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marketing

Retail loyalty insight: How a $2.00 discount voucher resulted in purchases of over $1,500 from a first time shopper in the newsagency

I want to share with you a true story of what happened recently in my own newsagency. It is a story of how a small everyday purchase led to something bigger and how this happened as a result of fundamental changes in how the business is run.

This story could happen in any newsagency – city, country, large, small, shopping mall, high street. I make that point so you do not dismiss the story and think it could not happen in your business. The elements of the story work together in any size business. In writing about it here I’m not getting you to do anything other than to consider that you could achieve the same in your business.

At its core, this is a story about shopper loyalty, especially shopper loyalty in a retail situation where between 25% and 30% of shoppers visiting the business are not local and therefore not likely to engage with the old-school points-based loyalty program.

A customer passing the shop noticed our greeting card range and stepped into make a purchase because of a specific need. They purchased two cards. On their receipt was a voucher for almost $2.00. As they are not usually in the shopping centre they looked around for something in which to spend the $2.00.

This is the key: the customer came in to make a quick destination purchase. The type of purchase where we did not matter. They were on the way to the car park and happened to pass buy our shop. Point 1: location is in our favour. The stepped in because they saw our greeting cards. Point 2: the floor placement of cards was key in getting them in the shop.

Having made the purchase, the customer then noticed, for the first time, what else we sold – because of the $2.00 discount voucher on their receipt. Point 3: we got them to look around and see what else we sold.

The customer did a 180 degree turn and saw a locked glass cabinet of beautiful collectible bears. This was in the right place at the right time as they had been looking for a gift for a child. Money was not an issue. They wanted something to last a lifetime. They purchased a $500.00 bear.

This purchase would not have been made had they not been given the $2.00 voucher on their receipt. The voucher is what got them to notice what else we sold.

Fast forward several weeks and this customer who said they don’t usually come to the shopping centre was back for another $500.00 purchase. Now, several more weeks later, the customer has another $500.00 order placed.

I can directly trace more than $1,500.00 in sales back to the $2.00 voucher.

The software produced the voucher based on rules I established. The initial staff member serving the customer made a brief professional pitch highlighting the voucher. These are both important factors as they are at the core of a structured consistent approach to what has become the most lucrative loyalty program I have seen in my 30+ years involved in retail as a retailer myself and working with retailers in many different channels.

While most times vouchers are handed out they are not redeemed, they are redeemed enough to make them worthwhile. They are redeemed for good margin product as they get people looking at the shop for the first time and discovering items to purchase they were not in our four walls to consider.

The discount vouchers are disruptive. People respond in unpredictable ways.

Best of all, the discount vouchers are profitable.

For this story to work in a newsagency you need to have the right products, placed strategically in-store. Your staff need to make the right pitch. Plus, you need to be attracting people who don’t know and probably don’t care what shop they are in.

If you have read this post and thought it does not relate to you, that you could not do this in your business I say you are wrong. I am certain the approach I have shared with you could work in any newsagency in any situation. I urge you to not hold your business back.

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Management tip

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: film your business

While I have suggested here previously that newsagents create a video of their business, I’ve not explained the multiple benefits of this. The main benefit is it helps you see your business as others see it. I have noticed myself that I see things in my newsagency when watching back a video I have shot, things I missed in-store.

From a marketing perspective, the video can give you something to put on social media, to pitch your business. But don’t do this unless the shop looks stunning and the video is exciting. Check out this video of Splurge, a gift shop in Sun Prairie Wisconsin. It pitches the business and the products available well.

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marketing

How can you sell cards to new customers if you leave them in the card department?

I have seen four or five card shops in New York this week with displays of greeting cards and wrap in their shopfront windows. Yes, they are pitching cards to people on the street. I have written about this several times before – that we ought to promote cards outside the card department, we should use them to drive traffic for our businesses. A display like you can see in this photo pitches the shop as a card specialist whereas a spinner of cards does not.

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Greeting Cards

Leveraging the Oprah cover on AWW

Screen Shot 2015-09-28 at 3.16.41 amI am leveraging Oprah on The Australian Women’s Weekly through social media and other out of store promotions. This type of promotion is simple, free or low cost and effective at linking the newsagency business with a respected star and the magazine. I urge all newsagents to promote magazines in this way. It’s smart business.

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marketing

Sunday newsagency challenge: display cards off-location

IMG_9721Place a selection of cards from a caption away from the card department, in context with the display with which you place them. This photo shows placement of graduation cards with graduation gifts. We are selling six to eight cards a week from this off-location placement. I suspect most purchases have not been destination purchases. In other words – people have purchased a card from here on impulse because we have the cards placed here.

Try this tip and expect to sell more cards.

