that once the motoring manufacturers realised that consumers were no longer relying on reviews in the magazines, they vastly reduced their advertising.

“They always had a difficult relationship with these titles because they couldn’t control them. When they started to drop in circulation, about seven to 10 years ago, a lot of the manufacturers decided they didn’t need to advertise in them anymore,” he said.

It’s been a bad year or so for print editions of Aussie mags. Bauer closed Cleo magazine in February last year, and Dolly’s print edition was axed in December. Back in October, Bauer Media also sold off five adventure titles and their websites.

And the closures aren’t limited to Bauer — Pacific Magazines’ FAMOUS closed in April last year, and Australian Property Investor closed in December.

Newsagents are dealing with the lack of traffic by diversifying their businesses. Fletcher said that, for most, this has meant reducing the space in their shops dedicated to magazines by up to 40 per cent over the past 18 months or so. He said one newsagent he’d spoken with today had, over the last 12 months, culled the 1,400 magazine titles he once stocked down to 600.

Now before magazine publishers call and ask me to not talk down the category, the numbers are the numbers. We retailers need to run our business pursuing the best return on space and labour possible. The 25% GP sets us up to watch what happens with magazines more carefully than growing product categories from which we can get 50% GP and more.

I think magazines have an excellent role in our businesses. Niche magazines, more mainstream special interest titles and magazines with content people want in print form, content they can trust.

Shop Til You Drop has been dropped not because it is a bad titles, but, rather, because the economic model on which it was based has fundamentally changed thanks to technology and direct designer / manufacturer relationships with consumers.

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Join the discussion

  1. Chris

    Yet again Bauer. I have told their Rep that their titles are not relevant anymore. Why hasn’t a company with that potential changed their model to fit consumers needs? We have had to.

    1 likes

  2. Paul S

    So true Mark that last couple of paragraphs.
    I was having a conversation with the head librarian of the Library near to us and even she was saying that the borrowing for various magazine titles was falling off dramatically particularly in regard to the weekly titles with the exception of “Hello” and also the “mother/baby/pregnancy” titles which were almost never borrowed even though they have a very well attended mothers group and kids reading sessions. During the same discussion I commented that I’ve gone from circa 1200 pockets to less than 500 over 7 years and I’m not even remotely sorry that I’ve done this.

    0 likes

  3. Mark R

    Bauer have for many years supported supermarkets over newsagents this flawed management style will be there downfall

    2 likes

  4. Mark Fletcher

    Mark many publishers support supermarkets. The challenge for pub fishers is efficiency of channel management. Dealing with one entry point t to manage hundreds of store is more efficient than dealing with 500 CEOs of 500 small businesses.

    0 likes

  5. Mark R

    Many publishers may support supermarkets but only Bauer have chosen not to have a direct relationship with many Newsagents because they to not meet their “sales” targets. Thus forcing those Newsagents in to a Sub Agency agreement.

    I agree that obviously their inefficiencies are greater by dealing with fewer and larger accounts.

    However my point is that Bauer would have benefited when the magazine market was strong ,but now with falling sales they have not adapted , rather than change the style and content of their titles they choose to cut them, rather than support the specialist magazine outlets they have chosen to stick with a system which is over 20 years old

    4 likes

  6. Mark Fletcher

    Mark this is free enterprise just as the decision you make on your magazine space allocation is.

    1 likes

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