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

newsagency marketing

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

Why buying a birthday card at your local newsagency is better than buying it somewhere else or not at all

Sure you can say happy birthday, or send a text, but nothing beats a card they can hold and keep. It’s that memory that makes the card more valuable, more loved, more appreciated. A birthday card is a keepsake for years. A text message or happy birthday said is not the same. Cards are valuable, for years.

Here’s why buying a birthday card from your local newsagency is a good move:

  1. Convenience: Your local newsagency is local. You don’t have to go out of your way to visit a specialty card store or spend time searching for the perfect card online our deal with the small range in a supermarket. Pop into your local newsagency, browse the selection, and find the perfect card in no time.
  2. Personal touch: When you buy a birthday card at a newsagency, you can add a personal touch to your gift because of the range on offer. You can choose a card that reflects the recipient’s personality or interests, or add a heartfelt message that shows how much you care. It’s a small gesture, but it can make a big difference.
  3. Supporting local businesses: The newsagency closest to you is most likely locally owned and run, and supportive of the local community. Shopping with them helps you and where you live. You’re helping to keep the community vibrant and ensuring that small businesses can continue to thrive. It’s a win-win situation!
  4. Variety: Newsagencies have more cards than other retailers. Range matters if you want to find the right card for your situation. In your local newsagency card department you can find cards for all ages, genders, occasions and situations. Whether you’re looking for a funny card, a rude card (yes we have those), a sentimental card, or something in between, you’re sure to find it at a newsagency.
  5. Help: Ask and the folks at your local newsagency are sure to offer help in your selection. They can provide you some options based on what it is that you say you need.

Buying a birthday card or any card at a newsagency is a smart choice for anyone looking for convenience, variety, and a personal touch.

The more we send cards the more we bank memories into the future and that matters in the relationships we cherish.

7 likes
newsagency marketing

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

Pitching everyday stationery in in the newsagency in a fresh and fun way

Rather than the usual function focus of stationery, newsXpress has released a batch of digital collateral to its newsagency members designed for social media that pitches everyday, and some forgotten, stationery lines in a way that is fresh and, I think, fun.

I mention this today because it is easy for shoppers to forget we stock these everyday lines. We need to engage with pitching them, to capture sales that can otherwise go elsewhere, including online.

Everyday we need a fun and fresh pitch on social media, and every so often we need to promote these to get them in front of people outside those who already know about us.

Posts like these are easy to make and of the marketing groups can do them, and even individuals can do them. The time investment is not considerable.

While for sure what you do in your business is up to you, and I know no one will retire on the proceeds of these posts. But, they are a good small step no cost approach to making the store relatable, and fun, and that does count for something.

I guess the other point I’d make is these posts are not what one might expect from a bug business competitor, and that matters.

10 likes
Newsagency management

Hey Aussies, the local newsagency may not be what you think it is (part 1)

Take a look at part of the Christmas story at newsXpress Sarina, located half an hour out of Mackay in Queensland. Sarina has a population of 5,000. The shop is a stand-out in town for Ita range, and its retail innovation.

What a joyful shop to shop!

Too many journalists and too many Aussies think of a newsagency as we were twenty or more years ago. Times have changed for many, thankfully. Many newsagency shops today are innovative, inviting and thriving!

What Shelley, Mark and the entire team at Sarina does is excellent, best practice retail. Their shop attracts people from out of town. years ago, theirs was a more traditional shop. They have made it what it is by leaning into change.

newsXpress Sarina is a good newsagency journalists and others need to think of next time they go to talk down our channel.

23 likes
Newsagency management

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

We can’t ignore Black Friday in the newsagency

Black Friday, a retail sales tradition that has its roots in the post Thanksgiving sales United States from around 100 years ago.

Amazon really got behind Black Friday. Today in the US, you’d see almost every retailer engaged in one way or another.

Here in Australia, engagement with Black Friday has grown, slowly at first, faster in recent years.

This year, walk around any mall or along any high street shopping setting ad you will see retailers engaged.

Black Friday is an opportunity to quit slower lines and to sell items sourced specifically. It’s also an opportunity to make space before the run home to Christmas.

There are no rules around what to discount or the level of discounts. But because the season is now sir widely adopted, you are in a crowded marketplace and need to yell to be seen and heard.

In my experience, engaging with Black Friday is worth it. We play in-store and well as online. We go out 2 or 3 days before Friday and run through to midnight Monday. Our discounts range from 40% to 50%. We have a good mix of products purchased at a discount so as to maintain GP%.

