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

Newsagency opportunities

2023 newsagency performance benchmark targets / goals

Benchmarks provide business performance data points against which similar businesses can compare their performance.

Here are the recommended benchmarks for newsagencies:

  • Gross profit: this is the goal gross profit for all product sales not taking into account any revenue or costs related to any agency business. The traditional newsagency average continues to sit at 28% to 32%. In an engaged newsagency, I think a GP% goal of 45% is appropriate.
  • Minimum stock turn. That is, the number of times you sell an item in a year. This is a calculation based on current stock holding against total revenue for a year. Here are suggested stock turn goals by key departments. These numbers are based on what is needed at a minimum for a department to be valuable to you:
    • Cards – 3. The average sits at 1.75. This is too low.
    • Gifts – 7. This means a tight mix of products turning quickly.
    • Toys – 5.
    • Plush – 5.
  • Ratio of Gift revenue to Card revenue: 100% minimum. The goal ought to be 200% or more. If you do $50K a year in cards, toe goal is to do $100K a year in gifts.
  • Revenue per employee – $250 an hour minimum.
  • Revenue PSQM $4,500 – $8,500 depending on country versus city / high street to shopping centre and depending of the product mix. Higher GP lower revenue required.
  • Overall revenue mix percentage targets: Cards: 30%; Gifts/toys/plush: 35%; Stat: 10%; magazines/newspapers: 15%; other: 10%.
  • Category performance notes:
    • Stationery. Pens and writing products should account for more than 30% of revenue.
    • Magazines. Crosswords should account for more than 6% of unit sales.
    • Lifestyle cards. Should be more than 40% of total card sales. growth should be 12% year on year at least.
    • Impulse counter items: (NeeDoh, sensory, putty, world’s smallest) should be more than 10% of toy and related sales.
  • FLOORSPACE ALLOCATION: This is very much a store specific thing. That said: Cards: 20%; new traffic lines: 5%; Gifts/toys/plush: 35%; Stat: 8%; magazines/newspapers: 10%; other products: 10%; office/back room / counter: 10%. You don’t make money from your back room.
  • Mark-up goals: Stationery: 125%; Gifts 110%; plush: 110%, jewellery 300%.
  • Occupancy cost: between 9% and 11% of revenue where revenue is product revenue plus commission from agency lines. Location and situation are a big factor in this benchmark. For example, a large shopping centre business will have a higher cost than a high street situation. NOTE: It is easy to say the landlord is responsible for this ratio. As the retailer you are responsible for margin and revenue.
  • Labour cost: between 9% and 11% of revenue where revenue is product revenue plus commission from agency lines. Labour cost should include fair market costs for all who work in the business. (See above).

Now, these are goals. I share them here for consideration. You should set your own, based on your own situation. The key is to have goals and understand why they are what they are. That’s the reason I have published this information developed by my POS software company Tower Systems and my newsagency marketing group newsXpress – to offer something of a starting point for individual newsagents to consider.

15 likes
Newsagency benchmark

Vegemite anniversary a hit

The Vegemite brand is having a moment in the sun thanks to the anniversary this year. Licenced product is selling very well, including the mint coins.

The 100 Years of Happy Little Vegemites – Six-Coin Uncirculated Year Set 2023 and the 100 Years of Happy Little Vegemites – Six-Coin Proof Year Set 2023 are both selling well. Just today alone we have sold more than $600 worth in one shop. People travel for them, and they purchase other items at the same time.

I did not expect this iconic brand anniversary to go this well.

7 likes
Newsagency opportunities

What does your newsagency stand for? What’s unique about it?

In his 1960 book, Reality in Advertising, Rosser Reeves, a respected US advertising executive, introduced the world to the concept of the Unique Selling Proposition, USP for short.

Reeves defined USP in an advertising context:

  • Each advertisement must make a proposition to the consumer: buy this product and you will get this benefit.
  • The proposition must be one that the competition either cannot or does not
  • The proposition must be so strong that it changes consumer behaviour.

In the 1960s and 1970s, the concept of a unique selling proposition evolved from being essential to advertising to being essential in business. Finding your business USP was considered mission critical to businesses, retailers especially. Businesses drifted however and forgot about the importance of a USP.

Today, it is common to see ads with we will not be beaten on price or if you find it cheaper elsewhere we will sell for 5% (or more) less. These pitches are from lazy marketers who think price is the most important USP and while it is a factor to some shoppers, value is often about much more than price.

Jack Trout told us a few years ago that USP was relevant today. In 2000, he said that a Unique Selling Proposition was mission critical in business in his aptly titled book Differentiate or Die: Survival in Our Era of Killer Competition.

Differentiate of Die. There is no doubt about the call to action in the title, no doubt about the consequences of inaction.

Yet many retailers, for the most part, have remained still in the face of an onslaught of competition. Some newsagents have remained still.

Retail is complex, challenging and changing rapidly today. The differences between competitors fewer. Retailers are surrounded by competition and it grows by the day. Yet many have remained still and done nothing.

Our channel continues to be confronted by the migration to digital, more local retail competitors and online shops selling what we sell. Those who have stood still feel the impact more than others.

Smart retailers are re-acquainting themselves with the writings of Reeves and Trout and leaning about the mission critical imperative of having a Unique Selling Proposition.

Differentiation could be service, products or location or a combination of these. Differentiation will most likely not be price as anyone can match this easily. Price is, after all, the last line of defense in any business battle. That said, there are some major price-focused success stories – WalMart for example. It is rare in an independent retail situation.

To develop your USP, engage with your employees and other stakeholders. or, do it yourself with your own deep dive into what you want your business to stand for. This is leadership. Take your time. Determine what you and your business stand for. Following open and honest discussion and debate, the USP around which everyone in the business can willingly congregate will emerge.

A good USP will not require an advertising campaign to communicate. It will become obvious through actions and decisions. By living the USP in every facet of the business you soon become seen as unique by shoppers and this can drive excellent word of mouth and success for the business.

While differentiation in retail is more important today than ever thanks to today’s economic conditions, the approach to the challenge is the same as in the 1960s.

If you are not sure where to start when considering your USP, look at your POS software and the data it curates about your business for in that data will be insights into your points of differences things you can cultivate to have a stronger USP.

Your POS software is a good place to start as your shoppers show you through their behaviour what they like and don’t like about your business.

No one can tell you what your USP should be. It has to come from you, from inside your business. It has to reflect what you believe, how you want your business to be seen and known.

Here are some things that are not a USP.

  • Convenience is not a USP.
  • Opening hours are not the USP they once were.
  • Agency products like lotteries are not a USP.
  • Magazine range could be a USP as many have moved on from deep range cover.
  • Price is not a USP.

And while we are considering lists, here are some less than ideal things in business that could be a USP – note the strikethrough the S as they are not selling propositions but, rather, customer turnoffs that a retail business could become known for (in a bad way):

  • Poor customer service.
  • High prices.
  • An EFTPOS surcharge.
  • Poor range.
  • Bad opening hours.
  • Poor counter processes.

Here’s another list of some easy USPs:

  • Local community connection.
  • Community group support.
  • Product range.
  • Product knowledge.
  • Fun in-store.
  • Quality products.
  • Value.
  • Appreciation of shoppers (loyalty).

It can be tough coming up with something genuinely unique. But, once you have it, it can be worth the work.

Take your time. Do it yourself. Be the leader your business will love.

8 likes
Management tip

Cards in the front window of the newsagency attract shoppers

This full face display of Mother’s Day cards in the front window is attracting passers-by into the newsagency on the busy Glenferrie Road in Malvern. That was the plan, our hope. It looks like paying off.

