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newsagency of the future

Video of Newsagency of the Future

We recorded the Newsagency of the Future START HERE workshop today.  This will be edited to something manageable in size over the next couple of weeks. Once this is done I’ll either load it somewhere people can access it or make copies available for mailing.

The four sessions this past week have enabled me to settle in fresh content and ideas to help newsagents transition their businesses.

Based on the feedback there are some terrific innovators out there – some newsagents embracing serious change.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagency of the future: START HERE starts next week

The NEWSAGENCY OF THE FUTURE: START HERE workshops are on next week and more than 100 have booked already for the free sessions.

This is a completely new workshop for newsagents only (no suppliers) with new content specifically targeting options for newsagents who want to restructure their businesses for the future (and today). The dates so far are:

  • Sydney – July 17 @10am venue Rydges Camperdown
  • Brisbane – July 18 @10am venue Brisbane Tech. Park, Eight Mile Plains
  • Adelaide – July 19 @10am venue Rydges South Park
  • Melbourne – July 20 @10am venue Amora Hotel River Walk Richmond

Book online by clicking here.

The workshop will run for two hours with plenty of Q&A time. It will cover specific traffic generating and basket building ideas for newsagents in shopping centre, high street and rural situations. I’ll look at strategy and tactics.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagencies in transition, opportunities abound

More and more newsagents are transitioning their businesses, embracing new traffic generating opportunities, taking on products not traditionally offered to newsagency shoppers and working on improving business efficiency.  I see the results in the business data I am fortunate to see almost every day.

What I see often are wise moves from newsagents with an eye to the future. Okay some moves don’t work … such is the nature of embracing change.

But there are plenty of newsagents who are not embracing change, newsagents waiting for others to ‘fix’ their businesses.

Newsagents who are not actively chasing change in their businesses today face a challenged future. The guaranteed traffic of newspaper, magazine and other shoppers is no longer guaranteed. We have to become proactive retailers.

We have to accept complete responsibility for our situation. Yes we can complain that others are to blame and we can feel let down by history … but that won’t change our situation today.

We have to accept complete responsibility for our situation.

This is good. It makes us, as business owners, responsible.

These are themes I am exploring in the new workshop: NEWSAGENCY OF THE FUTURE – START HERE. Click on the city to book a free sport: Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Adelaide.

For newsagents wanting a TO DO list, this session will be ideal. I am stripping away what we need to embrace change and will focus on change options available to newsagents.

I have some excellent case studies from newsagents well advanced in implementing change strategies. I also have some ideas from overseas to share.

There is no doing we are in transition. The opportunities for us are wonderful … if we embrace them.

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Newsagency management

Book now for Newsagency of the future: START HERE

I am hosting NEWSAGENCY OF THE FUTURE: START HERE, a completely new workshop for newsagents only (no suppliers) with new content specifically targeting options for newsagents who want to restructure their businesses for the future (and today).

The workshop will run for two hours with plenty of Q&A time. It will cover specific traffic generating and basket building ideas for newsagents in shopping centre, high street and rural situations. I’ll look at strategy and tactics.

The dates so far are:

  • Sydney – July 17 @10am venue TBA
  • Brisbane – July 18 @10am venue TBA
  • Adelaide – July 19 @10am venue TBA
  • Melbourne – July 20 @10am venue TBA

Book online by clicking here.

Our future is up to us. No supplier is going to deliver a future for us. We have to back ourselves, in our own businesses. This starts with us being aware of an accountable for our situation.

This is not a sales session. All newsagents are welcome. Attendance is free. One of the workshops will be video taped and an edited version made available for download.

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newsagency of the future

New Newsagency of the Future workshops

I am hosting NEWSAGENCY OF THE FUTURE: START HERE, a completely new workshop for newsagents only (no suppliers) with new content specifically targeting options for newsagents who want to restructure their businesses for the future (and today).

The workshop will run for two hours with plenty of Q&A time. It will cover specific traffic generating and basket building ideas for newsagents in shopping centre, high street and rural situations. I’ll look at strategy and tactics.

