Casual roles available Southland and Knox VIC
Both my stores are looking for casual staff with uni students moving and other changes. If you know someone who might be interested please get them to email me at mark@towersystems.com.au.
Both my stores are looking for casual staff with uni students moving and other changes. If you know someone who might be interested please get them to email me at mark@towersystems.com.au.
You should take a copy of every contract you sign at the time you sign the contract. If you don’t have access to a copier, take a photo with your phone.
If there is no way at all for you to take a copy, initial and date every page.
These actions will stop the other party to the contract demanding you honour clauses not in the contract you signed. They could do this by writing new clauses and slipping those pages in so that when you ask to see the contact it looks like those clauses are in the contract.
Yes, sadly, this happens.
Click here to access the statement from Credit Suisse yesterday about the Tabcorp proposed take over of Tatts.
The issue of Rugby League Week published on March 27 will be the last for the magazine Bauer has announced.
I love the pitch from Pilot for their Pilot MR Animal collection. It leverages fashion and drama, expanding the reach of what otherwise would be a boring pen pitch. Good on Pilot for giving us the opportunity for us to leverage this in our out of store marketing. I like it and we have pitched it outside the business.
Queensland newsagents are disappointed with the latest promotion launched by Tatts and News.
The information put to me is this really is a Tatts driven promotion with News doing what it is told.
My concern is that entry is via online. That’s is where Tatts is focussed.
If I was a retailer I wold refuse this promotion until Tatts actively supported me as a retailer against the continues attached by Lottoland.
Here is the pitch:
News Corp + Crosswords Promotion
From 5 March to 1 April we are partnering with News Corp to give away a $20,000 holiday voucher and 4 weekly $5,000 holiday vouchers.
Customers must purchase any Crosswords ticket and an eligible News Corp Newspaper to receive a promotional Scratch Card. The Scratch Card directs customers to holidaygiveaway.thelott.com to enter their details into the draw.
Eligible Newspapers:
The Courier-Mail
The Sunday Mail
The Cairns Post
The Townsville Bulletin
The Gold Coast Bulletin
I shop this video at my shop on the weekend. Watching it you can see how the floorspace is zoned to appeal to different demographics, how we use key international brands to attract choppers and how we pitch the business as it’s own thing and not as a newsagency.
Take a look…
I share this here to show how we are using brand name products to attract shoppers from the mall and to pitch, through the products, that we are not the business they may think we are.
We started placing a pocket of That’s Life Puzzler Go with That’s Life years ago. We continue with this today as this second location works a treat. Whereas destination shoppers purchase the title from our crossword section, this pocket wins impulse purchases.
I pulse purchases of magazines are the icing on the cake for magazine sales.
I get it that there are magazine retailers who think they should not do anything extra for tiny margin product like magazines. The thing is, an impulse purchase deepens the basket, it makes the shopping visit more valuable, more efficient.
I am happy to make any tactical move that can drive basket efficiency where the move does not have a significant labour or other cost. This move with That’s Life Puzzler Go works a treat.
We are pitching the Star Wars Helmet Collection part works launch on the lease line, next to a large range of new pop culture products ts including plenty of Star Wars products. The placement is ideal and the traffic generation opportunity excellent. This is perfect for leveraging the advertising of the partworks into a good margin dollars sale.
The latest issue of Frankie magazine continues the pitch of a visually appealing title. This is a magazine to ensure you have on full face display, and in in two separate locations so as to drive impulse purchases – beyond the destination purchase. For a second location I suggest with her birthday cards.
We are have had terrific success with non chocolate items for Easter for years, often selling out weeks in advance of Easter. Our range includes limited-edition collectible plush items valued at $200 or more. In fact, we have been successful at attracting new shoppers by promoting these. And, yes, the $200+ item sale is easy with the right product.
Ask every person in your business to write on a shared list, on a whiteboard or a large sheet in the back room, things you sell or do that make your business unique.
The idea of the exercise is to have a shared experience of working out what is unique in your offering. What you consider unique can be relaxed or hard core. Here are some ideas to kick things off:
Create the list and see how long you can make it.
Once you have your list, it becomes material you can use to promote your business.
I left my laptop computer in the seat pocket of my Adelaide to Melbourne flight on Sunday this week. I am 100% to blame for this mistake.
I did not realise I had done this until I got home mid afternoon.
This is a big deal as my laptop is my workplace. It has all my files, my calendar, my task management and plenty of apps on which I rely in business and personally.
Immediately on realising what I had done I called Qantas at Melbourne airport. The laptop had not been handed in at baggage services. By the time I called, the aircraft had flown to Sydney and then left for Perth.
The Sydney lost baggage process is different to Melbourne. I was told it could be a day or two before the laptop made its way to lost baggage.
When the aircraft arrived in Perth, a Qantas team member personally boarded and checked the seat back pocket. The laptop was not there.
At each check they made, Qantas staff contacted me and kept me updated.
The collective wisdom from Qantas folk was that it would be in Sydney and I should hear from Qantas since they found i.
Sure enough, that is what happened. A Qantas staffer called Tuesday morning with the news.
On Tuesday I picked my laptop up from Sydney baggage services. The laptop was in perfect condition. It had not been opened – I know for sure because of the security facility I had installed and from the remote monitoring I had in place.