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Management tip

Sunday marketing tip: make your own showbags

It is Royal Show time in Melbourne and one way to drive interest in your business in-store and online is to create showboats for sale or giveaway to customers. This could be your opportunity to quit stock and push perceived value.

Even if it is not show time in your area, it is school holidays, or close to, so why not have a show bag for kids, for fun and to show your business as pitching something different to other retailers for this time of the year.

Gather a mix of items together, set a date for the promotion, maybe have some rules around age and some activity you want them to undertake. Invite suppliers to provide samples. HAVE FUN!

This is a simple low-cost marketing tip that could work in any newsagency any time.

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marketing

Victoria Beckham shops in newsagencies

Screen Shot 2015-09-24 at 6.52.08 amTwitter went a bit nuts two days ago with a photo of Victoria Beckham (Posh Spice from the Spice Girls) shopping in a newsagency with her kids. While not ‘news’ to some, it was news enough to be reported by Metro to its 209,000 Twitter followers. There are more than 300 stories online about this shopping visit.

In the UK this is a good story for newsagents, illustrating relevance.

What is more interesting to me is that the story is a story. It’s kind of – okay so newsagents may have some relevance if Victoria Beckham shops there.

I guess the channel ought to take the victories it can.

The reality is our relevance is ours to nurture. We do this through what we range in our shops and how we pitch our products outside our shops.

While a celebrity visit would be good for business, it would only be good for a short time. Our long term success relies on our standing our ourselves through what we do, how we do it and how we position it externally.

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marketing

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: get your suppliers promoting your business

Good suppliers to retail businesses list their retail partners on their corporate websites. Do your suppliers do this? Ask them, if they do not, ask why not? if they do, ask them to list your business.

Whereas years ago there were four or five highways of shopper traffic to a newsagency, today our best traffic is fed by hundreds of streets and lanes.

A good supplier will support you, list your business and help people who like their products find you. This type of marketing support from a supplier is marketing 101, essential in my view.

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marketing

Smart use of social media by Tatts

IMG_9761Tatts paid for this promoted tweet on Twitter Tuesday afternoon, pitching tickets in that night’s OzLotto draw. It is their use of the #libspill hashtag that caught my attention as this is the hashtag that had been running hot through the Liberal Party leadership spill and beyond. Hashtags are a factor in determining when proposed Tweets are served by Twitter. What Tatts has done here is remind us of the value of timely targeted Tweets.

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Lotteries

Leveraging Star Wars to drive new traffic for the newsagency

photo 1We are promoting the official Star Wars cards and gifts range from Hallmark on the lease line, facing into the mall – leveraging maximum traffic generating potential for the newsagency.

We are also promoting on social media widely around the business – and not only to those who like our social media pages.

Star Wars is tipped by licence experts here in Australia and overseas to generate more sales from now to Christmas than all other licenced products combined.

Early engagement with other Star Wars products that we launched two weeks ago suggests that interest will be massive. We have customers who have prepaid us for official Star wars licenced products that will not arrive for at least another month.

Good licences promoted well in-store and outside the business can be valuable for us not only for the direct sales they generate but also for the other purchases made by those attracted by the licenced product promotion.

I urge all newsagents to embrace licenced product opportunities from a variety of suppliers. Good licences allow you to make a pitch for relevance related to the licence and this is often better than the relevance attached to your shingle.

Be careful about your licence choices as some are duds. Not all licences go as nuts as Star Wars will or Frozen did.

The challenge with licence engagement is the need to engage early. Usually, this is months away from release. In the case of Star Wars, we completed most of our buying by March – we actually started last last year. yes, considerable forward planning is involved.

While being part of an engaged group helps, it is not mandatory. Do your research, watch what is happening in the marketplace, listen to suppliers, be connected with overseas news sources. Know about major opportunities well in advance of them hitting mainstream news here.

Yes, all this is hard work. However, this is where new traffic lives, where our future lives. It is good and rewarding work.

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Management tip

Leveraging the 7 network Peter Allen TV show for newsagency sales

photoWe are riding on the back of the promotion by the Seven Network of their Peter Allen mini series that starts Sunday night with this promotion in-store of a special DVD pack of: The BOY from OZ.

The promotion leverages the huge investment by the Seen Network. It also pitches us as being relevant.

We invested in the stock and space on the basis that the mini series will refresh interest in Peter Allen. Early indications are that it will.

On TV, at the movies and on social media we can see many opportunities for us to pitch products not being actively promoted by the majors and from which we can make good margin in our businesses. Some opportunities work as new traffic generators while others work as basket depth drivers.

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marketing

Looking behind the scenes in selecting seasonal marketing material for the newsagency

IMG_9676Two years ago newsXpress moved away from noisy seasonal posters urging people to buy for a season. The decision was made to table a more artistically stylised yet subtle approach that connects with the emotion of each season, with no specific call to action.