This is not a sales session. All newsagents are welcome. Attendance is free.

One of the workshops will be video taped and an edited version made available for download.

The dates I am planning so far are:

  • Sydney – July 17 @10am venue TBA
  • Brisbane – July 18 @10am venue TBA
  • Adelaide – July 19 @10am venue TBA
  • Melbourne – July 20 @10am venue TBA

Later this morning you will be able to book online by clicking here.

Our future is up to us. No supplier is going to deliver a future for us. We have to back ourselves, in our own businesses. This starts with us being aware of an accountable for our situation.

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newsagency of the future

Fairfax prepares for a digital only future. Are newsagents prepared?

Newspaper publisher Fairfax announced major changes to its operations today under the heading of FAIRFAX OF THE FUTURE.

The changes prepare the company for a digital only model.  Indeed, on page 17 of the investor briefing document, Fairfax acknowledges that the move to digital only is inevitable, tying remaining in print to revenue. With print revenues in steady decline for years, there can only be one end point, an exit from print.

Click on the image to see the point made on page 16 of the investor briefing. See the pie chart – 34% of the company’s cost base goes to production and distribution. The document notes these as: costs not required in a digital only model.

Every part of the announcement from Fairfax today prepares the company for a reduction and, possibly, ultimate complete retreat from print. The move of The Age and SMH to compact formats (great move and long overdue by the way), the introduction of digital subscriptions (somewhat overdue for their quality journalism offer), the closure of the Chullora and Tullamarine print sites and their digital-first editorial model make the end game clear for Fairfax … and for newsagents.

Fairfax has intensified its focus on cost cutting, targeting annualised savings of $235 million by 2015. It’s in a race again market forces as evidenced in the chart on page 12 of the investor briefing showing the Fairfax audience by media type … chilling stuff.

I suspect that market forces will impact this plan and see the company act on at least one or more of its daily mastheads either shedding some days from the print roster or move to a digital only platform before 2015. Circulation continues to decline for all but a couple of daily newspapers in Australia and this is putting pressure on advertising revenue. Page 17 of the investor briefing makes it clear Fairfax will move to a digital only model if print advertising and circulation revenue declines materially. I think this is happening.

A day by day analysis of the return achieved for The Age newspaper, for example, would, I suspect, reveal at least three days of the week to be loss making: Monday, Tuesday and Friday. I’d expect Wednesday to be doing okay because of classifieds (but only just as advertising is falling away rapidly), Thursday to be strong due to the Green Guide, Saturday to be strong due to advertising and Sunday to be strong due to a good weekend read.

If my assumptions (above) are right, we could (should) see The Age cut days. A number of seven day newspapers in the US have done this. Equally, Fairfax could switch from seven days to digital only of the cost savings of eliminating all production and distribution costs justified the move.  I think we are more likely to see days cut in advance of a complete move – but a switch to digital only is inevitable.

I’d note that the news itself will most likely result in fewer people reading the print products as it puts migration to digital more top of mind.

The Fairfax moves are focused solely on their share price. They should not come as a surprise to anyone, especially not to newsagents. However, I think there will be newsagents who are shocked by the Fairfax moves.

Some state based newsagent associations have spent and continue to spend more time and effort on print distribution issues and plans than on retail yet the future of our channel depends more on retail. I wonder when they will realise their mistake.

While there is value in distribution newsagents consolidating in pursuit of efficiencies, there is even greater value in developing a newsagency model in a world where most newspapers in Australia are replaced by digital only platforms. We know from Fairfax and News that distribution costs are a key focus. There is no up side for newsagents from this focus. What little control newsagents had to drive their distribution businesses is fading. But this is not news.  If only channel leaders realised this and engaged with their constituency more proactively. They should have been spending more time representing the whole channel and not just distribution.

Fairfax is doing what it needs to do for its survival. Its needs do not match the needs of newsagents. Newsagents need to act on what is right for them. In my case, the decision to get out of distribution years ago feels more right every day.