It’s not too late to engage this year is you move fast today. The display does not need to be special. The key is placement in the best position on the shop floor, simple signage and a pitch on social media.

0 likes
Newsagency management

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

Halloween can be as big as you make it

I know of newsagency businesses doing thousands of dollars in Halloween products by going big with home decor items for lavish parties.

Others do well with spider webs, blood and pumpkin buckets.

Others do well with plush.

The thing is, Halloween is a good season for fun in the shop, for events, and for sales.

It very much is one of those seasons that you get from it what you invest, in-store and out of stores. Yes, it’s work, but in the right area the rewards can be terrific.

2 likes
newsagency marketing

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

Selling outside your newsagency – a free workshop for newsagents about online, how to, where to and when to

Join me online for a free workshop this Monday, October 17, at 10:30am Melbourne time in which I will explore with you how, when and where to sell to people who will never shop in your shop.

I will share experiences:

  • Selling interstate.
  • Selling overseas.
  • Dealing with fraud.
  • Packing and shipping.
  • How to sell what you don’t have in your shop.
  • Pre-selling.
  • Payment methods.
  • Marketing, including Google image advertising.

I will also cover factors that may mean online is not for you.

In addition to the group websites my business has created for retailers in the newsXpress marketing group, I have single-store online shops connected to three of my retail businesses, each in a specialty niche, each attracting good business. I’ll take you under the hood to see what that looks like and explain how any retailer can do this.

This is not a sales or marketing event. It is pure business advice you can go use any time that suits.

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/86896859959?pwd=aFdTdGNuSXZvOUxuL1pFUWpya0FzQT09
Meeting ID: 868 9685 9959 Passcode: 877510

Online is here to stay, and sales from online are growing. My goal with this session is to provide information so you can make informed decisions about online.

While the session will be recorded, I will decide after the event whether I release it.

3 likes
Newsagency management

If you have 10 minutes, join me on a look at the difference newsXpress has made to this high street Melbourne business, and see the value of engagement with cards

One reason I own newsagencies is to show, rather than tell. The high street Malvern business is an example of that. Take a look at the September numbers in this business:

As I say in the video, everything we are doing in the business is what is offered and pitched to newsXpress members. There is nothing exclusive or unique in the approach here.

For sure, we are proud of the results so far.

And, yes, this business does not have lotteries.

14 likes
newsagency marketing

Join me on a visit to the awesome Woods Grove in Brooklyn, New York

Woods Grove is one of the best gift shops I have seen. I am grateful to visit there a few weeks ago, and speak with one of the owners. Here’s a short video in which I share some highlights.

The visit was part of a newsXpress retail study tour where we visited a bunch of innovative and successful local indie retail businesses relevant to the Aussie newsagency channel.

6 likes
Newsagency management

Tower Systems announces new free online marketplace for local independent retailers including newsagents

Tower Systems is launching www.findit.com.au, a free marketplace for local indie retailers like you. Listing products on FindIt will be free for Tower Systems customers.
 
Our goal for FindIt is to help customers looking online for items you sell, to drive traffic to your shop.
 
All Tower Systems POS software customers have access to FindIt for free.
 
We have built FindIt because of the growing importance of being online to in-store retail, and because some retailers are challenged with creating and running their own website. This is a no cost / low cost solution to help you be found online.
 
If you do have your own website, you will still be able to list on FindIt if you wish.
 
Retailers can choose to sell through FindIt, or just list what they have available in-store. If they do sell through FindIt, there is a fee of 10%. This covers Tower for credit card fees and Afterpay fees once that is live. It also covers us for credit card fraud claims. Retailers choose whether to sell through FindIt or not. Again, to list products and have your shop found is free.
 
We are hosting the website on a large secure and fast server in a remote data centre. We are also doing the backend SEO work to raise the Google profile.
 
Customers will land on the website from Google. As the ranking of the site increases, products on FindIt will list in Google results. Customers will be able to add items from multiple retailers to a FindIt basket in a transaction.
 
The FindIt website confirms the order to the customer and provides the retailer with a recipient created tax invoice. Retailers will be able to go to their FindIt vendor panel to download a picking slip.
 
 
 
  

 

Retailers choose the price of what they sell – it can be their web price or their retail price. In the Tower Systems POS software, retailers choose whether a product is listed online.
 
The image for a product will be the first image loaded for a product. If a retailer has a better image than the first one loaded by another retailer, it would take a manual process to change it, a process not currently in place. The same applies to descriptions. 
 
We connect products by barcode. If a retailer generates their own barcode for an item already on FindIt, it will treat that product as a new item.
 