A good example of this approach can be seen in the Father’s Day 2015 poster with the words Love Your Dad. You can see that the newsXpress branding is subtle, at the bottom of the poster.

Choosing this artwork takes several months from start to finish. It starts with the brainstorming of themes. This guides the creative team to consider colours, images and words. This feeds into the creation of several drafts of options, which are considered by as many as ten people as well as a couple of supplier representatives. The draft options are slowly revised until one stands out. This is then shared with all newsXpress members and their feedback considered before final revisions made and a proof prepared. It is a highly consultative process, one that has lead to this approach of focusing on the emotion of the season rather than the usual shrill call to action we see in many retail businesses leading up to major seasons.

What I like about the Love Your Dad collateral is the simplicity of the message. Saturday at the newsagency, I saw a couple of kids drag their dad to in front of the posters and hug him. His smile could have lit up a room. It was heartwarming to see.

Sometimes, the best way to encourage engagement is to not chase it.

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marketing

Sunday newsagency challenge: reduce visual noise

Stand outside your newsagency and count how many different messages you are pitching from the shingle to posters to window displays to signs to what you can see from out there into the business.

Write each message on a list. How many messages do you have pitching to people outside your business?

If you have more than four messages, decide which of the messages can be cut.

People walking past your shop most likely do not stop and read all the messages. You have seconds to grab their attention. The more messages the less opportunity for them to notice anything.

This challenge is about you deciding what messages are most important today. Yes, today – because the messages you want to focus on in a week will be different.

My own experience is that less is more. A narrower focus can increase traffic and engagement because people notice a marketing pitch if it is delivered in a less crowded space.

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Management tip

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: 10 school holidays marketing ideas

Don’t be a victim of school holidays – you know, a retailer who does nothing special, a retailer who looks at the numbers and says it’s school holidays.

Be a retailer who says it’s school holidays, let’s lean in, let’s embrace the opportunity.

Here are seven marketing ideas to help school holidays be more valuable for your newsagency. They are the tip of ideas you could embrace.

  1. Place two or three dump bins with special offers at the front of the store containing products to appeal to the largest age group of school kids in your area.
  2. Reset your primary gift displays to focus on items likely to appeal to families shopping. Ideally, the display will be of new product regulars have not seen before.
  3. If you sell confectionery targeted at adults, consider a school holidays survivors discount.
  4. Publish a series of posts on your business Facebook page with ideas of what people can do locally during the school holidays.
  5. Do more product demonstrations in-store during the expected peak days, demonstrating thinks like a slinky, kinetic sand, goop balls, jigsaws and the like. Create some retail theatre.
  6. Maybe have t-shirts made for staff: Holiday Crew or something similar. This helps them look different to everyday and that is key to making the most of the holidays.
  7. Host an event appropriate to the season:
    1. A papier machier pumpkin mask competition for September holidays.
    2. A paper plane throwing competition for summer holidays.
    3. A Easter art competition for all ages for the Easter break.
    4. A winter bake off for Winter – maybe connected with the cookbooks you sell.
    5. Run a best joke of the holidays competition.
  8. Promote graduation gifts.
  9. If you run discount vouchers, change the name to something like: SCHOOL HOLIDAY BONUS or HOLIDAY SURVIAL $$$. Have fun with it.
  10. Find out what groups host school holiday events in your area and publish a list as a resource for parents.

These ideas are designed to help you create a business during any holidays period that is looked at differently to the rest of the year, to help you gain a reputation as the best school holidays place locally.

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marketing

Resources to help you sell Art Therapy issue #1 launching next week

Art Therapy - A3 Colouring In PosterThe Art Therapy partwork launches Monday next week. Courtesy of Gordon & Gotch, here is a poster you can print for customers to colour in.

You could also use this poster in online marketing to leverage the most from this launch.

My suggestion is you start your marketing for this immediately, ahead of the launch of the title as none of your competitors are likely to do this.

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magazines

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: break rules in your marketing

IMG_9348I love this poster promoting Happy Socks for Father’s Day. It mocks (in a good way) the Father’s Day tradition of the gift of a tie by using a sock as a tie. It makes the gift of socks relevant, funky even.

The Happy Socks marketing people have recast their products in a more relevant and engaging way and as a result should expect good Father’s Day sales.

We can make similar decisions in our newsagencies, casting products traditionally one way to appeal more widely as a result of a clever pitch. In our stationery, magazine and card departments we have products that lend themselves to visual merchandising pitches that are against tradition and therefore more likely to attract shopper attention.

These are moves we ought to make for ourselves, in our businesses to the needs of our local shoppers.

