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

Some newsagency related predictions from July 2011

Here’s an article published by The Australian Financial Review open July 4, 2011 (pg 10) in which I and several others are quoted about trends in newsagencies.

Some predictions were accurate, while some others were not.

Are we better off than in 2011? I think so, because more newsagents have ditched the fading agent model and found success in being innovative retailers.

Coffee has turned out to be a terrific success while ink shot up and faded. Gifts and homewares continue to grow, as do collectibles and several other niches.

Tomorrow is the start of a new year. I hope it’s successful for you professionally and personally.

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newsagency of the future

Magazines are being delivered Monday everywhere except WA

Several newsagents I have spoken with today from VIC, NSW and SA thought there were not getting magazines Monday. The confusion arose from the poorly worded notice from Are Media.

The Monday line should have been written: Monday 3rd January – normal delivery, except for West Australian newsagents who will receive their deliveries on Tuesday January 4th. That follows the standard set in the above line.

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magazine distribution

The free mask scam

Look, it’s no big deal, but, hey, human behaviour some days has me shaking my head.

We have a box of masks just inside the door, for anyone to take a mask if they need it. Several times we have seen shoppers, usually older males, take a mask, hold it to their face, walk over to the newspapers, flick through a couple of pages, and then leave, and go to the cake shop or chemist on either side of us.

Is it the free mask they are after? Or, do they want to see if there is any major news and they think holding a mask to their face is the only ay they can do that in our shop?

We’ll continue to offer free masks as the use some make of them is entertaining.

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retail

The high cost of buy now pay later for purchasing lottery tickets

Afterpay and Humm have cards that look like credit cards through EFTPOS terminals. They can be added to a digital wallet for watch and phone tap. It’s only when the retailer discovered the 3.5% and more cost per transaction that they realise the higher cost product has been used.

I’ll leave the social responsibility question of using buy now pay later for lottery ticket purchases for another time.

Since the EFTPOS terminal providers don’t know what’s in the basket they cannot block the transaction. They could. The tech is there to feed this to them. Now, by basket, I mean each transaction – the EFTPOS terminal and the network to which they connect do not know what is in each transaction.

The only real option right now for retailers is to ask each customer about the method of payment. But this will slow transactions at the counter and, likely, lead to shopper frustration and, maybe, embarrassment.

I have discussed the issue with a range of stakeholders and they are engaged with it. It is too early to say if that engagement will lead to change that satisfies retailers – I say this because one outcome could be the removal of BNPL from the channel altogether and I wonder if impacted newsagents would want that.

Retailers accept EFTPOS payments through a connected terminal in good faith. They have an expectation of a reasonable soft of that method of payment. The gap between .75% and 3.5% is too much, too great, especially for items over which the retailer has no control of the selling price.

I have looked at the basket solution as this is what has been established listed for the Indue card here in Australia where people with the card are permitted to spend it in a designated group of items. The tech. block them using the card on non approved product categories.

Some companies manage use of their finance services by not permitting certain retailers in a whole of business approach. The basket approach is better. But, in this instance with lottery products, the cost of implementation in tech. and at the counter in dialogue with shoppers could be problematic.

This is a complex matter that needs discussion.

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Lotteries

Spain’s lottery retailers strike for better margin

Spain’s lottery retailers went on strike last week as part of their campaign to list their commission from 4%. See the story from The Guardian.

The vendors, who had shut up shop for the day, say they deserve more than the 4% of the ticket price they currently get, arguing that 80 cents on a €20 ticket is not enough. They point out that their commission rate has been frozen for the past 17 years despite huge rises in living costs – not least Spain’s skyrocketing electricity prices.

“Prices go up, taxes go up and the commissions remain the same,” Natalia de la Fuente, the daughter of a lottery seller, told Reuters. “We have to pay our bills … This is impossible.”

4%. Sheesh, it makes the arrangements in Australia look good. But, from what I have seen of lottery outlets in Spain compared to Australia, the compliance cost there for retailers is much lower.