The price will be the retailer’s price – yes, multiple retailers on FindIt could result in different prices for the same item.
The product description is the key. Our advice on this is to try and think about what someone is likely to type into Google.
 
Retailers will have the option to be either freight free or charge. If a retailer has product dimensions and have selected to charge freight, the Australia Post plug-in we have will calculate a freight charge. Retailers will also have an option, on their vendor page in FindIt to set a flat freight charge if you wish.
 
We currently serve over 3,000 local small business independent retailers. Across that eco system there are more than 100,000 unique products. FindIt has the potential to be an important marketplace. 
 
We are around 3 weeks away from launch. 
 
In terms of the launch tho, it will be soft, no major fanfare. We’re taking a Field of Dreams approach … building it in the hope they do come.
 
This is a new space for us and for our customers. There will be missteps along the way for sure. We will evolve the site based on what we learn from these and from your feedback. 
 
We are excited to help local indie retailers find new shoppers for your business.
Find out more about our Tower Systems POS software at our website, www.towersystems.com.au, where you can also easily watch demonstrations of our software. We only supply independent retailers. Plus, our software is Aussie made and supported.
 
For a personal demonstration or to discuss your POS software needs:
  • sales@towersystems.com.au
  • 1300 662 957.
15 likes
Newsagency management

Online, what matters more? You, or what you sell?

Newspower recently sent our marketing that claimed 6,245,277 searches on Google. I knew this was wrong and shared with them data on actual Newspower searches.

The Newspower website itself gets around 16,800 visitors a month. The term Newspower accounts for 3.42% of its traffic. The Newspower website traffic appears to have dropped around 30% over the last 18 months. I shared this with Newspower and their CEO said the claim of 6,245,277 Newspower searches on Google has been mistakenly stated. It was not our intention to mislead any reader with this information, and we will now advise those readers with clarification of the information.

Here is comparative traffic data that I collected this morning using SEMRUSH for 4 newsagent brands / groups.

The thing is, though, this does not matter.

What matters is what people search for online.

newsXpress has a comprehensive, easy to access, multi-faceted online strategy across multiple web platforms. Since I own a newsagency software company too, I have made sure this is easy, and successful for our members.

But back to what people search for online. Here’s a 13 minute video I made this morning that offers real data examples.

If you want revenue from online shoppers, my advice is that you seek it from multiple channels: your own website, websites connected with your marketing group, social media and more.

We have moved from the one pathway to sales, through your shop front door, to today’s world of many pathways, which often connect.

How, when and where people shop has fundamentally changed. This was happening long before Covid. But, Covid, has sped things up.

A challenge when it comes to online is trust. Plenty of people and businesses make claims. Ask for evidence supporting any claim. Their response to you asking for evidence could indicate a simple mistake, deliberate misleading or ignorance … it could also provide evidence that their claim was accurate, which would be ideal.

Online is like to gold rush era of the 1800s in Australia. It’s a rush with people of varying skills and experience our there, in the rush. take care to make informed decisions.

And, yes, it is vital you join the rush. Too much business today is transacted online for you to not engage. Engage now and expect to sell to people you’ve not sold to before.

21 likes
newsagency marketing

Early start to charity boxed Christmas card sales

We decided to kick off access to charity boxed Christmas cards early this year at our online store, and sales have been good.

Some customers purchase only cards while others buy ornaments and other items and add a box or two of cards into their purchase. The basket data is fascinating as we try and figure out the initial shopping intent.

Looking back over the charity boxed Christmas cards sales this year already and for Christmas season last year, not one of the purchases was from a customer local to us. There were several businesses that bought big, which was terrific. In fact, I think this business opportunity is something newsagents could leverage.

We have had this range of charity boxed Christmas cards in the shop through the year and while they have sold okay, it’s online where there is more interest. I guess that is because online makes it easier for us to reach those early seasonal planners.

The other point that is interesting is that shoppers love that most of our charity boxed Christmas cards are Australian designed and made.

What we are doing with this website any newsagent or other retailer could do. For us, our approach is to grow the percentage of revenue the business earns from online versus in-store. Currently, for this shop, it sits at around 40% of revenue, which is at the high end for similar local Aussie retailers. It’s tough and relentless work keeping the data on the site up to date, answering customer queries and fulfilling – but the right processes can help streamline all of this. It pays off when you get good sales and repeat business.

In fact, repeat business is key for this type of seasonally-focussed business.

We are five years in and still growing, which we appreciate.

Anyway, back to my point – people are shopping early for charity boxed Christmas cards so if you have stock in the back room, consider getting it out and pitching it on social media and elsewhere. Being in front of an opportunity and winning business is better for you than someone else getting that revenue.

