newsXpress features in The Australian Women’s Weekly

Today in The Australian Women’s Weekly you can see the first of a series of ads and media coverage supporting newsXpress retailers and their release in exclusive partnership with The Royal Australian Mint a coin program honouring The Australian Women’s Weekly Birthday Cake Book.  The QR code takes you to the newsXpress website where stockists (from June 12) are listed.

This is good news for the newsagency channel and, especially, newsXpress retailers. It will drive net new traffic in-store, increase sales and honour a beloved

While the coins release on June 12, the teaser campaign starts today. What is planned between now and June 12 is comprehensive, big. What is planned for June 12 and the weeks after is even bigger.

newsXpress members are grateful to The Royal Australian Mint and Are Media for the opportunity and their support over the last two years bringing this to life.

Advice on buying a newsagency in Australia

There’s a buzz in the air in May 2025, with plenty of newsagency businesses changing hands across the country. A newsagency is a good business to buy and a good business to work on, improve and make more valuable.

A question we frequently encounter from prospective buyers is, “What should I ask for when I’m looking to buy a newsagency?”

Our advice is: thoroughly understand the newsagency business as it stands today. The newsagency of the present and future is a far cry from the predominantly agency-focused model of the past, for which the Australian newsagency channel is well known.

To help you get a clear picture, here’s a list of essential data we recommend all prospective newsagency buyers request from the vendor or their representative:

  • The accountant’s Profit & Loss (P&L) statements for the last two years. Insist on the actual financial statements, not a specially prepared spreadsheet.
  • A detailed list of all add-backs used to arrive at the profit figure upon which the asking price is based.
  • Tax returns for the same two-year period. While their relevance can vary depending on business structures, they can serve as a valuable cross-reference against the accountant’s P&L.
  • Sales data reports directly from the Point of Sale (POS) software for the last two years. This is critical data for verifying the claimed income.
  • Sales data reports from the lottery terminal to corroborate the income figures.
  • Business Activity Statements (BAS) to further confirm the data presented in the P&L.
  • A comprehensive inventory list detailing every item in the business, including its purchase price and the date it was last sold. Additionally, request copies of invoices for random verification.
  • A copy of the current shop lease agreement.
  • Copies of any other leases that the vendor expects you to assume as part of the sale.
  • A list of all forward orders that have been placed on behalf of the business.
  • A complete list of all employees, including their names, hourly rates, employment type (e.g., full-time, part-time, casual), start dates, accrued annual leave, and accrued long service leave.

This information is fundamental for any buyer to properly assess a business opportunity. If a business for sale cannot readily provide this data, it raises serious questions about its preparedness for sale.

Once you have this information in hand, take the time to analyse it yourself. Don’t outsource the critical decision of whether a business is a sound investment.

For newsagents considering selling, and who might feel apprehensive about this list, our advice is to address these points proactively. Focus on running your business effectively now, ensuring that the data outlined above reflects a healthy and well-managed operation. Preparing your newsagency for sale is an ongoing process, something you should be mindful of every day you’re in business.

This is why we here at newsXpress often say that every day in a well-run business is a payday. Operate a smart, lean, and profit-focused newsagency, and you’ll enjoy success today and a significant reward when you decide to sell.

The most attractive businesses for buyers are those that are straightforward to operate and consistently profitable. While a buyer might be willing to turn a business around, they should rightfully reap the rewards for that effort, not the seller.

Ultimately, the selling price of your business will be determined by its current performance. So, get your affairs in order and make your newsagency as appealing as possible to potential buyers. The effort you put in now will undoubtedly be worth it in the long run.

newsXpress helps newsagents run businesses they enjoy and that are profitable. We love helping new newsagents settle in and then to evolve the businesses to be relevant into the future.

See how a POS software integrated Shopify website is helping a newsXpress business grow online sales

Ten months ago, we embarked on a small experiment: building a POS software connected Shopify website for a local suburban Melbourne newsXpress shop on a tight budget. The goal was to test the waters and see what could be achieved with minimal investment.

That website has, as at the end of April 2025, racked up more than $125,000 in online sales.

What a huge boost to the physical shop!