In December 2021, this space was taken by a drinks fridge, and ice-cream fridge and a stand of AWW cookbooks. Slowly we have change what’s here, culminating in the installation of this card wall a few weeks prior to Easter.

I think there is nothing better than awesome good margin products attracting shopper traffic from off the street. It’s a bonus if they are habit related products, products from a category for shoppers could return to you.

.

This shop is in a highly competitive location for cards with two newsagencies nearby, several supermarkets, more than 15 card and gift shops and an Australia Post outlet also with a good range of cards. We have the biggest range in the area, but it’s located in the card department inside the shop. I knew we had to bring a card pitch to the footpath.

While our card suppliers have been supportive, we funded this new fixtures ourselves, so that we control the use of the space. This will be especially critical with how we use the space outside of seasons, especially in the retail valley between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day.

On the space itself, we have the capacity to extend it to the left, to almost double the space. This will be needed for Christmas.

A bonus of this new card wall is that we no longer need seasonal card floor units. This frees up floorspace and assists traffic flow. Also, on the new wall, cards are better presented and more easily shopped than in a floor display unit.

While the pitch in the front window of the newsagency right now is Mother’s Day cards, it will change from may 15 to a different card offer.

We used a handyman to install the slat wall, this was a fraction of the cost of a shoplifter. We are frugal in managing our capital investment in this business, and in each of our shops. Our approach tends to be: make a change, measure the result, if good – move forward, if bad – re-group.

Too often over the years I have seen retailers access funding for a new or partial fit out and too much of that money be spent on changes that will not pay for themselves in 3 years. Funding it out of your own pocket makes you more cautious about the spend.

Be frugal. Follow your data. Take small steps. Back yourself over tradition.

Yes, a shoplifter may have created for us something more grand. I doubt it would have delivered a better financial return though.

While our shops are a reflection of us, they should not be a shrine or a showpiece, unless that makes money, turns a profit in the investment, in 3 years or less.

Footnote: some suppliers will be keen to engage with you on changes in your business. For sure, listen to them, but, it’s your business, not theirs.

12 likes
Greeting Cards

Newsagency of the Future – a free online workshop about retail newsagency businesses

Join me via Zoom Tuesday May 16 @ 11am Melbourne time for a Newsagency of the Future workshop.

I will share up to date retail newsagency performance data, sales data from outside our channel for categories allied to what we do, thoughts on the rest of 2023 and into 2024. I will also cover some trends into the future that present opportunities.

There will be an open Q&A.

While Covid continues to circulate, it is over from a disruptive perspective. I think there are things we can leverage from the pandemic experience. I also think there are category opportunities for growing business GP% and attracting new shoppers.

I am not running the session to sell you anything, or to get you to sign ups to anything. My sole motivation is for the retail newsagency channel to be strong, vibrant.

It is a competitive world out there and I think all of us in retail newsagency businesses can do better.

Here is the link:

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/84982771189?pwd=RWdRM0s3bENpZ2F5UGxNblkzKzN3QT09

Meeting ID: 849 8277 1189 Passcode: 103292

I’ll record the session.

Anyone is welcome.

4 likes
Newsagency management

Newsagency performance: comparing Jan – Mar 2023 vs 2021

Here’s a video I shot last week for newsXpress members in which I high-level compare the first quarter of this year at my Malvern (VIC) business with 2022.

I share this here as any newsagent using the Tower Systems newsagency software can produce the same report for their business. They can also select the category version for a deeper analysis. There are other options, too, for even deeper analysis.

Each of us is the most important competitor our business has.

Cross period revenue growth is important.

GP growth is even more important.

It is vital to transition from the 28% – 32% traditional Vally of GP for newsagents to 35% to 40% and more.

I think anyone pitching revenue / profitability growth opportunities to newsagents should support these with evidence. Our channel has had too many snake oil salespeople.

11 likes
Ethics

What defines a good newsagency?

Back in 2013 I was interviewed for a magazine. I recently found an email from the journalist with notes from the interview. Here is some of it, which I think is relevant today:

What defines a good newsagency?

A good newsagency is a business loved by the local community, generating its own traffic growth – off its own efforts – delivering between 40% and50% grow product, profitable and a business with a clear plan for its own future.

When and how did you get into the newsagency business?

I worked in a newsagency, Pakenham newsagency in Victoria, after school in high school for a couple of years and while there used an old card system for handling newspaper home delivery accounts. Seven years later, when I decided to start my own business, I created my first newsagency software –on an Apple II computer. I never sold this software but used it as a proof of concept for what I would go on to develop.

From 1981 to February 1996 my focus was on my newsagency software company. Then, in a fit of madness or brilliance, I bought my first newsagency at Forest Hill in Victoria. I owned that business for thirteen wonderful years.

You have three newsagencies now. When you were establishing these what were your biggest challenges and how did you overcome them?

I now own three newsagencies in Victoria, all in shopping centres. All three were new locations, greenfield locations. Beyond negotiating the lease with the landlord – which is the biggest and most important challenge, the hardest work is getting the product mix right. Too often we see this as a do it once and you’re done thing. In fact, it’s daily – especially in a marketplace where change is relentless.

So, the biggest challenge is today’s challenge – to be relevant, interesting and valued to today’s customers and to know, for sure, what I will need to do tomorrow to achieve the same things,

Newsagents historically have relied on suppliers to tell them what to do. It’s part of the agent culture. Today’sworlddictates that we have to own our ownfuture because it is ours. We have to source our own products and package them with our own services – not those products from other suppliers or services we are told to provide.

Our future is up to us. And, sadly, this is why many newsagencies will close – because they will not take ownership of their future. That said, many will flourish. Our channel has the potential to grow in strength,

You’re very experienced in retailing and you regularly share your experience and advice on Australian Newsagency Blog. When you were starting out was there someone more experienced that you looked to for advice? How did their advice influence and shape your career and retail management?

I didn’t rely on or pick up retailing ideas from newsagents. My insights came from travelling overseas and looking at trends there at leading retailers. I realised what I liked and what could be applied to newsagents.

It’s easy to become discouraged when business is flat or going backwards. What advice can you give other newsagents who may be in this situation?

I see newsagents who grow to hate their business. It’s important that we know our triggers for negative feelings and that we fight against these.

To newsagents feeling depressed or worried about tough times I say: get moving, do something, anything, but take steps in your business today, right now, to drive change. The steps themselves may be wrong but you will get more benefit from moving in your business than standing still and worrying or complaining.

Owning and managing a retail outlet is competitive business. Do you think there’s opportunity for newsagents to work more closely together to achieve better outcomes for the overall industry?

I think our channel, while still a channel, is breaking apart. The term newsagency appliers to a diverse mix of businesses. It’s rare for there to be a consistent product mix or service value proposition.

Newsagents have a history of eschewing opportunities to work together, even in smaller groupings like marketing groups. They all complain about the channel not getting value from suppliers for its size – with thousands of rooftops – but they do little or nothing to actually leverage this. They are their own worst enemy and I wish that was not the case, I really do.

Newsagents working together could become a serious commercial force to be reckoned with.

On Australian Newsagency Blog you regularly provide marketing tips. If you could sum up your top 5 marketing tips, what would they be?

It’s hard to list the top five specific marketing tips as the top five today will be different tomorrow. Right now, the top five in a general sense are:

Determine and live your USP – Unique Selling Proposition. Answer the question- what do you stand for? and live that in every business decision.

Relay your magazines, confuse your employees and customers – own your magazine range as it represents the single most important point of difference for any newsagency today.

Give your employees power to change your business. You don’t have to lead the business alone, your employees could have brilliant ideas if only you helped them bring them out.