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Lotteries

Smart way to get newspaper home delivery customers to pay on time

While we don’t have many newsagents directly managing newspaper home deliveries in Australia any more, this competition for people paying their account from Lomas News in the UK is cool:

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Newspaper distribution

Major shopping centres less busy this Christmas?

Retailers in shopping centres are telling me that traffic this week before Christmas is down in the last two years. Click and collect sales are good as has been online for the last couple of months.

They put it down to people avoiding shopping places where there are likely to be large groups of people.

Not that they would release it but it would be good to get shopper traffic data from all shopping malls in Australia for the last two weeks for the last three years. If what I am hearing holds up, we’d see some centres down considerably, others steady and some even up.

A couple of NSW retailers I have spoken with say customers have contacted them to cancel LayBy collection saying they are too concerned about the virus. In each case they said in-store traffic is down 20% on 2019, the opposite of what they had seen through October and November, pre Omicron.

In my own situation, I have two businesses in major centres. One us up, way up, while the other is flat over the counter in-store but click and collect has surged. That second store has the centre’s Santa photo display out the front and it’s not booked out, not at all. That’s the best indicator of the challenge I am writing about.

On the high street we’re seeing a number Christmas, which is wonderful.

While I get push for personal responsibility, that is harder to plan for than government mandates controls, which are easier to plan for.

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Social responsibility

We bought a newsagency

Last week we bought a newsagency on Glenferrie Road Malvern in Victoria. It had been in the same family for almost 40 years and had stayed true to the traditions of years ago. We will take the same approach we did with the business we bought in Mount Waverley Victoria three years ago: slow and steady change, based on data, with a minimal capex budget and ensuring to not leave existing customers behind.

Here’s a short video I shot on day 2.

Already this week the shops is looking different. Each day it is changing, but with baby steps.

We are grateful to the family for the opportunity to pick up from where they left off serving Malvern shoppers.

Oh, and before the folks at Newspower shoot off a letter, the sign people are booked to remove the logo. Being Christmas and all accessing them has been challenging.

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buying a newsagency

When governments leave it up to people to be responsible

When the NSW government early last week shutdown check in at retail and did not follow the health advice on masks and other measures in retail, newsXpress shared the following with its members – in response to some requests for guidance:

Opinion / advice: Omicron, NSW and newsXpress businesses.

In NSW, QR codes are no longer mandatory in newsagencies, or in any retail. Deep cleans are no longer mandated in businesses where contact has occurred.

From the UK and Europe we can see that Omicron is transmitting quickly, and loading hospitals as a result. In the last few days we have seen this in NSW, too.

Our advice to newsXpress members in NSW is:

  1. Continue with QR code check in.
  2. Continue with staff wearing face masks. The NSW Chief Health Officer was clear with her advice on masks earlier this week, contradicting the advice from the health Minister. Dr Chant made it clear – wear masks, they work.
  3. Keep acrylic panels at the counter up.
  4. Continue to clean regularly.
  5. Continue to encourage staff to wash their hands.
  6. Continue to make masks and hand sanitiser freely available in the shop.
  7. Encourage all staff to get boosted as soon as they can. The government has cut the timing from 6 to 5 months. You can ask for it sooner and doctors will do this (I did that myself weeks ago).
  8. Message on social media about keeping the community safe, especially the vulnerable who cannot make decisions for themselves or who are health compromised.

I appreciate there is a strong desire to get back to life the way it was. That will not happen for years. Omicron was always coming as is the next significant variant and the one after that.

The more infections the stronger the breeding ground for virus variants.

From a business perspective you want to ensure that you can remain open.

What you do in your business is 100% up to you. We have shared this today in response to a couple of NSW members who asked us.

newsXpress also shared some collateral for positive reinforcement messaging on masks, including …

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Social responsibility

Is the Amazon Hub parcel pickup service a good fit for your newsagency?

Only you can answer this question for your business.

The core question, though, is: are you a retailer or an agent? An agent will want the transactional clip and therefore find the Amazon opportunity interesting. A retailer will wonder about the real commercial value of Amazon parcel collectors.