Are newsagents focused on their future? Some are but not enough of them. Hopefully, today’s announcement from Fairfax will be a wake-up call for those with their heads in the sand.

While I feel for the 1,900 jobs Fairfax will shed, many more will be shed in newsagencies as digital replaces print for new consumption. This is a moment of fundamental restructuring which cannot be blamed on anyone. We have seen it coming for a while. Maybe some of those losing their jobs will not engage with more flexible and content driven online platforms.

News Limited is next up to the microphone with their announcement.

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newsagency of the future

Find a way or fade away

This art from Deviant Art is relevant to newsagents (retail & delivery).

FIND A WAY OR FADE A WAY.

It’s what we have to do in our own businesses and collectively if we want to have a collective.

And the way? A way forward, the future.

If we stand still we will fade away. Our channel has grown up being told what to do, what to stock, what to sell it for, everything we have to do with deliveries, how to merchandise … hell suppliers have even done this for us.

Our businesses today are more under our control than at any time in our past. Our future really is up to us.  This is why the T-Shirt art from deviant Art resonates.  We must…

FIND A WAY OR FADE A WAY.

This is why I am now scheduling more Newsagency of the Future sessions.  I don’t have answers as these depend on the circumstances and opportunities for each business. However, I have information and ideas which can be useful for newsagents who went to plan for their future.

Wether you have a distribution business, a retail business or a mix of both in the one, planning for your future is the single most important time investment you can make today. No one else is doing this for you.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagency of the Future workshop in Townsville

I have scheduled a Newsagency of the Future workshop for Townsville for May 29 at 10am. This session will be at the Plaza Hotel. You can book here. It’s free. Participation is open to anyone.

This could be the last session of this round. It’s been a fascinating journey meeting with so many newsagents and engaging in some terrific discussions as we explore being proactive about the future of our businesses and the channel.

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newsagency of the future

Newspaper sales collapse for some titles in March

March quarter newspaper circulation numbers are out this morning and they show sales in fee fall for some titles. The Age, The Sydney Morning, The Sun-Herald, The Australian Financial Review (Saturday) all reported double digit declines in circulation. Click here for the full numbers as published by B&T.

While reporting declines for most titles but nowhere near the same extent as the Fairfax reported declines, News Limited would have to be happy with the numbers reported, especially for South Australia where thanks to the migration project the company has more control than ever on home delivery circulation. The challenge here for newsagents is the reduction in real-terms of revenue from newspaper home delivery.

Overall, the sales declines are a sobering reminder for newsagents that newspapers lack upside and many instead continue to deliver a sales decline despite continuing investment in marketing.

I wish the a breakdown between retail and home delivery sales.

A question for newsagents: what’s your plan for a newsagency without newspapers? This is at the heart of my Newsagency of the Future discussion.

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Newsagency management

More Newsagency of the Future workshop dates

I have added a regional round to the Newsagency of the Future series. Starting next week I am getting out of the cities and into farther apart locations to talk with newsagents about the future. This next round will go further than the round just completed, benefiting from the discussions had already and feedback from newsagents. Click here for details and the booking form. You can also book online here. Here are there new dates.

  • Gold Coast. April 16. Marriott Resort Surfers Paradise. @ 11am.
  • Geelong. May 1. Mercure Hotel Cnr Gheringhap & Myer Sts, Geelong. @ 11am.
  • Launceston. May 2. Colonial Hotel Cnr of George & Elizabeth Sts, Launceston. @ 10am.
  • Newcastle. May 3. Crowne Plaza, Cnr Merewether St & Wharf Rd, Newcastle. @ 10am.
  • Townsville. May 8. Rydges Southbank Townsville, 23 Palmer St, Townsville. @ 1pm.
  • Albury. May 10. Quality Hotel on Olive, 579 Olive St, Albury. @ 11am.

Anyone is welcome including newsagent suppliers and publishers. Attendance is free.