Make sure you can be found online. This means being locatable on Facebook, Twitter, Google Places, True Local and every other local directory. Check out how easily you can be found by typing in newsagent and your suburb or magazines and your suburb …and so on. If you don’t come up worry!

De clutter. Stand our the front of your shop and look carefully at what your shoppers see, the messages you present. The typical newsagency will have 30 different messages, often conflicting. I’ve heard retail psychologists say that anything beyond five messages is too many!

What do you believe are some big opportunities in 2013 for newsagents to use to set themselves apart competition?

The biggest two opportunities for newsagents in 2013 are to become fierce retailers by taking complete charge of their own retail destiny and to use their own store specific business data as their roadmap. Take the energy from the first and the guidance from the second and you have a model for the future for any local business that is sure to drive success.

Are suppliers doing enough to support small business like newsagencies in Australia? What makes or breaks a relationship between a retailer and a supplier?

Many suppliers to newsagents use processes that are decades old and have associated with them an operational cost that makes products in newsagencies more expensive. Our suppliers need to change as much as us, cutting costs from the supply chain so we and they can make more. We them to be more efficient so we can be. This means we need less reps on the road and easier ways to connect with suppliers in more modern-day ways.

Suppliers have sometimes “bought” store floor space and fixtures to ensure their products are displayed prominently. Is this an advantage or disadvantage to retailers? For example, does it provide a needed cash injection or restrict the rotation of other stock and product that may benefit from being in that “bought” location.

Historically a range of suppliers have funded fixtures in newsagencies. I strongly recommend newsagents reject such offers as a bit of cash today comes with a high cost to the business long term. What matters is the margin I make on products and that products turn quickly. Margin and stock turn matter the most. I will make more from good margin high stock turn product than any supplier cash hand out today.

Where do you see newsagency retailing heading over the next five years?

Over the next five years I send the gap between the strong and the weak to widen. Hopefully, this will attract more to being strong. I’d note that being strong is a choice- it is not a function of suppliers or other circumstance. We need to own our own situation and live this with gusto.

5 likes
Newsagency management

Stationery beyond practical need is a terrific opportunity for Aussie newsagents

The Aussie newsagency channel is known for offering a good range of stationery. Newsagencies are where many locals shop for stationery, especially when the need is urgent. We are considered expensive, but shoppers expect is to offer quality products.

We’re not expensive. We know that.

There is a growing stationery opportunities for Aussie newsagents and that is with stationery that reaches beyond the practical need. Stationery that is fun, on point.

No, this is not major branded stationery, like with Disney characters, nor it social stationery that we have known for years. It is stationery with text or images that make it appealing beyond function, like these pencils.

There are plenty of opportunities like these: pens, pencils, pads, post-it notes, envelopes, stickers, tape, and more.

The challenge is to be current with the offer as some trends will come and go in the blink of an eye. Others, though, are around for months, even years, offering opportunities to make good money.

Most suppliers of these types of trend stationery items are not common to our channel. Plenty are small, too.

We have been playing in this space through 2022 and it’s been fun, and educational. I see plenty of upside for us and for plenty of newsagents engaged in the opportunity.

8 likes
Newsagency management

Commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War

I’m grateful that we have been able to stock this highly sought after coin commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam war. Having something so connected with news like this coin is connects us with shoppers we value.

This coin is also the first coin to note the years of reign of Queen Elizabeth, which makes it even more collectible.

The rush to access this coin has created some challenges. I think 2023 will be big year for coin collectors and I’m glad to have a small role in that locally.

6 likes
Newsagency opportunities

Lotterywest launches Better Business Program for newsagents

With the backing of the WA state government, Lotterywest has launched the Better Business Program.

The program will see $4.5 million delivered annually to provide support to our retailers for at least the next three years.

  • $3.5 million in Business Support payments directly shared among around 500 small local businesses.
  • $500,000 in dedicated support services for retailer businesses such as sales coaching, visual merchandising and adapting to changing customer spending habits.
  • $500,000 in Sales Sprints where you can earn rewards.

Here is the announcement email sent to retailers:

Introducing the Better Business Program

Yesterday we launched our Better Business program at the State Reception Centre Kings Park. It was fantastic to see so many of you there, both in person and online to hear the Premier, the Hon. Mark McGowan MLA, make this exciting announcement. Click here to read the Premier’s letter endorsing this program.

This program will see $4.5 million delivered annually to provide greater support to you, our retail network for at least the next three years.

The $4.5 million investment will include:

  • $3.5 million in Business Support payments directly shared among around 500 small local businesses.
  • $500,000 in dedicated support services for retailer businesses such as sales coaching, visual merchandising and adapting to changing customer spending habits.
  • $500,000 in Sales Sprints where you can earn rewards.
  • The program is launching today, with Support Payments back-dated until January 1 2023.
We’ve created the Better Business Guide and this video to explain how the new program will work.

All retailers are eligible to receive their share of Business Support. To ensure you don’t miss out on your payment, you’ll need to meet Business Standards. We aren’t introducing any new standards; this program will ensure we are focused on what’s most important. We want you to receive your payments each quarter and will work with you to resolve any issues.

We’ve included an amnesty period until 30 June 2023 to give you and us time to adapt to the changes.

This greater financial support is due to the overall growth of Lotterywest’s sales.

This program aims to help build more resilient and adaptable businesses.

There is more to do, including continuing to invest in our online presence to remain competitive and provide access to players how they want, but this won’t be at the expense of the retail network. We’re committed to ensuring our retailers remain resilient and well supported into the future. Together, we will continue to make a big difference to the WA community, which we should all be proud of.

Your Retailer Relationship Officer is available to answer any questions you have. We have uploaded digital versions of all the above resources to Retail Link here. You can also contact our Customer Services team on 133 777 or contact@lotterywest.wa.gov.au.

Kind regards,

Ralph Addis
CEO Lotterywest and Healthway

It’s a terrific initiative and while I think newsagents should have been engaged in change long before now, it is not too late.
6 likes
Newsagency management

We play a role in the newsagency channel narrative

Every time we talk to someone, anyone, about our business, retail, local small business retail, anyone, we add to the narrative about our channel, local retail, small business retail – in addition to the narrative about our business.

When speaking to the media, journalists in my experience come to us with a bias about our channel and about local small business retail, unfortunately.

“Business owners, nowdays after COVID-19, we are not making any money. Please don’t do this,” Singh said.

This is a quote from a newsagency owner, from a story by 9 News in Melbourne about a newsagency that was robbed.

I get the emotional feelings following the break in would underpin anything said. The journalists would know this. I also get there is no point saying we are doing fine when being interviewed about a robbery.

The quote does nothing for the narrative of newsagency retail or local small business retail in general.

Our choice.

All of us who own newsagencies have chosen to do so. We have made that decision. Just like we decide who works for us, what we stock, how we display it and how we promote our businesses.

These are all our choices.

The performance of our business is a consequence of our choices.

If business is tough we need to respond. If what we respond with does not work, we need to change our response. We need to keep changing until we can change no more because of time, resources or will.

The thing is, our business reflects us. We choose how we present ourselves, and that can impact others that trade in similarly named businesses, no matter how different our businesses are.

I know of many newsagents doing well. Most newsagents I speak with had a good Covid. Plenty of newsagents are making good money.

I get that there can be local circumstances that beat against the pursuit of success. Online can help play outside that, and online has been an active option in our channel for more than ten years.

I also get that personal financial circumstances can dictate what we are able to do. However, we chose to be in business.