Footnote: the shop managing fulfilment of these purchases is not the same shop I mentioned in my previous post.

8 likes
Greeting Cards

5 reasons to buy your Father’s Day cards at a local newsagency this year

While you can buy Father’s Day cards in all sorts of shops, I encourage you to shop at your local newsagency, and here’s why …

  1. Newsagency businesses are local. Locally owned. Locally run. What you spend is more likely to stay within the local community, your community.
  2. Doing good. Newsagency businesses offer Father’s Day cards that support charities. Charities like RU OK?, which do wonderful work in the community.
  3. Awesome range. Newsagency businesses have the best range of cards, usually more than you will see elsewhere. From fun to serious, Fram dad to pa to pop to grandpa to uncle to step-dad, the caption range is excellent. There are also cards for people who have been like a dad to you.
  4. Make it special. Newsagency businesses often have gifts to go with the cards. Plenty of them have Australian made cards and gifts, too, which further serve the local community. If you are not sure what to give, ask for help.
  5. It’s easy. Newsagency businesses are likely to offer easy shopping, grab and go. Plenty have Father’s Day gift bundles made up, ready for treats for Dad.

Shopping early for Father’s Day is good because you get to choose from the broadest range. Then, you have time to post the card and gift.

So, when shopping for Father’s Day cards and gifts this year, consider your local newsagency. They would be grateful to get your business and do their best to serve your needs.

Where you shop its a choice, a choice that can impact beyond the cash you hand over. Look at any economic study comparing the local community impact of local small business retail versus locally based big business and you will read of practical and appreciated engagement form helping a local community group, free copying for a local charity and more.

Local retail businesses, like local newsagencies, make an impact that is valuable and important.

So when you make your next shopping choice, consider local, and when you think about buying a Father’;s Day card, please think about your local newsagency. They’d love to show you an awesome range of fresh design Father’s Day cards.

18 likes
newsagency marketing

Tower Systems promoting newsagents

My Tower Systems newsagency software company has produced another video promoting local newsagents and has been playing it via YouTube. So far, the sponsored video has more than 7,600 views – this is in 1 day.

The goal of the video is to remind people of value offered through local Aussie newsagents.

13 likes
magazines

What does newsXpress offer newsagents for its $175 a month membership fee?

A newsagent contacted me earlier this week asking why it didn’t help with leases and why it restricted the card company members could buy from. I explained that newsXpress does help with lease negotiation and that there is no restriction on the card company newsXpress members buy from. It turned out they had been misinformed by someone. Hmm…

Anyway, that call prompted me to make this new video in which I talk about what is included for the $175 a month membership fee to be part of this vibrant and proactive community of newsagents.

12 likes
newsagency marketing

The nursery opportunity for Aussie newsagents

Nursery related sales are strong in newsagencies strong in this segment. It stands to reason since our shops are the go-to shops for baby cards.

Too often, though, newsagents with strong baby card sales fail to leverage the gifting opportunity. This is true across the card captions – we have excellent data indicating purchase intent that we miss to leverage for gifting sales.

In my own shops, nursery product sales are terrific. This is driven in part by out of store marketing, but very effectively through in-store product placement and display. Like this feature display.

And this one.

These displays are not what shoppers expect to see in a newsagency, in terms of the displays themselves and the range of products on offer. These displays have been done by a team member with a gift for creating visually appealing and engaging displays, ensuring they are shapable, and enticing.

The displays in the photos are next to each other, with related products the same shopper may find appealing on the wall behind – to maximise the visit value for us.

Currently in Australia, there are 200,000 searches online each month for baby and nursery related gifts, placing the segment among top performers of retail related product searches. This search engine dataset is useful in that it reinforces the value of the segment, proves interest among shoppers. But, we can see that ourselves in our greeting card data, as I noted above.

For me, greeting card data is key to exploring other product segments we could expand in. We have used it for years, and benefited commercially from its use.

Any newsagent can do what I have described here. It’s easy:

  • Look at your card data.
  • Expand, with a modest budget, based on shopper intent opportunities.
  • Pull together existing product and modestly supplement with new product.
  • Create visually appealing displays.
  • Measure and adjust to need.

It’s all basic retail management really. It’s essential, especially in 2022 when we have the pandemic led opportunity to play outside what has been usual for our channel and when so many more people are living and working locally than prior to the pandemic.

If you’re not offering nursery related products check card sales in your newsagency … if they show opportunity, dive in.

6 likes
Newsagency management