Heard on the Web" Media Intelligence
Courtesy of BoSacks and The Precision Media Group 
America's Oldest e-newsletter est.1993


newsstand

BoSacks Speaks Out:

 

The following article parallels in some ways my intensive current research and development project to actually fix the newsstand as we know it. I know that sounds like an incredibly bold statement and an adventure where many good intentioned ships have floundered before on the rocky retail shores. But I am in the midst of putting together a broad based team of professionals who will motivate and encourage members of the publishing supply chain to imagine new and innovative solutions that I am convinced will work. The early results are more than compelling.

 

 

Will our plan totally end the newsstand slide? No, that isn't going to happen any time soon. But the plan does greatly improve the conditions in which we find ourselves. At this point in development I feel confident that our team can guarantee improved efficiency by a minimum of 5% with no loss of sale. I'll go further and suggest that we can also guarantee increased unit sales by a minimum of 5%. You do the math. Does that sound interesting? Would that help?

 

There is much more to this project, but rest assured that it ain't magic or alchemy, but rather science based formulas that deliver and distribute our merchandise profitably and sensibly. As our team continues to get together, I will report results to you all. Early indications are excellent. In the near future, we will be looking for volunteers, as there is nothing better than real proof of a concept that truly pays the bills.  

 

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Let us not seek the Republican answer or the Democratic answer, but the right answer. Let us not seek to fix the blame for the past. Let us accept our own responsibility for the future.

John F. Kennedy 

By Michael J. Fox

 

 

 

With newsstand sales hobbling, much of the talk at yesterday's PBAA Canada meet centred around change. It's time to entertain new ideas, said speakers and attendees, spurred by a presentation by Michael J. Fox. 


Speaking August 14 in Toronto to a gathering of magazine publishers, retailers, wholesalers and distributors, the publisher ofGarden Making and new chair of Magazines Canada floated some ideas about circ that he admitted might be radical or naive (and in some cases not even his own). Regardless of whether the suggestions are doable, Fox's point was that it is time to try something different, because the same-old means sales keeping sliding.


"The economics no longer make sense for a lot of players," Fox said, noting that everyone in the chain is facing challenges. "Margins per copy are not very good."

Fox said that fighting over who gets what slice of the cover price pie coupled with historical industry competitiveness is preventing the consideration of new ideas. "The system was supposed to work," he said, but doesn't anymore, leading to today's climate where Fox said there is little incentive to explore newsstand marketing.

Here are some thoughts from Fox on switching from a model of abundance, to a model of scarcity.

Get the margins up to 100%

The idea behind Fox's scenario is to get the juices flowing, and to move units. Copies could be re-allocated with frequently rejiggered newsstand  configurations (which also means scrapping RDA); putting new or hot items at the front and repositioning older titles that are known to sell mainly in the first week; or maybe even using copies as shopper incentives. "You pay $50 on groceries, you get a free magazine of your choice," Fox suggested.

All copies leave stands with consumers

This model might require having a no-return policy in place and cutting press runs (apologies to printers, said Fox, who are currently the only parties who get paid for every copy produced). For retailers, it creates opportunities for new display ideas, making an event out of the release of new issues, and specials, like bundling unsold issues as gifts. "There would be more copies in the consumers' hands rather than at the shredders," Fox said. 

He also mentioned publishers paying fees to distributors and wholesalers, and maybe selling copies to retailers at a third of the price. Who takes the hit? The publisher could absorb 25%, the wholesaler 5%, and the distributor 3%.

Put the data to work

How to know where to place copies and how to reconfigure the newsstand on a regular basis? Which magazines to bundle with what products? What magazines to publish, let alone stock in stores? In the current system of RDA and sending unsold copies to the cutters, "there is no real incentive to make use of all the data we now have available," Fox said. "Use databases to actually market," he said.

Masthead will have more on the Periodical & Book Association of America's 2013 PBAA Canada event to come. In the meantime, share your own ideas on how to shake up the newsstand in the comments section below. 

 

bo"The Industry that Vents Together Stays Together"  
Responses to all Articles and Bo-Rants are greatly encouraged and may be included in " BoSacks Readers Speak Out"  =======================================
All news items and the various opinions expressed in this newsletter are not necessarily the opinion of, nor in agreement with the opinions of BoSacks. They are just interesting thoughts and other opinions that BoSacks thinks you should know about.  
After all, as the Japanese proverb goes: 
"If you believe everything you read, perhaps you better not read." 

"Heard on the Web" Media Intelligence:  
Courtesy of  The Precision Media Group.   
Print, Publishing and Media Consultants 
193 Brookwood Drive, Charlottesville VA 22902
Contact - Robert M. Sacks  917-566-7437
BoSacks@aol.com
http://www.bosacks.com
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