Here are some truths about newsagency retail in Australia today. While I accept people may disagree, on these points I have seen enough data to know they are true:

  • You determine who notices your business based on the products you carry, where and how you display them and how you promote them outside the business.
  • Convenience retail is not successful for independent newsagents.
  • Value retail, like what you see in a discount variety store, is not successful for independent newsagents.
  • Tobacco has no upside, no benefit for retail newsagents.
  • Vape products have no upside and will limit your shopper reach.
  • Everyday confectionery at the counter is far less successful than more unique and higher margin items.
  • Newspapers work just as well in a less expensive location than the high-traffic front of the shop publishers want.
  • Greeting cards is the best margin category in your business and it is the one that responds best and fastest to your attention.
  • $1 and $2 cards deliver little, or, usually, no financial value to the business.
  • While agency business brings people in, in too many situations that foot traffic is not adequately leveraged to valuable retail sales.
  • Newsagents can sell gifts at $200, $300 and more apiece.
  • You are not your customer.

I could go on.

In truth: if we are finding business is tough, if we are not making any money, doing the same thing over and over will keep us in that rut.

29 likes
Newsagency management

Free online workshop: Websites for newsagents

Join me for a free workshop Wednesday March 22 @ 2pm Melbourne time:

Websites for newsagents.

March 22 @ 2pm.

Let’s look at:

  • What’s working.
  • What people are looking for.
  • Where to start.
  • Why it does not need to reflect your newsagency.
  • How to do it for the lowest cost possible.
  • Risks and how to avoid them.

Anyone is welcome to attend. While my POS software company develops websites for retailers, including newsagents, this is not a sales pitch. The advice shared will be useful to anyone, regardless of supplier.

You don’t need to book. Just turn up. 2pm Melbourne time March 22.

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88276032133?pwd=cWgzYjFQaVRPM3diVUNnWjd6L1pqZz09 Meeting ID: 882 7603 2133 Passcode: 207681

I will record the session and decide later if I make the recording available.

You can access this Zoom from any device, anywhere. Having a camera is ideal for participation.

It is common for people joining a session like this to be a voyeur, to watch, and not actively participate. The best value is achieved through participation. No question is wrong, or ignorant. Ask away. It’s likely that what you ask others want asked as well.

Why newsagents need to have an online strategy.

The history of our Aussie newsagency channel is rooted in serving locals, in the local community, through newspaper and magazine delivery.

For too long, we have played purely local and while that may feel nice, it does not maximise the return we can achieve.

Every dollar you make from someone who lives hours or days away from your shop is icing on the cake, bonus revenue. And, because of data collected from online sales, it is easy to win more sales from online shoppers.

A smart online business leverages at the very your existing labour and space investment. This improves business efficiency. I have not listed inventory investment here because some of the best online businesses I have seen started by local retailers, including newsagents, are for new product categories that are not reflected in the shop.

A focussed modest online shop offers you a place to reach more customers, sell when you are closed, make better use of existing resources and make your business worth more every day.

An online shop in your newsagency is smart business.

Too many newsagents overthink this. They spend too long and too much money planning and designing.

A common mistake is that they think they need to put what they sell in the shop online. While in some circumstances this makes sense. Most often it does not make sense.

The carpentry adage of measure twice cut once does not fit website plans and development. When it comes to websites, my advice is launch early and launch often. Failing is good if you learn, recalibrate and launch again.

I have had websites connected to my retail newsagency businesses for many years. Most are successful. This is thanks to the failures.

Join me for this free workshop if you don’t have a website today.

8 likes
Newsagency management

Let’s not get sucked in by downcast sales forecasts from big retailers

Some big retailers are predicting flat or declining sales through 2023 and into 2024. There are forecast reports of comp (comparable) store sales, we tend to call these same store sales, of 3% to 5%.

The challenge is that journalists and news editors hear this and attach the downward forecast to all retailers.

I know plenty of independent retailers, including independent newsagents, who are forecasting growth over the same period. Know, not massive growth, but growth nevertheless.

In my own stores, I am planning for 5% growth and hoping for closer to 10%. But more important than the sales revenue growth number is growth in business GP percentage achieved. Growing that several points is more important than revenue growth.

If you grew business GP% by, say, 3% and overall revenue by 1% the bottom line benefit to the business would be considerably magnified compared to no change in GP% and 1% revenue growth.

There are many growth opportunities in our channel, many opportunities for retail newsagents to achieve good growth in revenue and in gross profit percentage performance.

How do we achieve that?

Look at your current sales data, look for green shoots, indicators of opportunity for you. In a retail newsagency these are typically in cards, magazines and stationery. Sales in these departments can indicate opportunities outside of them, maybe in new areas for the business, better margin areas for the business.

I know of many retail newsagents where this approach of data lead range review and gross profile percentage growth is successful.

Covid.

One of the consequences of Covid was that many shoppers tried local retail for the first time in years. We showed that we offered diversity in products and personal service. We can continue to leverage these differences. But we have to show rather than tell.

Big retail looks like big retail. Their displays tend to be blah and their differentiator tends to be price.

In local retail, displays that are more fun, appealing and enticing can work well. back this with shop floor knowledge and genuine personal service and price is a secondary factor. people want to enjoy shopping. They want to walk out of the shop feeling good. That feeling is currency, it pushes pure price to a secondary consideration as value is felt in other ways.

The economy.

Yes, there is pressure in the economy because of rising interest rates. There is still plenty of money around for what people want. Want is a big driver for spending. It’s the emotional purchase where you have good opportunity. Especially as a skilled local retailer who is able to feed into the want.

You.

The reality is that there will be more tough economic news and negative reports about retail. You can choose to watch that and worry, or you can create the retail experience that is an oasis of happiness, a place locals enjoy and are happy to spend. Every day, choices you make in your business determine this.

If you do what you’ve done every day for years, your results will be what you are used to. I think the Aussie newsagency channel can do much better than that. 

11 likes
Newsagency management

Toy Fair in Melbourne is well worth the visit

I am grateful to have been able to visit Toy Fair in Melbourne yesterday. There was plenty to see, plenty of new products, plenty of show specials.

It runs through to March 8. If you have time and can make it, it’s well worth it as it shows a broad set of shopper reach opportunities beyond what has been traditio9nal for the newsagency channel.

The specials on good turning lines provide extra margin opportunities to make the time commitment, and travel, worthwhile. There are also plenty of opportunities to schedule deliveries through the rest of the year.

All in all, an excellent trade show.

2 likes
Newsagency opportunities

Newsagency sales benchmark study results: 2022 vs. 2019

Thank you to the 119 newsagents trading under a variety of shingles and in a variety of settings (rural, regional and suburban high street) who provided sales data for this benchmark study. The only connection is that they use newsagency software from my POS software company. Their transparency will help many in our channel.

Plenty of good news in retail newsagency benchmark study comparing 2022 to 2019.

Many newsagents had an excellent 2022 compared to 2019, the majority who participated in this benchmark study in fact.

Common among those who did well is active engagement in non newsagency traditional product lines, active promotion of the business outside the business, and focussing on three key metrics: basket value, margin and the cost base of the business.

Common among the businesses that did not report as good results is their focus on traditional newsagency operation: lotteries, papers and magazines more so than other product categories.

What is particularly interesting is the results for businesses that transitioned from traditional in 2019 to innovate in 2022. In those cases, the results are extraordinary. In one million dollar business the revenue was almost the same but business GP% moves from 29% to 34%, which is an extra $50,000 in gross profit. In another business they added $120,000 to their $590,000 revenue with the added revenue for items achieving more than 50% GP.

This is the story that stands out when comparing 2022 to 2019, transition. Transition from relying on agency revenue, from relying on commission, to relying of good margin from sought-after products through which the business can attract new shoppers, non newsagency traditional shoppers. A highlight of the transition as evidenced in the dataset is that size and location do not matter. Okay, location in terms of shopping centre matters as it’s not proving to be a winner for our channel, but outside of shopping centres – city or country, large or small – success is equally attainable.