As best I can work out, Qantas staff spent at least four or five hours on this for me, without charge and without mocking me for leaving the valuable laptop in the seat pocket on the aircraft.
What I love about the experience is the regular communication from Qantas staff, their adhering to the timeline they advised in each contact with them and that they did not judge me – even though this was 100% my fault. Their communication on Sunday is what had me trusting them and their processes. It made waiting on Monday bearable.
The Qantas customer service was flawless.
Footnote: My 5pm Sunday I realised I needed a new laptop as being within mine on Monday was not an option as I had a crazy week ahead. I went to Apple at Chadstone, bought a new MacBook and thanks to a SSD backup and my iCloud backup was 100% up and running late that night. The experience was a reminder of the value of cloud based backup.
While comments on my post yesterday and other posts here about the demands rom Tatts Group re capital investment in a new fit out as well as a new in store digital marketing platform have been minimal, my phone has been running hot.
yesterday alone I received calls from six newsagents about this issue. One was in tears for what the additional cost will mean to their business.
Each caller said they are not responding publicly because of how threatened and vulnerable they feel.
In two cases there is a mental health impact from the pressure they are under that has no business case backing.
My core concerns are, as stated by me many times here:
What should newsagents do? In my opinion, they should take their case to state based authorities: small business commissioner, small business advocate, VCAT / QCAT / CTTT or anything similar. They should do this without fear of Tatts as those forums exist to hear this type of dispute.
If you can’t afford to do what Tatts demands, tell them, in writing, prove it to them.
If your mental health is impaired because of the manner in which Tatts and its representatives are dealing with you, write to Tatts about this, explain how it is affecting you personally.
The more informed the company is the better the record of how this massive public company is harming small businesses and those who own them. Your stories will / should ultimately matter.
I have heard from several newsagents this week about intensified pressure they are under to agree to capital expenditure beyond what they can afford and borrow in order to meet the new technology fitout requirements from Tatts.
When two of them asked their Tatts representative for financial justification for additional screens or other demands by the company, the Tatts representative refused to respond.
I understand the fit out obligation. What makes it different this time is the rolling into the fit out obligation the introduction of a new technology platform to market products and that the newsagents funding the platform have no control whatsoever over the content on the platform.
I see the screens requirements as outside the obligations of the agents, beyond the scope of what they signed up for.
At the very least, this should be tested by an independent umpire.
I would love newsagents to respond here about what Tatts has told them to justify the capital expenditure. I ask as I am unaware of any business case from Tatts for the tens of millions of dollars it is forcing small family run businesses to spend promoting the Tatts brand.
Is there any newsagent who has received a business case or a financial justification from Tatts supporting the company’s demands of their business?
The threat from Tatts to take the agency business to another shop in town appears to be the core leverage the company is using. If this is the case, shame on them.
It shocks me that no newsagent has taken Tatts on and forced the company to be held to account for the extraordinary expenditure it is placing on small businesses that can ill-afford capital expenditure that does not deliver a good return.
Kudos to the folks at The Bolton News in the UK for showing the value of the newspaper poster for driving interest in over the counter purchase of the print product. While this poster is from a while back, it is a reminder of newspaper posters that were designed to ignite reader interest.
I was thrilled to see this sign in my local coffee shop on Monday this week. I am often on the phone when there ordering coffee. It works, I don’t disrespect them and they don’t disrespect me.
I think some retailers get too hung up on the mobile pone thing. As long as you can complete the transaction who cares if they are on the phone? Not me, I am happy there are there shopping with me.
What I love about this campaign is that its is positive and inviting. It turns what is often a negative situation in retail into a positive.
Good on the people who are behind it. My cafe owner got the sign from his local Snap Printing outlet so it may be a Snap thing.
Sure it can be frustrating if the conversation on the phone slows the sale. My experience is that it usually does not. The key is to look beyond the default position of being angry or frustrated that a shopper is on the phone. Suck it up, take their cash and appreciate having a customer to service. That’s good pragmatic customer service in my view.
I have been going through photos and videos from the massive Nuremberg Toy Fair, which I attended a few weeks ago.
For train enthusiasts, here are two videos I shot.
At the New York Toy Fair last week I met with the brand owner of a niche collectible brand available in Australia. They shared worldwide sales information that changed how I saw some items available in Australia. Data insights revealed not only top sellers but also helped demonstrate connections between items in the portfolio.
While local suppliers do their best, sometimes even they do not have insights that can be invaluable to driving greater success from licenced product. This where groups can play a role, by digging deeper and developing information-flow relationships with brand owners.
Thanks to the social media world of today, information is key in being able to pitch points of difference. While a product may be in multiple retailers, if you have information ahead of others yo can leverage it to pitch a point of difference.
Price is not the differentiator it was years ago. The most valuable shoppers to any retail business are those who care less about price and more about a licence, its collectibility and value-add insights you may have. It is our job as retailers to mine for these value-adds.
This is especially true of brands that are not usual for the business you run for anything you can do to leverage a brand that can attract new traffic has to be mission critical.
I appreciate I am not being explicit here. There is a reason for that. More core message is – mine for unique information that you can use to leverage fringe brands you carry and through this expect to discover en shoppers.
A newsagency experienced person has relocated to Melbourne and is looking for work. If you have a need let me know and I will connect you with their former employer.