Starting with a modest product range, the website quickly began generating sales. In just the past seven weeks, this simple online store has raked in over $18,000 without any additional marketing spend or inventory investment. This new video from us takes you behind the scenes on what we have been able to do through the Hugs and Love website integration with our POS software.

The Hugs and Love website (www.hugsandlove.com.au) is a prime example of how seamlessly integrating Tower Systems POS software with Shopify can streamline online sales and fulfilment processes for local businesses. This powerful combination allows businesses to efficiently manage their inventory, process orders, and fulfill purchases both in-store and online.

By leveraging the strength of these two platforms, local shops can:

– Expand their reach: Attract new customers and increase sales beyond their physical storefront.

– Simplify operations: Streamline inventory management and order processing, saving time and reducing errors.

– Enhance customer experience: Offer a convenient and efficient online shopping experience.

The experience with this website has been valuable in helping us take care of the tech for local small business retailers and provide business advice for implementation, advice based on lived experience.

With so many offering website development services, we differentiate ourselves by providing business operational advice and support to make the revenue dream from online sales a reality.

Everything we do in this POS software / Shopify integration space is about maximising profit for the local small business retailers we are grateful to serve. Our innovation with Shopify is part of this.

Profit is vital in any business and especially vital in local small retail businesses.

If you are a small business retailer looking to earn more money from online sales, Tower Systems can help. Our team of experts will work with you to create a customised solution that meets your unique needs. We can demonstrate our POS software and demonstrate integrations like with we have done with Shopify for many of our customers. Better still, we can connect you with many other retailers for whom we have done this already.

Tower Systems is a small business focussed POS software company developing, and supporting POS software for niche specialty retailers.

Here is a video we made five months ago.

This Mother’s Day, newsXpress offers a difference

newsXpress shops across Australia are running a local in-store Mother’s Day competition. Each store has a prize pack valued at close to $400.00 to give away to a local shopper. Locals love it when a local wins.

Every card purchase is eligible to enter, not only Mother’s Day. This has been key to above-average card sales growth for newsXpress stores over the last year – this Mother’s Day promotion is the fourth of a series of seasonal promotions.

newsXpress funds the promotion for members: providing the prize packs, the in-store collateral, digital assets and more. We do this with some support from Henderson Greetings and Simson Cards.

A vital piece of this promotion is the analysis using our POS software data. This is key to the evolution of these campaigns to maximise the value for retailers. Our retail and tech expertise combine to help our local retailers cultivate more valuable businesses.

If you haven’t shopped for Mother’s Day yet, please shop local, preferably in a newsagency. There you’ll find many local Aussie made cards that also do good by supporting a local charity you’re bound to love.

An awesome newsagency transformation success story

Congratulations to Ravi for the fresh and fun shopping experience he and the crew are bringing to newsXpress Newstead in Tasmania. A good news story about a newsagency business on the front page of the local daily newspaper is good news for our channel. This is from The Launceston Examiner yesterday.

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This is a newsXpress business, the second for Ravi. newsXpress helps its members transform their businesses, to make them enjoyable and profitable.

Our thoughts on the future of the Australian newsagency

The future of the Aussie newsagency has been in the news late last year thanks to what we’d label inaccurate reporting by the ABC.

We are grateful to Henry Johnstone of Real Commercial for their interest in our opinion on the future of the newsagency. This video reflects our opinion on commentary about this topic and we explore why we take a different view to some others, a few we back with current data.

newsXpress helps local newsagents thrive.

Retail transformation: Launceston, Tasmania

Join us in a chat with Ravi as he shares us his journey from engineer in India to flourishing retailer in Launceston Tasmania.

Ravi’s newsagency at Prospect Marketplace near Launceston Tasmania looks nothing like a newsagency. This is a wonderful and inspiring business transformation that has locals loving shopping there. It has come so far from when it was run by others as a traditional newsagency.

It is a true treasure hunt retail experience, offering shoppers of all ages fun and inspiring engagement opportunities.

What Ravi has achieved in what was a traditional retail newsagency is an inspiration to other newsagents. he’s done it on a tight budget, using items bought at markets and elsewhere to bring character and warmth to his shop.

We love seeing retail transformations like this and are grateful for the opportunity to share. We are grateful to have helped Ravi on this journey.