After comparing data from the businesses in the benchmark dataset here are the averages for business performance measurement points and categories, comparing 2022 with 2019:

  • Revenue: Up 9.5%.
  • Sales transaction count: Down 1%.
  • Basket value: Up 9%.
  • Items per basket: Up 7%.
  • Average item value: Up 7%.
  • Greeting card revenue: Up 7%.
  • Magazines unit sales: Down 1%. This is an unfair measure because of the big difference between businesses, bigger than for any other category.
  • Toy (incl. plush) revenue: Up 22%. 25% of those in the study have this category
  • Gift revenue: Up 35%.
  • Book revenue: Up 15%. 12% of those in the study have this category.
  • Fashion: 70%. 20% of those in the study have this category.
  • Stationery revenue: Up 3%.

Since the above results are averages, there are some considerably below and some considerably above.

There is also interesting data within departments, like stationery and magazines:

  • In magazines, weeklies experienced the biggest decline again. Special interest titles are the winners, often delivering double-digit growth.
  • In stationery, everyday is patchy but special interest, fringe, stationery is doing very well.
  • Newsagents with a unique add-on category, such as firearms, music or pet food, tend to see these doing well.

I have a note about traditional categories: lotteries, papers and magazines. They are important, but they should no longer define your business. Make what you can from them, support them well, but do 9other things to attract new shoppers who will purchase better margin products from you. And on magazines, if you focus on special interest titles and promote them outside your shop, you could do very well.

Evidence.

Common feedback I get from these benchmark studies is can I see the report for the best shop so I can learn. I can’t do that. But I can share snippets. Here are some category specific snippets from different businesses. The results speak for themselves.

Cards.

Gifts.

Toys.

Clothing.

Magazines.

I am concerned about my numbers, what can I do?

If you want better results it is up to you to act.

There is no one size fits all solution, anyone who says there is is wrong.

The first step is to understand where you are at, from the data evidence in your business. next, you need a plan. Then, you execute with clarity and commitment, and draw on the support of others who have done this.

I own newsXpress, a marketing group supporting newsagents. newsXpress helps with this. If it interests you, please email help@newsxpress.com.au or call Michael Elvey on 0400 331 055 – he’s not a sales person, he’s part of the team encouraging success.

Mark Fletcher
M | 0418 321 338
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-fletcher-tower/

17 likes
Newsagency benchmark

Opportunities abound at Nuremburg Toy Fair

Spielwarenmesse, the international toy fair in Nuremberg/Germany, the world’s biggest toy fair was wonderful this year. I am grateful to have been able to be there, to see this 2023 event first-hand.

I met with plenty of Aussie suppliers who were there as well as some people from businesses not currently in Australia. Some were visiting while others were in the stands of their suppliers.

The sheer size of this event is extraordinary – way bigger than any trade show in Australia. Think the big Melbourne gift fair and multiply that by 10 or more. Yes, it is that big.

But size is not everything. It’s the innovation on show that I loved.

It is interesting seeing toy retailers from the US who I met at the New York toy fair now making the trip to Nuremburg. It makes sense as it is the first big toy show of the 2023 year.

Product launches in Nuremburg will not hit Australia in many cases until late in 2023. having an advance insight into this is wonderful, useful. Early insights  into the trends toy designers and makers see as important help too.

A couple of the trend highlights that interested me were the integration of tech, AI specifically as well as mobility products.

Getting around the event was extraordinary. In a day, 25,000 steps is nothing at this event. But in some halls, there were displays of delight and nostalgia. As is always the case at this trade show, the model train displays are a hit.

I appreciate not everyone can get to trade shows like Spielwarenmesse. I am here for newsXpress of course, to meet suppliers to the group, find new suppliers and to collect and share insights with group members. The trip has commercial value.

Thanks to better flight prices between Australia and Europe compared to flying two the US, it is economically valuable to be here, especially since in a week it can be a two trade show trip. But more on that another time.

That so many Australian suppliers are here speaks to the importance of this show in Nuremburg to their business back home in Australia.

9 likes
Newsagency opportunities

Smart buying: Having products that sell for more than one reason, to more than one type of shopper

The more we stock our shops that appeal to multiple buying situations the better for our retail businesses, the more efficient our inventory investment, the more opportunities for out of store promotions.

This candle is a good example of what I am talking about.

Candles are candles, right?! They are everywhere. Many different types of shops have them. The marketplace is covered well for people shopping by scent and different types of ingredients. And, new local makers are popping up almost daily.

This candle, by virtue of the fun text on the label, offers a different reason for purchase. It’s fun, self-deprecating, a good conversation opportunity when given.

Having items that could be purchased for more than on reason helps improve inventory efficiency in the business. In local small business retail this is especially important. If an additional reason is humorous related, it’s a bonus.

A candle like this in a town with plenty of candy outlets gives you differentiation.

This candle is an example. There are plenty of products you can buy to serve this purpose. My suggestion is to look for multiple purchase opportunity products, to expand the appeal of what you sell, and to provide you with opportunities to reach more possible shoppers through out of store marketing.

6 likes
Newsagency management

Will Vic. newsagents lose MYKI top-up sales in 2023?

Hello and welcome to 2023. Like every year for the last 15 or so, I think this will be a year of significant change for our channel, and through change we uncover opportunity.

The first news of 2023 is that the state government of Victoria will review the MYKI transport ticketing system this year, which may result in the cards themselves being replaced.

From a transport user perspective, MYKI is out of date and frustrating.

From a tech perspective, MYKI was out of date before it was launched.

From a retailer perspective, the minuscule commission from MYKI card top-ups does not cover the actual costs of providing the service and the dealing with myriad customer queries. But plenty continue to offer it, including me in one of my shops.

I don’t see how the MYKI cards can survive in a world rapidly retreating from physical cards. The old argument of older people want a physical card has been proven wrong with their update of credit card access through phones and watches.

I think it’s best to plan now for a business without MYKI card top-up so that when it does happen you’re ready.

There are some who like offering the top-up because having anyone in the shop its better than no one. That’s not true, actually. The best customers are those purchasing high margin products through which you differentiate your business.

There is no upside in services, especially minuscule commission services – these are best handled throng convenience stores. But … as with anything I write about here, what you do in your business is up to you.

For the one shop I have that offers MYKI top-ups, we will continue until the government decides otherwise. We don’t rely on it. It’s not core. But, it is a customer service that is appreciated locally … and for that we are grateful.

Happy 2023!

 

Footnote for any journalist finding this post. Newsagents losing MYKI is no biggie. It was always going to happen. The bottom-line value of MYKI is small. Local Aussie newsagency businesses have defined by what we do for ourselves rather than why suppliers do to us. It has been thus for many years now.

6 likes
Newsagency challenges

Our suburban newsagency sold $9,000 in boxed Christmas cards in November, and 80% of that was online

Our small suburban newsXpress business in Mount Waverley sold $9,000 worth of charity boxed Christmas cards over the 30 days of November 2022.

80% of the boxed Christmas card sales were to online shoppers.

Online purchases of boxed Christmas cards have taken off for us this year, after already terrific sales in 2021 and 2020.

We are not doing anything special. Any retailer of boxed Christmas cards could do this from any location.

But having said that, we do carry a broad range, describe the cards so they are found through Google searches and we regularly pitch on social media, leading with the charities the cards support.

There are some in our channel who say that online is a small part of newsagency businesses and that most newsagents ts are not even doing online. I think these types of comments are ignorant and designed to discourage newsagents engaging in online.

Again, what we are doing in this newsagency in suburban Mount Waverley any newsagent, any retailer, could do.

