2009 wasn’t what you’d call a great year for anyone who cares about magazine sales at
retail. That would be any publisher of a
print consumer magazine, magazine wholesalers and distributors, and the
retailers who carry magazines.
It was a year that saw a major wholesaler go out of business, another declare bankruptcy
and restructure, a growing rift between subscription and single copy prices, bookstores
closing, a bookstore chain on the brink, specialty chains cutting back on their
assortment (remember the MMPA?), court cases between publishers and
distributors, court cases between wholesalers and publishers, magazines folding
or pulling off the newsstand (but that’s not so unusual, is it?) and falling
sales. Again.
And, oh yes, the internet.
And that isn’t even mentioning the pending court case for attempted murder by a key player in our business.
This year also, by my personal anecdotal survey, was the year I heard the most people
say, as a celebration of the New Year: “at
least last year is over.”
This early in the year it’s hard not to feel at least some small sense of optimism that
2010 will be a better year for all of us.
Surely the worst is over. None of
us will be going back to business as usual—there really isn’t much usual business
left anymore. But what there is needs
our attention and to the degree that we’ve recovered from the quakes of ’09, we
can turn to that and get it rolling.
With this in mind, and based on trends shaping up in first quarter, what do we have to look forward to in 2010?
1) Bookazines are coming into their own.
The trend towards supporting profitability through special issues and
one shots has been going on for quite some time. In recent years, the specials have been
getting bigger, more valuable, and more expensive. Publishers find sales hold up if the
up-priced specials offer real value to the reader, and lots of heft. This year more publishers than ever appear to
have included these Bookazines, or Super SIPS, in their planning. A caveat:
this boom will quickly bust if budget restrictions force publishers to
pump out increasing numbers of specials at ever higher prices while value is
not maintained.
2) Publishers are beginning to promote at
retail again. There was a virtual freeze on promo spending
in 2009 as publishers scrambled to meet their often dramatically reduced
expense budgets. This year publishers
are comparing sales with promotions with sales without and cautiously
re-entering the promotions field, targeting retailers that make the most
difference to their sales and profits.
3) Publishers are cross-promoting with
their book lines with their magazines—in
part because retailers are making it more easy to do so.
4) Retailers are working with publishers
to try to stay relevant. In part they are doing so by introducing new
promotions approaches, including internet-generated coupons tying in with
direct mail and in-store circulars, coupons sent to the customer’s phone;
online partnerships with premiums, coupons, sweeps, and contests, more
sophisticated digital signage, and support with subscriptions efforts through
in-store and online tie-ins.
5) Retailers continue to seek greater
margin, but publishers continue to resist"Tahoma","sans-serif""">. Intro fees,
slotting fees, and increased RDAs are all being put on the table but publishers
are looking to their own bottom lines.
6) We’re seeing a rush to mobile
applications, some
with retail implications.
Tags: circulation, distribution, magazine, publishing, sales
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