Retail transformation: newsXpress Leven, Ulverstone, Tasmania

This business has been in the family for decades, across two generations. What was once a traditional newsagency is today a vibrant gift shop that has some newsagency lines as a service for customers.

This shop is an excellent example of doing it yourself and creating something genuinely local, warm, comforting and clearly loved.

This shop also shows that you can succeed by trading outside of what people expect for your type of business, that today in retail, your shingle does not have to define your business.

Ulverstone is a wonderful local community, a beautiful part of the world. What Shareen and Wayne have created at newsXpress Leven is a shop people love to visit and spend money in.

Often, local retailers can get caught in their head about what they could do in their business. Seven years ago, Sharene and Wayne set about embracing change, and they haven’t stopped since – creating a business of which they can be proud.

  • Location Benefits: Ulverstone’s relaxed lifestyle, with its proximity to beaches and mountains, attracts both locals and tourists.
  • Business Evolution: Originally a magazine and souvenir shop owned by Sharen’s parents, Sharen and Wayne have turned it into a gift shop offering a diverse range of products, including homewares, leather bags, and toys.
  • Shop Design: The shop boasts unique design elements, such as a black painted wall inspired by New York shops, and custom-made fixtures by Wayne. He even repurposed old boxes into retail shelving.
  • Product Range: newsXpress Leven caters to a wide range of customer needs, offering everything from everyday gifts to premium products, with dedicated sections for baby items, games, and even John Deere merchandise.
  • Customer Experience: Sharen focuses on creating an appealing and easy-to-navigate shopping environment with distinct zones and storytelling displays.
  • Inspiration: A trip to New York inspired Sharen to implement innovative retail concepts.

It was a thrill to see what they have created.

newsXpress Leven brings to Ulverstone in Tasmania a wonderful retail experience, a shop that would be at home on the high street in the UK or in retail streets of Brooklyn. Ulverstone locals love shopping here and visitors are surprised at the elevated shopping experience.

Small retail business advice: easy steps to transforming your newsagency for success

If you recognise the need for a transformation in your newsagency but find your business data isn’t up to scratch, don’t despair. There are immediate actions you can take right there on the shop floor to initiate change.

In our experience, businesses in this situation often have a very traditional shop floor layout. The advice we are about to give is all about deliberately disrupting what you currently have. We have found this can be incredibly helpful for retailers to see their business with fresh eyes and identify new possibilities. It’s a radical and somewhat rough approach, designed to shake things up significantly.

It’s crucial to understand that whatever changes you implement aren’t set in stone. Make these moves, observe the results, learn from them, and be prepared to adjust. Your shop needs to be in a constant state of evolution.

First: Confronting the Old Guard – The Newspaper and Magazine Unit

If your shop features a traditional magazine fixture running down the length of the store, with newspapers facing customers as they enter, here’s what you need to do: remove all the stock and rip the entire unit out. Don’t overthink this; just get it done.

That prime central space is valuable retail real estate that should be dedicated to products yielding a gross profit of 50% or more. Allocating this high-visibility area to products with a 25% gross profit or less is simply not a sound business decision.

Tear the whole unit out.

Now, using basic, low-cost shelving – the kind you’d find in any hardware store – relocate your magazines to the back wall of the shop. Whatever was previously in that back wall space will need to be moved elsewhere. Simple strip shelving with adjustable brackets will suffice.

Place your newspapers on a low, flat shelf beneath the magazines.

Furthermore, if you’ve been displaying newspaper or magazine posters, it’s time to stop. They don’t effectively increase sales.

Second: Filling the Newly Liberated Space

Find a couple of old tables or some sturdy wooden boxes. Use these to create display areas on the main shop floor. On each of these makeshift displays, tell a story about a specific product category. Bring products to this central part of the shop that customers might not typically encounter.

If you don’t have spare tables, check out your local op. shop, your garage, or a discount retailer like Amart. Keep your spending to an absolute minimum.

Resist the urge to use spinners in this newly recovered space.

Carefully select products that you are genuinely proud to offer.

Crucially, make sure to include some products that you think won’t work for your customers. This is a vital step in uncovering what you don’t yet know about their preferences and buying habits.

Be prepared to completely change these displays within a week if they aren’t generating the results you’re looking for.