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Newsagency management

Is the Metcash story a wake-up call for newsagents?

The Metcash story in all the newspapers yesterday, that they are culling 400 jobs and closing a bunch of Campbell’s cash and carry outlets is a further wake up all to Australian newsagents along with all independent retailers.

While Metcash fingers the fight between Coles and Woolworths as the reason for a decline in business from independent retailers, like milk bars, and therefore the need to slash their operation, it is important to look at what is behind the Coles and Woolworths battle.

Retail has fundamentally changed. Coles and Woolworths get this. Indeed, they got it before most retailers in this country.

Whereas in the past we saw them as supermarkets duking it out in a traditional rivalry, the fight is not being waged from the milking shed to the smallest high street and even rural shopping situation.

Beyond the retail trading brands we know today, the two major supermarkets have their eyes firmly set on a greater proportion of retail purchases in Australia.  It is the early stages of this causing pain for the traditional Metcash customer and what should be of interest to newsagents.

I’d urge newsagents to go back to yesterday’s newspapers to read the Metcash story carefully, especially the coverage in The Australian Financial Review as this provides the analysis which I think will interest newsagents the most.

The question for us is: how do we respond?  We respond by leading our businesses, owning our situation and making our own success. Yes, this is possible.  Indeed, I am seeing it in the data newsagents are providing the latest Tower Systems newsagency sales benchmark data I am gathering.

My concern is that not enough newsagents are pursuing their own success.

I talk about this in my Newsagency of the Future series.

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Newsagency management

More Newsagency of the Future dates

I have added more dates to the Newsagency of the Future series, this time in regional centres.

It will be good to get to Townsville, Geelong, Newcastle, Albury, Launceston and the Gold Coast. Click Click here to download the flyer with details.

There is no cost to attend and anyone is welcome- newsagents, would-be newsagents and suppliers.

It is vitally important that newsagents engage in a discussion about the future and consider an action plan to step into the future. This is why I am offering more of these sessions. The first round has gone well judging by the follow up calls and emails I have received.

These are 100% educational sessions … no sales pitch. Take time from your business and work on it by considering the future with me.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagency of the Future workshop for Gold Coast

I have scheduled a Newsagency of the Future workshop for the Gold Coast for Monday April 16 at 11am at the Marriott.  This provides an opportunity for Gold Coast area newsagents to meet and discuss the many changes that are impacting on newsagency management and direction. Anyone is welcome, it’s free.

I am also working on dates for Launceston, Geelong, Newcastle and a couple of other locations.  These will not be until May.

Click here to download the flyer and booking form.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagency of the Future sessions going well

The first two of the Newsagency of the Future sessions have gone well. Today is Canberra with Adelaide and Brisbane rounding out this week. next week it is Hobart and Melbourne on Monday and tuesday respectively. At these sessions I am trying to reset how newsagents view their businesses and how they respond to the economic, print media disruption and retail challenges of today’s world. Click here for the booking form.

  • Adelaide. March 29. Rydges South Park Adelaide, 1 South Terrace, Adelaide
  • Brisbane. March 30. Brisbane Technology Park
  • Hobart. April 2. Mercure Hotel Hobart, 156 Bathurst St, Hobart
  • Melbourne. April 3. Amora Hotel Riverwalk, 659 Bridge Rd, Richmond

Anyone is welcome. Attendance is free.

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Gerry Harvey misses the point on the retail paradigm shift

Gerry Harvey was a guest on Radio National’s Saturday Extra program this morning. You can listen to the interview and read feedback comments here. Harvey was preaching his usual message: that the $1,000 GST free threshold on imports is hurting retail in this country and that overseas retailers facilitate fraud by allowing Australians to purchase expensive items and get a receipt which is under the $1,000 threshold.

Host Geraldine Doogue did not challenge Harvey as she should have.

In London earlier this week, I heard some major retailers openly talk about Australia as being a hot and lucrative market for them. One fashion retailer talked about the $1,000 tax free threshold and the high Australian dollar as providing them with “extraordinary” sales.