The thing is, what this business is doing with charity boxed Christmas cards is only part of the online story. This business has already passed $300,000 in online sales this year. No, that is not a typo, $300,000 … of good margin sales.

The detail of what we are doing is part of the DNA of newsXpress, in the advice it provides for store specific websites – about range, margin opportunities, product descriptions, online marketing, and plenty more. What we are doing in this business we are also doing in another business, for a different category of products, with similar success.

Online retail is strong, but competitive, high-value, but challenging. It is an opportunity to play outside the constraints of the shingle, an opportunity to leverage space and labour to improve the return on these business costs.

To be clear, a newsagent selling online does not have to restrict what they sell to what is sold in a newsagency. We are in some of our businesses, but not in others.

Once you have established yourself online, thanks to excellent insights data and captured customer data it is easy to grow at a faster rate than in a physical store. 

I get that plenty of newsagents will read this and think they cannot achieve the same. You will never know if you stand still.

There remain many online opportunities that newsagents can leverage to drive the value of their businesses and to improve the efficiency in their use off labour, space and more in their businesses.

Important footnote: The value of the online boxed Christmas cards purchases goes beyond the cared themselves. These shoppers do put other things in the basket – not all but plenty, making their shopping with us even more valuable.

Second footnote: This is a business without lotteries and without magazines FYI. I mention that to reinforce-orce that we do not have two key and newsagency-traditional traffic drivers in the business.

11 likes
Greeting Cards

newsXpress partners with the Royal Australian Mint to get more Donation Dollars into the hands of Australian’s in the lead up to Christmas.

This is a big deal, a respected government organisation partnering with local commercial businesses, local newsXpress stores, in an initiative that has community at its heart. The Donation Dollar is all about encouraging Aussies to give to charities and community groups.

The Donation Dollar is a respected initiative, something that has attracted praise from around the world.

The engagement by newsXpress stores in this is a wonderful opportunity for the members of the group.

MEDIA RELEASE 23 November 2022 

More Donation Dollars out in circulation in the lead up to Christmas 

Today, the Royal Australian Mint (the Mint) launched a new initiative to get more Donation Dollars into the hands of Australian’s in the lead up to Christmas.

This initiative, which will be rolled out at newsXpress retail stores across the country from 24 November, encourages people to swap their change for Donation Dollars and increase charitable giving in the lead up to the Christmas holiday season.

Managing Director of newsXpress stores, Mark Fletcher said “We are excited to be working with the Royal Australian Mint on this important initiative. With nearly 200 stores across Australia, newsXpress can help get Donation Dollars into the hands of thousands of Australians in all parts of the country.”

Royal Australian Mint CEO, Leigh Gordon, said rolling out this initiative through newsXpress stores will make Donation Dollar more accessible to Australians.

“We have minted one Donation Dollar for every Australian as a tangible reminder of the importance of giving back. Donation Dollars have been distributed through the banks since September 2020 with an estimated six million currently in circulation. While Australians will continue to come across Donation Dollars, this partnership with newsXpress means that Australians don’t need to wait to find a Donation Dollar in their change, they can simply visit one of the newsXpress stores to get their hands on a Donation Dollar – making this hard working coins more accessible to all. Every dollar out in circulation, is another dollar working to make Australia better.

The coin is designed to be instantly recognisable with the words Give to Help Others and a green centre with a gold ripple design emanating from the centre symbolising the ongoing impact each donation dollar makes to those who need it most.

“Since its launch in September 2020, 2.8 million Australians have found and donated one or more donation dollars to a charity or a business or person in need. Independent research commissioned by the Mint shows that the average donation prompted by the Donation Dollar is $21, equating to approximately $59 million in donations generated by this initiative to date.

“I encourage all Australians to visit their nearest newsXpress store and swap their regular dollars for a Donation Dollar, or check their change, car consoles and saving jars for this very special coin. When you get your hands on a Donation Dollar, remember to donate it to someone in need, whether this is a charity, homeless person or struggling business,” said Mr Gordon.

From tomorrow, Australians can head into their local newsXpress retail store and swap their dollars for Donation Dollars. For more information and to find a participating newsXpress agency, visit www.donationdollar.com.au

About the Royal Australian Mint 

The Mint is an award-winning, world class Mint and a global leader in the mint industry. The Mint produces circulating coins for Australia and other countries; collectible and investment coins for domestic and international customers; and custom-made medals, medallions and tokens for individual or corporate clients.

The Mint is also a national cultural attraction that educates millions of Australians and international visitors on the history of Australia’s decimal currency, and the significance and value of coins.

About the Donation Dollar 

The Donation Dollar is an official circulating coin, designed to be given, not spent or kept. The Royal Australian Mint will produce 25 million Donation Dollars, one for every Australian. If every Australian donates one Donation Dollar a month, an additional $300 million every year can be raised for those who need it most.

Coins are efficient products in that people visiting to purchase coins often purchase other items in the business as many coin sets are purchased as gifts.

Now, the Donation Dollar is a bit different as it can be purchased but will more likely be handed out as change – this iOS hope the Mint is keen for it to reach the community.

 

Note: I am the Managing Director of newsXpress Pty Ltd

7 likes
Newsagency opportunities

Terrific online sales for newsagents

Plenty of newsagents with their own website are enjoying terrific online sales, and by terrific I mean good enough to add real value to the bottom line of the business.

In my own 4 shops we run for store specific Shopify websites, and they are doing well … but more on the results of those another time.

For many years, newsXpress has offered free access to members to sell on network connected Magento based tech websites for Jigsaws, Pop! Vinyls and Beanie Boos. These websites generate online sales for businesses without the need for a local store website.

What’s unique about the websites is that they offer shoppers a single warehouse view for items located across the fleet of connected newsXpress businesses. This tech was built before Magento offered it. It was ground-breaking on so many levels.

People shopping on the site can also see exact current stock on hand data at the store level. We do this to drive in-store traffic. We know from Telstra data that more than half of the time people use a website is to see what stock is available in a shop they are considering visiting.

By offering shoppers access to inventory across a fleet of stores drives a deeper basket. The tech of the website preferences stores closest to the delivery destination, fanning out based on availability.

It is common to see big sales, like this one from yesterday morning going to  Moreton Bay in Queensland:

Placed on 12 November 2022 7:34:38 am AEDT
Item Store Sku Qty Subtotal
Slush the Dog Large Beanie Boo newsXpress Gifted & More Kaleen 008421370696 1 $59.99
Prince the Blue Husky Medium Beanie Boo newsXpress Gifted & More Kaleen 008421364749 1 $17.99
Nori the Narwhal Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Sarina 008421362165 1 $9.99
Buff the Husky Regular Beanie Babies newsXpress George Town 008421421831 1 $9.99
Twiggy the Pink Owl Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress George Town 008421368464 2 $19.98
Melly the Gray Koala Regular Beanie Bellies newsXpress Southland 008421407262 1 $9.99
Camilla the Poodle Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Sarina 008421363834 1 $9.99
Halloween Tatters the White Mummy Regular Beanie Bellies newsXpress Southland 008421409266 1 $9.99
Christmas Bella the Brown Bear regular Beanie Boo newsXpress George Town 008421372409 1 $9.99
Chessie the Brown Monkey Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Sarina 008421363919 1 $9.99
Romeo the Valentine’s Day Dog Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress George Town 008421368648 1 $9.99
Turbo the Spotted Turtle Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Newhaven 008421363926 2 $19.98
Juliet the Valentine’s Day Penguin Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Sarina 008421368655 1 $9.99
Tamoo the Monkey Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress George Town 008421368471 1 $9.99
Lola the Multicoloured Llama Regular Beanie Babies newsXpress Newhaven 008421412174 1 $9.99
Yips the Chihuahua with Horn Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Gifted & More Kaleen 008421363209 1 $9.99
Christmas Kinley the Brown Reindeer Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Treendale 008421364992 1 $9.99
Halloween Drizella the Crimson Bat Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Sefton Plaza 008421364961 1 $9.99
Grindal the Dragon with Horn Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Southland 008421363216 1 $9.99
Sheldon the Coral Octopus Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Gifted & More Kaleen 008421363902 1 $9.99
Halloween Radar the Bat Beanie Boo newsXpress Treendale 008421362370 1 $9.99
Jamal the Camel Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress Sefton Plaza 008421362233 1 $9.99
Gilda the Pink Flamingo Slippers Medium newsXpress Newhaven 008421953387 1 $29.99
Bamboo the Panda Slippers Medium newsXpress Newhaven 008421953363 1 $29.99
Bamboo the Panda Sequin Square Purse newsXpress Sefton Plaza 008421951420 1 $24.99
Whimsy the Cat Sequin Square Purse newsXpress Treendale 008421951512 1 $24.99
Lion King Nala Regular Beanie Babies newsXpress Southland 008421412648 1 $14.99
Dexter the Brown Chihuahua Regular Beanie Boo newsXpress George Town 008421368785 1 $9.99
Subtotal $432.70
Shipping & Handling $0.00
GST $39.34
Grand Total $432.70