Three: Observe and Learn

The initial changes might not yield immediate success, and that’s perfectly okay. If they don’t, make further adjustments and continue experimenting until you see positive outcomes.

You might also experience some early wins. If that happens, capitalise on it – do more of what’s working.

If your business still has that traditional central magazine and newspaper unit, we suspect you’ll see some encouraging results from this radical shift. That’s been the pattern in every similar business we have seen try it.

Most importantly, have fun with this process.

We know one newsagent who, after making these changes, hosted a Saturday afternoon sausage sizzle specifically so people could watch as they literally used a chainsaw to dismantle and remove the old magazine unit from the shop!

The fundamental aim of this initial move is to disrupt your ingrained view of your business. Yes, the shop floor will be temporarily disrupted, but more importantly, you need to be disrupted in your thinking. That’s why you need to undertake something radical that you’re likely to initially resist. These suggested changes could potentially do more for your personal perspective than for the immediate bottom line of the business itself.

newsXpress helps Aussie newsagents and small business retailers thrive.

The local Aussie newsagency has changed into a wonderful new type of shop serving locals

The local Aussie newsagency is changing and newsXpress is grateful to serve these businesses and help them navigate change.

This video features photos from some of our newsagency customers. We made it as part of our commitment to help local newsagents reach beyond tradition to attract new shoppers who otherwise might not consider their businesses.

While Aussie newsagencies are rooted in tradition, many of their shops have shrugged off tradition in favour of more modern retail offering unique and wonderful products.

We are thankful to count many newsagents as customers. Many of these are gift shops too, jewellers, clothing shops, coffee shops and more, while still identifying as a newsagency. Such is changing retail today.

This video is branded newsXpress as that is the newsagency marketing group with which these businesses are connected.

Aussie newsagencies have been around since the 1800s. They were created to distribute magazines in the goldfields. The channel has gone from close to 5,000 to 2,800 retailers.

The businesses closing tend to be old, out of date and irrelevant to today.

This brief video explores what newsagents of the future could look like and how newsagents can transform to be relevant.

Helping local small business retailers navigate the opportunities of omnichannel is something for which we are grateful here at newsXpress.

Helping small business retailers serve and sell 24/7 bring us joy as these retailers discover a bigger world than their local businesses traditionally reached.

If you’ve not visited a local newsagency for a while, drop in and, hopefully, find a business that has transformed beyond what you expect.

newsXpress is not a franchise group and as such does not operate under the obligations and requirements of the franchise code of conduct.

newsXpress is a marketing group, a local retail business marketing group. It provides support, advice and nourishment for local retail newsagents around Australia.

It is the how and what of newsXpress that sets it as not being a franchise group.

newsXpress is not intrusive or demanding. It does not make demands in terms of products ranged, prices set or how a business operates. newsXpress does not have demands in terms of business name, layout or uniforms.

All of these things and more demonstrate that newsXpress is not a franchise and that newsXpress local retailers are not franchisees, which is liberating for them.

Small business retail advice: transforming your newsagency

If you’re serious about transforming your retail newsagency or any other local small retail business with which you are involved, whether it’s a traditional setup or one that’s already evolving, the journey begins with a clear understanding of your current position. It all starts with your data.

Knowing exactly where your business stands is the bedrock upon which all future progress will be built. This means taking a comprehensive look at your operations from various angles. You need to gather the following:

  • An up-to-date profit and loss statement. This provides a snapshot of your recent financial performance.
  • A current debtors report and a current creditors report. These show who owes you money and who you owe money to.
  • A complete list of all monies owed by the business, both formal loans and informal debts.
  • A stock listing showing the total value of your current inventory.
  • A dead stock listing, detailing all items with zero sales recorded in the past six months or more, along with the total value of this stagnant inventory.
  • A floor map illustrating the gross profit percentage contribution by each product department or category in relation to its allocated floor space.
  • Your total rostered hours for a typical week, including all owners regardless of whether they draw a formal wage, alongside a calculation of your revenue per hour.
  • A revenue comparison down to the individual category level, comparing the most recent six-month period with the same six months from the previous year.

Simply stating a desire to transform isn’t enough. You need to deeply understand your current situation and the business’s capacity for change. The information listed above will reveal immediate opportunities and provide insights into the business’s ability to fund the costs associated with transformation. This list is the essential starting point for any business I work with on making significant changes.