While I think the federal government should address the $1,000 threshold on imported consumer purchases, I don’t see this as the cause of Gerry Harvey’s problems. Retail has changed, especially in the area of higher ticket price goods such as those sold in the Harvey Norman stores.  Consumers are better informed today, they have more options.  From a shop floor they can price compare and purchase from a competitor for next day delivery.

We are moving from retail model built on labour intensive distributed warehouses with high overheads to a model of fewer warehouses and lower overheads.  However, this is not a point A to point B shift. It is evolutionary. This is why retailers are talking about omni-channel retail today. This is a transition model because, frankly, they do not know where we will end up. This is not an end game – from the day the first retail business opened the model has been in play.

Gerry Harvey’s challenge is that he has built a business almost completely around a price perception. His route to market was relentless advertising. Advertising is working less today. People have smart mobile devices and other means through which they can discover price options.  Had Gerry built his business around a value proposition which it could genuinely own then they could have taken their loyal shoppers with them. Gerry is now learning that price does not drive loyalty. His millions of dollars in advertising has not been an investment in the future.

So, what does all this mean for newsagents? We will be as challenged as any other retailer. We have the opportunities of other retailers too … opportunities to adjust our business model. Many of us have customers who are loyal because of unique and appreciated customer service or because of a unique range of products. We need to develop business plans to evolve with our customers as their approach to shopping evolves.  The biggest mistake we could make right now would be to stand still.

We are confronted with more opportunities than ever before.  Now is the time for us to embrace these, leveraging our existing good and quite unique traffic from our core products and building our own businesses for the next generation.

I will explore these and related ideas in the Newsagency of the Future workshop which starts in Perth on March 26.

In the meantime, listen to Gerry Harvey because his message today will be a topic of analysis by retail experts in the future.

Footnote: Gerry Harvey sooked about how people react to what he says. He needs to understand that he has done nothing in his business to develop loyalty. Price is not a unique selling proposition.

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Newsagency challenges

Newsagency of the Future workshop venues announced

Venues have been confirmed for the Newsagency of the Future workshops which start in ten days. Anyone is welcome to attend. The event is free. But bookings are essential.  Click here for the booking form.

  • Perth. March 26. Country Comfort Inter City, 249-263 Great Eastern Highway, Perth
  • Sydney. March 27. Bonnie Doon Golf Club, Banks Ave, Pagewood
  • Canberra. March 28. Rydges Capital Hill Canberra, Cnr National Cct. & Canberra Ave, Canberra
  • Adelaide. March 29. Rydges South Park Adelaide, 1 South Terrace, Adelaide
  • Brisbane. March 30. Brisbane Riverview Hotel, Cnr Kingsford Smith Dve & Hunt St, Hamilton
  • Hobart. April 2. Mercure Hotel Hobart, 156 Bathurst St, Hobart
  • Melbourne. April 3. Amora Hotel Riverwalk, 659 Bridge Rd, Richmond
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Newsagency management

Retail Week Conference 2012 enlightening

It has been a thrill to participate in the Retail Week Conference 2012 in London over the last couple of days.  More than 1,000 retailers participated, large and small. This on top of the Retail Business and Technology Expo earlier in the week – a separate event.

Both events are better informing my presentations for the upcoming Newsagency of the Future workshop series.

Most of the retail challenges and opportunities discussed in many of the sessions are not dissimilar to challenges and opportunities we face in Australia. Some of the solutions discussed are fresh.

What was most interesting was the discussion about the future of the High Street.  This has been a hot topic in the UK for years and while there has not been much progress that they are at least discussing the migration from the High Street to the out of town centre puts them ahead of Australia.

The topics covered which are borderless include: challenged retail business turnaround strategies, omni-channel retail, High Street reinvention, being smart with technology, economic challenges, technology led disruption, employee engagement and big versus small retailers.