For orders over $100.00 shipping is free. It is subsidised by newsXpress to help member businesses maintain good margin. They purchase the Boos for a lower price than any other retailer, which also helps.

I share this here today for a few reasons:

  • There are some in our channel who talk down online, saying it is not big in newsagency businesses. I know of plenty of newsagency businesses where online is more than 25% of revenue. I suspect they talk it down as that narrative suits their commercial interests.
  • There are some newsagents who don’t think they can do online. Some of the businesses listed above thought that too. All they had to do is to flick a switch to get sales.
  • Online revenue is usually to people you will never see in your shop. It’s icing on the cake revenue that leverages existing inventory, labour and space.
  • Collaboration magnifies the value opportunity for newsagents. Our channel started as a collective of small businesses working together. Over the years, the collective faded away. Small businesses collaborating to support a single website help those businesses win sales they would otherwise not win. This sale, a not uncommon sale, is an example of the value of collaboration.
  • Actions speak louder than words. In our marketing, newsXpress says it offers these types of group member websites. This post backs that up with evidence. This Boo website has been live for many years. It has generated millions of dollars in revenue.
  • Some in our channel say Beanie Boo sales are dead. I say there is no evidence is sales revenue that is the case.
  • Some say it costs too much in stock. I know of newsXpress businesses winning good Boo sales from $1,000 in stock.
  • Some say online is too hard. It’s not when you have good head office support and good tech for capturing and managing sales.
  • Small businesses can compete with big businesses. This sale represents and the Boo website offers proof that small business retailers can compete with big businesses. Big W, target and K-Mart can’t and don’t match what this time offers, and shoppers understand that.

The big thing about online and those who talk it down or question results, you don’t know what you don’t know. By this I mean, unless you are active in the online space, and I mean deeply active here running 1, 2, 3 or more consumer-facing websites of your own and have done so for several years, you really don’t know what you don’t know.

I have discovered that for myself.

We launched a new consumer-facing website a few months ago. It did okay, but was soft. We looked at how people engaged, where they spent time, what they picked up but did not purchase, and more. We modified the website and it was like turning on a tap. $15,000 in sales in 4 weeks. $15,000 additional revenue for the newsagency business. 50% margin business. Business leveraging existing stock, labour and space. And, this website is a baby, it’s not even walking yet.

I have to say, though, that what I have not yet covered here is the website failures, and there are some glorious failures that have been wonderful learning experience. the successes today stand on the broken bones of those files websites. It’s what happens in business: try something and if it fails it becomes a success by teaching you things.

Online is not going away. I think it is essential for every retail business to have an online opportunity in their business. The best opportunities will come from those connected to, those who understand your business those who want to help you bring it to life for you, and not your local web developer or accountant.

Is this a newsXpress pitch? Kind of. But it is more a pitch about the importance and value of being online, being found by people who do not walk past your front door … because it is those people who offer you the icing on the cake opportunity, the bottom line net profit hit we all love to see.

8 likes
Newsagency management

5 reasons why Christmas 2022 may not be the same as Christmas 2021, and why that’s okay

Some media outlets are running stories about a downturn in shopper confidence and predictions from some questionable retail ‘experts’ saying Christmas 2022 will be down on 2021.

I think it would be unhelpful to get drawn into what might be.

We can’t change customer sentiment ourselves, just as in our small businesses we cannot change statewide or national retail performance.

We can only focus on that over which we have control. If we put out the best Christmas offer we can and market it in the best way we are able, that’s all we can ask of ourselves.

Christmas 2022 may not be as good as Christmas 2021 for newsagents and here’s why:

  • For chunks of 2021, borders were closed and many were in lockdown. That meant people planning on sending gifts rather than being with people in person.
  • There was more handout money in the economy in 2021, mainly from Covid support programs.
  • Interest rates were stable in 2021. They are not as bad in 2022 as some media outlets shout about, but they are on the rise and some people have taken on debt without considering that the cost of the debt may rise.
  • Plenty of our competitor retailers had been closed through lockdowns, some did not reopen. New businesses have opened since.
  • Even though 2021 was Covid impacted, we all knew were we stood, there was more certainty in restrictions. Plenty are still getting used to less regulation / control.

Odd as it may be, I think 2022 feels more disrupted than 2021 because we are on the other side of Covid restrictions, but Covid is very much still here. Business rosters are still being impacted by Covid. Working from home continues to be a thing for many. The supply chain continues to be a mess. Product quality out of some countries is worse.

Another factor I could have added to the above list is that some people are staying away from shops because of the lack of Covid restrictions. People who are immunocompromised, for example, may choose to not venture into Christmas retail.

We don’t know what’s ahead. I suspect this unknown has enough people being cautious that it impacts shopper behaviour. For what it’s worth, I think a good value proposition this Christmas will do well.

Now, all of this relates to in-store. What about online? Well, since you asked … I suspect online will have a good Christmas in part because the pool from which online draws knows no borders and in that is opportunity for smart and engaged retailers. The other benefit of online is that we have data, excellent data, about what the shopper is looking for, where they are, whether they are a first time visitor or a returning shopper, and more. Plus, with online, it’s easy to tap them on their shoulder as they leave and pitch an opportunity – these exit pitches tend to work at least 10% of the time.

So, yeah, Christmas 2022 may not be as good as Christmas 2021 … but I bet it will be better than Christmas 2019 and that is the comparison that I will look at, that is the comparison that matters.

For now, though, we need to focus on all over which we have control: what we stock, how we display it, in-store customer service and our own personal touches that make shopping in our shops different, more enjoyable, more memorable. That’s all we can do … focus on that over which we have control.

I wish our news outlets were more thoughtful in their coverage of what might be. What I have seen recently is likely to have a negative impact, even though the ‘reporting’ has not been based on evidence. Anyone can write a story based on a survey of what people may do. It’s speculation, unhelpful.

15 likes
Newsagency management

How newsXpress is helping newsagents increase card sales

newsXpress has launched a integrated in-store and online cam pain to encourage uplift in card sales in its member newsagency businesses.

At the heart of the campaign is 2 cards designed and printed on quality stock in Melbourne, cards with captions that are not common in the Christmas card mix.

I am not aware of any similar campaign ever and am proud to be part of a team bringing this to life for local small business newsagents.

Here’s a video I shot Sunday explaining the campaign.