I have no interest in offering any form of parcel collection in any retail businesses. As a retailer, I see little value in any agency activity.

Parcel collectors rarely purchase anything else – no matter how thoughtfully you configure your shop to interrupt their path.

Parcel collectors bring to their parcel collection any feelings they have for the retailer source of the parcel, and this can be problematic.

Parcel collectors trend to be engaged … meaning they could rate you down for something outside your control.

Parcel collectors want speed. Often, they think they should be served ahead of others.

Sure there are some in our channel talking up parcel collection. Maybe find out the commercial relationships they have or their employer has with such services to understand their excitement. Buyer beware.

Newsagents I have spoken with recently who have offered parcel collection services have recommended against it.

If you think parcel collection could be for you, do your homework and ensure that providing such a service fits with your business plan and how you see your business into the future.

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Newsagency management

The Herald Sun today shows, again, it’s part of the problem

It’s embarrassing having the Herald Sun on display today. I think the front page ‘story’ about masks is lobbying, not journalism. The ‘story’ references NSW where the politicians decided masks were no longer required while, at the same time, their Chief Health Officer said masks should be worn.

Politicians, and media proprietor lobbyists can play their games, the science remains that transmission is greatly reduced where masks are worn.

Of course, news outlets have trotted out the usual ‘representatives’ of business complaining about masks. Those same media outlets should give more time to the scientific and medical experts.

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Social responsibility

Chronic staff shortage impacting retail and hospitality in Australia

Gee it’s hard to find reasonable candidates for retail. We have heard plenty about the challenges in hospitality – one excellent restaurant in Melbourne has halved their hours because of a lack of wait staff – but the extent of the retail staff shortage is recent.

I am advertising for people for three of my shops. In each situation we are offering $2 above the award hourly rate, and other benefits.

Seek has been unsuccessful. The same is true with social media. The platform working best right now is Indeed. But you have to be fast. For example, this week already, good and ideally experienced people we have contacted within half a day of applying have taken jobs elsewhere. Once we realised this we modified our approach, to get faster and on-point.

Thankfully, here we are on Thursday with three new hires, each having completed paid half-day trial shifts and ready for immediate start.

If the situation did not improve we were considering a longevity bonus at 3 or 6 months or something else to separate us from other businesses fishing in the same, almost empty, pond. This is especially true for good people.

The staff shortage in Australia is real. The impact os knocking through the economy.

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Social responsibility

The Age and Sydney Morning Herald Christmas 2021 and New Year publication details

The Sydney Morning Herald & The Age

  • There WILL NOT be a paper published on Christmas Day – Sat 25/12/21.

Sections

  • Good Food – WILL NOT be included in the Tuesday SMH and Age on Tue 28/12/21 and the first issue date it will return is Tue 25/01/22.
  • Money – WILL NOT be included in the Wednesday SMH and Age on Wed 22/12/21 and the first issue date it will return is Wed 19/01/22.
  • Good Weekend – WILL NOT be included in the Saturday SMH and Age on Sat 01/01/22 and the first issue date it will return is Sat 29/01/22.
  • Domain (Sat SMH) – WILL NOT be included in the Saturday SMH on Sat 01/01/22 and the first issue date it will return is Sat 29/01/22.
  • Domain (Sat AGE) – WILL NOT be included in the Saturday Age on Sat 01/01/22 and the first issue date it will return is 29/01/22.
  • Traveller – WILL NOT be included in the Saturday SMH and Age on Sat 01/01/22 and the first issue date it will return is Sat 08/01/22.
  • Sunday Life – WILL NOT be included in The Sun-Herald & The Sunday Age on Sun 26/12/21 and the first issue date it will return is Sun 30/01/22.

Tower Systems has released advice to Newsagency ts on how to handle the changes.

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Newspapers

Australian Financial Review Christmas 2021 / New Year publication details

CHRISTMAS BUMPER EDITION

· On Sale Thursday 23rd December, 2021 until Tuesday 28th December 2021 (inclusive),

· All Mon-Fri & Mon-Sat subscribers to be delivered the Christmas bumper edition on Thursday

23/12/2021.