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Newsagency management

Ryman shows a different approach to stationery

I have been able to visit a number of Ryman the Stationery stores in London. While each is different in size, they are all similar – the typical footprint I have seen in London is small, the aisles narrow and the range of stationery considerable.

They offer known brand stationery and their own brand. Given the Ryman retail footprint their own brand would carry considerable respect from consumers I suspect. Certainly their house branded products look like good quality – not like some of the cheap and nasty house brands back in Australia.

What really strikes me about the Ryman stores is what they fit into a smaller footprint. I was in one store of no more than fifty square metres. I be they had more than twice the stationery than a large newsagency allocating twice the amount of space.

In each of the Ryman businesses you get the feeling that they know stationery. They must, of course, as it is their bread and butter – get this wrong and they fail.

Maybe this is why newsagents are challenged with stationery … it is not our bread and butter. We don’t know the category as we should. We need to fix this if we are to grow stationery sales.

I have some thoughts on this and will share these at the Newsagency of the Future workshops in a couple of weeks.

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newsagency of the future

Book now for a free Newsagency of the Future workshop

The Newsagency of the Future workshop series starts at the end of this month. Anyone is welcome to attend, newsagents, newsagency employees, would be newsagents and newsagency suppliers. You can book by faxing in a booking form or registering through the online booking facility on the Tower Systems website.

At this workshop I will share the very latest retail trends based on what I saw at the National Retail Federation Retail conference in New York last month and will see at the Retail Week conference in London next week.

I will also share my thoughts on the factors we need to consider in planning our future – migration to digital, online shopping, competition from supermarkets and others, the growing cost of labour and retail real-estate and changes in attention from core newsagency suppliers.

The last time I ran such a workshop was mid 2010.  So much has changed since then. Many new challenges have emerged and many new opportunities are before us.

I don’t profess to have the answers. That said, I certainly see plenty of options for us.  My sense is that newsagents want to discover and understand their options.

If you can’t make one of the capital city events I do plan to consider regional events if the interest is there in this series first.  I’ll keep you posted.

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newsagency of the future

Newsagency of the Future workshop series for newsagents

I have finalised plans for a Newsagency of the Future workshop series for the end of March. Anyone is welcome to attend, newsagents, newsagency employees, would be newsagents and newsagency suppliers.

Attendance is free. You can book by faxing in a booking form or registering through the online booking facility on the Tower Systems website.

At this workshop I will share the very latest retail trends based on what I saw at the National Retail Federation Retail conference in New York last month and will see at the Retail Week conference in London in under two weeks time.

I will also share my thoughts on the factors we need to consider in planning our future – migration to digital, online shopping, competition from supermarkets and others, the growing cost of labour and retail real-estate and changes in attention from core newsagency suppliers.

I will look at what is happening in the newsagency channel, the consolidation in some areas and decisions we face – not just around circulation and print products but in other areas such as stationery, lotteries and agency product.

There will also be some time devoted to recent events such as newspaper contracts, decisions by publishers on newspaper distribution, magazine distribution challenges and how we as a channel need to respond to these.

The last time I ran such a workshop was mid 2010.  So much has changed since then. Many new challenges have emerged and many new opportunities are before us.

If you want practical ideas you can implement today in pursuit of growth then you should find this session of value. If you want insights into and even guidance on the longer term challenges and opportunities then I you too will find the session valuable.

I don’t profess to have the answers. That said, I certainly see plenty of options for us.  My sense is that newsagents want to discover and understand their options.

I hope to see you at one of the sessions.

If you can’t make one of the capital city events I do plan to consider regional events if the interest is there in this series first.  I’ll keep you posted.

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Newsagency management

The Steve Jobs legacy for newsagents

While much has been written abut the sad passing of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, for me, the message of his life for newsagents is to face challenges and innovate through them.

Steve made computers cool, music devices fashion items and the mobile hone, well, plenty more than a phone.

He turned an uncool business channel into something relevant and valuable.