Here is some of the kit of digital assets provided to newsXpress members to support this campaign.

This campaign is 100% free for newsXpress members. It’s set to drive terrific commercial and social value.

I am the managing director of newsXpress. While this may look like a sales pitch for the marketing group, it is also a call to action to everyone involved with cards in newsagencies to actively engage in increasing card sales. Putting cards in a pocket is not enough.

Helping people understand the value of a greeting card beyond that moment they receive it, open it and read it is key to what we are trying here. Showing people reasons to give cards beyond the traditional is a factor. Using the card as a means for creating a keepsake for years to come is also key.

The more all of us in card retail engage with these and other ways to broaden the value proposition of cards the more we can expect to sell. It is vital we do this.

Our competitors in the card space, major retailers, are only interested in moving stock. Marketing to them is most likely to be price (discount) related. I don’t see any of them engaged with any ac giving to broaden the appeal of cards, to get people buying more than usual.

This campaign is designed to offer newsXpress stores an exclusive value with a category engaging opportunity at its core.

I appreciate there may be some who make fun of or criticise this campaign. If you hear that, please ask what they are doing to grow card sales, to grow engagement with the card category, to pitch cards in a way that nurtures engagement beyond the first opening of a card.

This campaign has only been live a few days and already the feedback has been terrific.

10 likes
Greeting Cards

Unfortunate coverage by the ABC of the Nine Media decision on newspapers in Tasmania

The ABC yesterday reported that Nine Media will review the decision to stop same day access to print editions of The Australian Financial Review and The Age in Tasmania.

However later on Wednesday, Australian Lottery and Newsagent Association (ALNA) chief executive Ben Kearney said he had been contacted by Nine and told the decision was under review.

He said no timeline was given, and the original intention may still stand.

“They’re going to look at that decision and consider some of the other options that might be available, so certainly from our point of view that’s really good news, that’s what we’ve asked for,” he said.

A couple of points in the ABC article have me scratching my head.

Newsagency co-owner Teresa Sturzaker said her Hobart business would take a financial hit if the original decision went ahead.

“The direct hit is a $25,000 profit per annum, so it’s about $2,000 a month that we’ll lose straight off the top starting,” she told ABC Radio Hobart.

The $2,000 a month figure from The Age and the AFR seems high. It equals $8,000 a month in sales of these 2 titles in one business. If that’s what they do, it’s awesome. But if that’s what they do I’d have thought Nine Media would have a plan B for them. If it’s a distribution business, based on what Nine and News have been doing around Australia it is only a matter of time before it is taken from the newsagent and managed through one of the new publisher distribution partners.

Launceston newsagent Garry Matthews said he would lose a lot more than just newspaper sales.

“Probably across the board, you’re not going to attract your general walk-ins anymore,” he said.

“If they no longer can come in and buy a paper and a cordial … it just means there’s one good reason why they don’t come.”

“It’s pretty sad that a big company like Nine should really care very little about Tasmania.”

Any newsagent running a retail business built and relying on shoppers coming in to buy a paper and a cordial is doomed. Supermarkets and convenience stores own that business. Over the counter purchase of newspapers has been in steady and predictable decline for 15 years. While there is an occasional bump because of a news story, the downward trajectory is set.

Smart newsagents years ago started attracting shoppers for other reasons. In know newsagents in rural and regional Australia, in small towns, that are thriving because they made this shift. Sure, they still sell papers, but they do not rely on them.

The report by the ABC yesterday plays in to an old and out of date narrative that does not serve the newsagency channel well. It makes our businesses look out of date. It does not reflect accurate reporting. The ABC should do better on this.

What people read in The Age and AFR is old news. The opinions that pack their pages are old, too. How people access this has fundamentally changed forever. There is no going back.

What News Corp. and Nine Media are focussed on right now is to achieve the best landing for their businesses, for their shareholders, and that does not include sustaining print forever. If you are a shareholder in either or both you’d want them to maximise profit as that sets your return. If print editions in Tasmania are loss making, you’d want them cut regardless of an emotive story from newsagents.

I get that it will be unpopular to call out the quotes from newsagents as I have done. We owe each other the truth. The truth is, print newspapers are in decline. The publishers have demonstrated this to us through their decisions over the years.

More fool any newsagent who expects the publishers to put newsagent needs ahead of the needs of their shareholders. Publishers have only one legal obligation, and that is to their shareholders. Any emotive argument to the contrary will fail.

My advice to newsagents for years has been and is today:

  • Choose to be a retailer, not an agent. the two are quite different. One makes you the driver of your success while the other tethers you to the success of others.
  • Chase new traffic every day. The more reasons for which you attract shoppers, the more sustainable your business.
  • Convenience is not a future for indie retailers like newsagents. Convenience retail in Australia is owned by big businesses with deep pockets, which which you cannot compete.
  • Don’t be your barrier to success. Too often I see local small business retailers decide against something for their business that will work.
  • Size doesn’t matter. Some of the most successful newsagency businesses in Australia today are small. Size is irrelevant.
  • Location dosen’t matter. Some of the most successful newsagencies in Australia are regional and rural.
  • The shingle doesn’t matter. The newsagency shingle is irrelevant to what you can achieve.
  • Only you can save you. No supplier, no association can save your business, only you can.
  • Make every day your pay day. The value of your business today is what you make today, not what you dream of selling it for in the future. Make every decision on that basis.

There is upside for our channel, plenty of good news. I talked about this recently when sharing the results of a traditional newsagency that I am fortunate to be helping to evolve: https://vimeo.com/756607390 I know of many success stories of growth and profit in our channel, in businesses that sell newspapers, but which to not rely on newspapers.

22 likes
Newsagency challenges

Don’t get in the way of what people want – management advice for newsagents

In business I often see retailers get in the way of shoppers through shop floor placement, product ranging decisions and other moves. I see it online, too, and online is what I want to talk about today …

Too often, small business build a website for their business that is niche-focussed, and they steadfastly stay within the niche, missing opportunities to win sales to people looking for other items.

For sure, it is vital that a website have a USP (unique selling proposition), a focus. But, it is equally vital, and valuable, that a website for a local retail business, like a newsagency, offers other products. It could be the other products that surprise you with results.

In one of my shops, the smallest shop I have, we have a niche website focussed on Christmas ornaments. We have other products there though, non-Christmas products. we put them there over a year ago, and they tick along.

One of the ranges we put there was Giving Plates and it is this range I want to discuss here today. Over the months we have climbed the Google rankings for Giving Plates. Today, we are #1 for a giving plate search. A consequence of this is, for example, is $300 in sales of these over this weekend.

The focus of our website on Christmas ornaments remains, and it ranks very well with Google for that focus. The other products we have added to the website, the products outside the core focus of the website, benefit from its position, and this is where real value is achieved for the business.

If we kept the website to its niche focus, we’d miss these other sales. Not stocking these non niche or core products online would, in my view, be us blocking certain revenue, bankable value for the business. In dollar terms, we’d miss $50,000+ a year in sales. I say we’d miss them because almost none of the people who shop with us online come into our shop.

Online is brutal, fast and valuable. It’s critical we embrace it and do so is a way that does not block what we could achieve for the business.

Did we think the Giving Plates would sell online? No, not really. We thought people would prefer to see them min person and that they would be nervous about having them posted. Both assumptions were wrong. The good thing for us was that even though we thought we knew how people would react, it did not stop us allowing people to show us how they would actually react.

It’s wonderful empowering shoppers to do what they want. It is through their freedom that we can learn more about what we and our businesses can achieve.

So, what does this mean? If your website sells books, put other items on there. If it sells baby products, put other items on there. see what I mean. You can do this in a way that does not distract from the core focus of your website.

17 likes
Management tip