· All Sat only subscribers to be delivered the Christmas bumper edition on Friday 24/12/2021.

· Returns for the Christmas bumper edition will be on your Connect returns form week commencing

Mon 03/01/2022.

NEW YEAR BUMPER EDITION

· On Sale Wednesday 29th December, 2021 until Monday 3rd January, 2022 (inclusive).

· All Mon-Fri & Mon-Sat subscribers to be delivered the New Year bumper edition on Wednesday

29/12/2021.

· All Sat only subscribers to be delivered the New Year bumper edition on Saturday 01/01/2022.

Tower Systems has released advice to Newsagency ts on how to handle the changes.

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Newspapers

Crosswords the powerhouse magazine segment in Aussie newsagencies

Looking deeper at the November 2021 sales data compared to 2019 for the newsagency businesses in the benchmark mix I wrote about last week … crosswords is a powerhouse segment in newsagencies.

While sales of women’s weeklies (New Idea, Woman’s Day etc) is far greater, crosswords account for, on average, 8.5% of all magazines sold. This is significant with most of these sales being for titles that are only in newsagencies.

Crossword shoppers are loyal, more likely to return to you if they know you stock the niche titles in which they are interested.

Crossword shoppers are more valuable. Our of all the magazine shoppers, they are more likely to buy cards, a high margin category and more likely to buy jigsaws, another good margin category.

Crossword shoppers respond to loyalty offers. Whether it’s an amount off based on purchase value or a future benefit from today’s purchases, they engage with loyalty programs and therefore are stickier to the business.

Crossword shoppers dwell. Dwell time increases shopper visit value in a well laid-out shop.

Crossword shoppers stick together. They talk, share their love of the puzzle and this word of mouth can help you find more shoppers.

The performance of crossword titles is better than most other magazine segments. This also makes it valuable.

While the paltry margin from crosswords is frustrating, it’s a product segment we can leverage and from which we can drive value by being engaged retailers and following the opportunities revealed in data.

I recommend having crosswords in two places within magazines, their traditional home and in a column next to weeklies. I’d also post about crosswords on social media as different titles speak to different co-horts of value: large print, cryptic and word circle are good examples of these. Talk about them as a good gift for young and old.

One of the best things you could try is a crossword lover club that meets up at your newsagency. I suspect they’d love this to meet fellow puzzlers and to be seen, it shows that you as a specialist retailer see their interest and respect it.

Crosswords are valuable in the newsagency. Take a look at your range and consider working with the distributor to expand it. Growth in crosswords will deliver growth elsewhere in the business.

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crosswords

Follow the cash in your newsagency

From the moment a customer hands over cash, it should be tracked in the business. Each point of a gap in tracking is a point of possible theft.

This is on my mind today because a retailer colleague recently discovered an employee theft situation where the employee was able to steal undetected for many months because the business did not reconcile daily takings using their POS software. It was a manual process that was not regularly checked again st actual sales and even then, the checking was cursory.

More fool on the retailer for disinterest in managing cash.

The theft would have been stopped or at least seen sooner had they done their end of shift inside the POS software with that data feeding seamlessly and untouched by human hands through to Xero, the accounting software they use. Instead, they recorded cash manually and manually entered data into Xero.

This is a failure of process that was easily exploited by the thief.

Business systems exist to block this.

The more control a business owner exerts on their business by fully using their software and supporting this with black and white processes the less opportunity for employee theft.

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Newsagency management

Australian made is a factor in card buying decisions

Customers are loving the excellent range of locally made single and boxed Christmas cards. We know because of the comments.

I especially like the smart placement of Australian made by suppliers on their packaging. Here’s one example from a pack a boxed Christmas cards:

Here’s an example of the collateral from Henderson calling Australian made out with their Christmas singles:

I think the locally made story is one of several factors at the core of excellent Christmas card sales growth this year.

The products we put into our businesses reflect choices we make. If we pitch shop local, it starts with us.

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Social responsibility