For an insight into the man, watch this video of his commencement address at Stanford University in 2001.

Inspirational.

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Newsagency management

Newsagency Management and Marketing Tip: Own your point of difference

While I have written here about the need for newsagencies to have a point of difference, a unique selling proposition, my sense is that most newsagents ignore this, considering it to be a waste of time.

Sadly, I think too many newsagents live with the mindset that it is our channel which is difference and therefore our USP.  Certainly, we are unique in the world.  Okay, there are newsagencies in the UK, but they are not the newspaper / magazine / greeting cards / stationery channel that we are.

The reality is that our channel is not unique., not at all.

Everything we sell is available elsewhere, often in just one or two shops.  Check out your local supermarket or Big W, K Mart or target store.  I bet that around 90% of your non gambling product sales could be satisfied from these much bigger, more aggressive and better known competitors.

Twenty or thirty years ago we were unique.  We were protected and we loved it. The bubble of protection has burst.  We are on our own.

In today’s world and with our stronger than ever competitors, we MUST stand for something, each of us in our own newsagencies.  We can’t do it as a channel because we would never work together to an agreed standard.

I have a suggestion for you: take some time to stand in front of your shop and on your shop floor and contemplate what it is that your business stands for and consider whether you see and feel that point of difference being embraced in how you are running the business.

Your USP must be obvious from outside your newsagency and within.  It must be felt and experiences at the counter, on the phone, in your newsletter, in your community work, on your vehicles and through your product mix and your people.

Is your USP, your point of difference, obvious to your customers?

Now more than ever, with the national retailers pursuing our businesses with aggression we have never seen before, we, each of us, MUST nail our USP,  otherwise we will fade in the minds of shoppers and with that fading we will see a retreat of foot traffic.

I am concerned that not enough newsagents get the importance of this, of standing for something, of offering something which is unique … something so tangible and appreciated that your shoppers tell their friends about it.

I got hooked on the British comedy series The Inbetweeners a few months ago.   It’s hilarious.  The sitcom genre is a challenge, too often characters blend into each other and those involved in the show get lazy – this is true for many US sitcoms.  Also, laughs are often too cheap.  The Inbetweeners can shock you and make you laugh all at once, even after three series. I love this show so much that I told people, plenty of people.  I know that they have told people. You can see where I am going.  Word of mouth has a powerful ripple effect.

Don’t you want to unleash the power of word of mouth for your business?  Your point of difference is key to this happening.

You don’t get good word of mouth for your newsagency if you do not nail, embrace, live and drive your point of difference.  It is vitally important to loyalty.

So when you are in front of your shop or on your shop floor, think about this – what is it that you do or sell which is so compelling and appreciated that your customers will tell their friends?

I can’t stress enough the importance of resolving this for your newsagency.

No one can tell you what your point of difference should be.  You must discover this for yourself, from within your newsagency, working with your team.  Once you have made your decision, everything you do in your business should be done with your point of difference in your mind.

Sorting this out is one of the biggest challenges for newsagents and the channel as a whole.  Get this right and even the smallest of newsagencies can grow and know tremendous success.

FOOTNOTE: If you think you have your point of difference sorted out, check with your customers and find out what they think.

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Newsagency challenges

Interesting newsagency model in Malaysia

mynews.jpgI was in Kuala Lumpur earlier this week in time to see the opening of the new myNEWS store at Bukit Bintang in downtown Kuala Lumpar.  This is a very interesting store, a nice evolution from the more traditional myNEWS model.  To us here in Australia it is like a 7-Eleven store with a much stronger traditional newsagency product mix and customer service focus.

The layout is terrific, inviting.  The shop looks as visually clean inside as it does outside.  Each area, magazines, confectionery, stationery and convenience lines, is well signposted.  The store has at least ten times the range of magazines you would see in a 7-Eleven store.

I got to see several of these myNEWS stores this visit and you can see the evolution represented in this latest store.  It leverages the convenience model without detracting from being a destination for key categories.

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Newsagency management