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marketing

Happy retailers make for a happy retail experience

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 6.57.32 amThinking about my challenge to newsagents yesterday about choosing optimism, I have this morning been looking through new marketing from my POS software company where the team put a call out for Tower Systems customers who would like to be professionally photographed in their shop for a national postcard marketing campaign.

These two photos from businesses in South Australia, a bike shop and a specialist confectionery shop, show small business owners happy to be in their businesses and happy to be promoting them. The photos exude optimism.

In each photo you can see pride in their faces. In the background you can see good visual merchandising and professional retailing principles.

The owners of these businesses excuse pride and confidence with justification. They are terrific small businesses having a big impact.

We choose ourselves how happy our shop is. We do this in our heads as well as on the shelves of our businesses.

How would you and your look if this photo was taken in your shop? Thinking about that could guide you to changes to make.

I appreciate there are challenges for the traditional newsagency business. We choose impact of those challenges on our mindset and demeanour and this plays out on the performance of the business.

While there is nostalgic appeal the traditional newsagency, you will make more money breaking free from that history and focussing on representing a bright and happy future.

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Management tip

Sunday newsagency marketing advice: send more cards

How many greeting cards do you personally send each year? If the number is under ten then you are below average. In the UK, the average is just over twenty per person.

So how many cards do you send each year?

The best reminder you can give to someone to send more cards is to send them a card. From a newsagency management perspective, the best way to get people sending more cards is for you to send cards for fringe occasions such as thanking a coach, thanking a teacher, welcoming someone to a new home, saying bon voyage, welcoming a soldier home or just because.

Your newsagency probably has the best card range in your area. (If not, why not?) Play to your strength by being aware of card giving opportunities and engaging with these with your customers and others you connect with through your business.

Think of every card you give as part of marketing of your business. 

I knew a newsagent years ago who would pick a birthday card for his wife, take it home and show her and put it back in the pocket in the newsagency the next day to sell.

Send more cards.

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Greeting Cards

Range vital to adult colouring success in the newsagency

IMG_9205This photo is a second display of adult colouring art therapy titles in our newsagency. It is located half way into the store. It sits in front of the magazine department to the right, our plush wall to the left and stationery on the wall on the far left.

We have cleared space in front of the display (not seen in the photo) so the full range of adult colouring titles is easily seen and shopped. Customers in wheelchairs and motorised scooters can come in and shop – these are valuable customers for this category of product.

The range on show has been selected to cater to people from teens through to 80+, boys and girls. This is important. In the early days retailers thought adult colouring was a thing for girls 30+. It’s not. We are selling for people of all ages. It is a fun category, we are learning plenty.

We have been in the adult colouring space all year and are enjoying excellent results still. We are watching sales because current sales will not continue. Knowing when to scale back will be important for business.

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Management tip

Sunday newsagency challenge: cancel all rep visits for a month

While supplier representatives can be invaluable for your business, they could be hindering your ability as the owner and manager of the business. They could be stopping you from seeing your business differently. There could be too much of them in your business indent enough of you.

My challenge today: Take a break from reps visiting your business. If they have products to pitch, get them to email.

Have a rep free month and see what decisions you make about buying that might otherwise have been made by a rep.

The goal here is for there to be more of you in your business and what you sell. This does not mean less buying from the companies the reps represent.

If you see, say, eight reps a month for 30 to 60 minutes each that is four to eight hours back in your pocket for the month, time you could spend on your business in tasks that reflect more on you than on the rep.

Your major competitors spend less time at the local store level with reps than you. This is a competitive advantage for them.

Suppliers reading this who are frustrated, here is your challenge: come up with processes for more efficient use of newsagent time. Rep visits at the local store level are inefficient.

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Management tip

Sunday newsagency marketing tip: pause your local newspaper advertising

If you advertise in your local newspaper regularly or semi-regularly, my tip today is you pause this spend and redirect the funds to Facebook boosted posts or locally targeted Google advertising.

For a few dollars you can test your ad, gauge the return and up the spend if the results are there. My experience is the Facebook posted ad process and results are far superior than local newspaper advertising. But remember my business is in a busy suburban area where a local newspaper ad is expensive and lost in the relatively full local newspaper.

If you do not advertise in the local newspaper or anywhere else then my tip for you is advertise! If you are not doing anything to attract new traffic to your newsagency you are nuts!

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marketing

Gotch pitching music magazines on Twitter

Screen Shot 2015-08-11 at 9.13.49 amMagazine distributor Gordon and Gotch took to Twitter yesterday promoting a competition encouraging entries explaining why people like one of the magazines listed. Up for grabs is a Spotify premium subscription.

I like the competition and the special interest music magazines it promotes. While not a big deal, I wish Gotch helped newsagents promote this via own social media.

Competitions on social media are a great way to find new shoppers.

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magazines