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partworks

Inspector Morse stuff up (part 2)

Further to my post yesterday about the Inspector Morse partwork stuff up. Yesterday afternoon we received 20 copies of part 1 of this new partworks product. We had sold all twenty copies of Inspector Morse by lunchtime today. Here’s the empty unit (photographed in our backroom) which we used to achieve this sellout in less than 24 hours – from the front of the shop.

empty-unit.JPG

Partworks are a goldmine. Some of our customers for Inspector Morse from the last 24 hours have signed up as putaway customers. The challenge will b to ensure that we continue to get the stock we need to serve our customers.

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partworks

Calling partwork publishers

I’ve been on a plane for the last hour and a half and thinking about my post this morning about yet another partworks stuff up. There has to be a way to connect newsagents and overseas partworks publishers and cut out the middlemen – the importer and the distributor – since they are where the most expensive problems occur.

Newsagents who embrace partworks do so wholeheartedly. In my store for example we would go hard on every new partwork offering. We’d consider a firm sale commitment as long as supply was guaranteed and as long as we got access to all the subscription deals the distributor offers through their website. We would even allocate a permanent high profile space in-store to promote the category. The current sporadic releases coupled with hit-and miss management techniques mean we cannot allocate such space.

So this blog post is a call to partwork publishers such as Marshall Cavendish, Eaglemoss and DeAgostini. Give us your partworks, deal direct with newsagents and let us show how successful your product could be in Australia.

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partworks

Inspector Morse partworks stuff up

morse.JPGGordon and Gotch, in their wisdom, decided to not allocate us any copies of the new Inspector Morse partworks released this week by Bissett Magazines. We discovered that we had been left out of this opportunity when the Gotch merchandiser visited us yesterday to put up a display. Our enquiries revealed that this was not a missed delivery by Gotch – they had not allocated any of this new partwork series to us.

We escalated the issue through Gotch and were asked later in the day by Gotch representative if we would like to be put on their list of newsagents who support partworks and therefore want good quantities of new releases. We were surprised to discover that such a list exists. Our partworks interest has been well established, or so we thought. Consider this:

I have blogged here before and spoken at newsagent conferences about the importance of partworks to newsagents – urging newsagents to take up partworks.

I have shared sales data with Gotch management about the efficiency of partworks customers – baskets with partwork product are more efficient than almost any other category we carry.

Ben Kay, Manager of my newsagency, and I have met with Peter Bissett, owner of Bissett Magazines, and discussed partworks at length and out commitment.

Ben and I have had discussions up and down Gotch chasing more and more partworks product , impressing on them the sales we can achieve with the right stock. These discussions have been from the GM down.

Through my software company, Tower Systems, we created some exclusive partworks specifics enhancements and advised the folk at Gotch and Bissett about these – enhancements which help newsagents better manage partworks with a view to better customer service and lower time cost management. The enhancements were delivered to Tower Newsagents free.

I launched the newsagency industry’s first ever magazine loyalty card in 2004 in part as a result of our partworks success and to drive even greater success. Gotch was made aware of this at the time.

Peter Bissett recently brought a UK executive to our store (and others) to show best practice.

Our commitment to partworks is absolute. We only wish we had more new releases to promote.

This time around like others Gotch will blame others, Bissett will blame others. In the meantime TV hits, customers come to us looking for the product, we look like hopeless retailers and we lose them to someone else. These are sales worth fighting for.
Obviously someone at Gordon and Gotch is not across any of this so they cut us out of the Inspector Morse game.

And magazine distributors wonder why newsagents complain about them. Sure we will get Inspector Morse. The ‘system’ which took us off the list is flawed and no one cares enough to fix it.

Footnote: I wrote this blog entry last night but did not click PUBLISH. Just as well as today I’ve been able to edit out some of the more colourful passages. The facts are colourful enough without me needing use more robust language to make my point here. Maybe I should have slept on the email I sent to Gotch but then maybe they will understand how upset people like me get when we are denied an opportunity to do what our newsagencies have been created to do.

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Starving for stock – how to kill a new magazine

partworks1.JPGThe merchandiser turned up in our shop asking for floor space to display their new partwork product. We said sure, go ahead. We’re happy to give you premium space to display the measly two copies of this new TV promoted partwork product. This iniial allocation by Gotch is nuts and while they will have excuses, it’s not good enough that we have to chase them for extra product. Sales from our shop prove that we are very successful with partworks. It’s like they want us to fail by sending two copies. Thankfully they sent another twenty copies today. Still not enough but it will do.

We are paying $3.00 per square metre per day in rent. The two copies would generate for us, if sold, $1.47 gross profit. Sometimes you feel like giving up in dealing with magazine distributors.

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