As you delve into this pool of data, my strong recommendation is to first seek out easy wins that can pave the way for a more focused and productive approach moving forward. For instance, if you discover $10,000 or more tied up in dead stock that has already been paid for, get rid of it! The freed-up cash and valuable space will give you an immediate boost. To clear this stock effectively, consolidate it into a designated clearance area – perhaps a table or a few tables. Apply a consistent discount across all these items; I suggest a straightforward 50% reduction.

While you’re tackling the dead stock, simultaneously work through the rest of your data. Aim to understand the current performance of your business and carefully examine the comparison report for any readily apparent “green shoot” opportunities within your existing product categories. This could reveal a simple first step you can take.

As you analyse your data, compile a comprehensive list of ideas and potential action items. You might uncover some easy wins you hadn’t previously recognised or had been overlooking.

Over the years, we have spoken with retailers considering business transformation or improvement who have been tempted to rely on their accountant for guidance. Unless your accountant has current, hands-on retail experience specifically within your type of shop, we believe this is a misstep. Others have been keen to engage business consultants. Similarly, unless they possess current retail experience in your particular sector, We would advise caution.

The key takeaway here is that this is your business. You’ve reached a point where you want change, a transformation. The next steps are yours to take and are best executed by you, ensuring you have ownership of the changes.

This initial phase begins with diligently gathering your data, cleaning out the stagnant aspects of your business, and getting your business “fit” for what lies ahead.

All of this groundwork is about preparing you to be “match fit” for the more substantial changes that will follow.

newsXpress helps local small business retailers thrive.

Small business retail advice: tips on managing labour costs in your newsagency

Let’s talk about labour costs and how they impact your newsagency or any retail business. The newsagency benchmark suggests aiming for a labour cost that sits between 9% and 11% of your total revenue – that’s your product sales plus any commission you earn from agency lines.

To put that into perspective: if your combined revenue from products and commissions totals $1 million, your total labour expenditure should ideally be around $110,000.

It’s absolutely vital that this labour cost calculation includes a fair market value for the time you, as the owner, invest in the business. Too often, we see newsagency owners clocking up a staggering 60 to 80 hours each week, and frankly, a significant portion of that time isn’t generating productive outcomes.

Think about it – a small business simply can’t afford unproductive management time. Your larger competitors don’t carry this overhead, and neither should you.

This is why we strongly advise against having a dedicated back office, or if it’s absolutely unavoidable, to keep it small and certainly not a comfortable space. There’s a hidden advantage to this lean approach: it naturally pushes pricing and other administrative tasks out onto the shop floor. Embrace this shift, and you’ll likely see your revenue increase.

While the dream of business ownership often involves stepping away from the frontline, remember that the shop floor is where the money is made. That’s where your best people should be, and arguably, where you should be spending a significant portion of your time too.

Allocate your “boss time” strategically, in proportion to the size of your business. For a typical small retail business turning over $2 million or less annually, we suggest limiting your dedicated management time to no more than around five hours per week. Of course, this depends on how you utilise that time. If you’re handling bookkeeping yourself, thereby saving on external costs, then a bit more time might be justified.

Here’s a more practical way to visualise the impact on your bottom line: simply cutting three hours of paid adult labour each day, from Monday to Friday, can directly boost your business’s profitability by over $20,000 per year.

If you’re thinking that’s not achievable in your situation, take a hard look at where you’re currently spending your “boss work” hours. Could some of those tasks be done at the counter or while you’re on the shop floor? By effectively multi-tasking, you could potentially reduce your paid labour hours. Ultimately, it comes down to whether you’re committed to making your business more profitable.

Consider the experience of one newsagent who heeded this advice. They successfully cut their labour costs by a remarkable $50,000 in a single period, and during that same time, their revenue actually increased by 6%.

Gaining control of your labour costs and ensuring they align with the benchmark starts with a well-thought-out and efficient roster.

This is more advice from newsXpress a marketing group that helps local small business newsagents thrive.

Small business retail advice: Re-igniting Saturday Spark in Your Retail Newsagency

Saturdays have changed in retail. They are not what they used to be.

It’s true, the retail landscape has shifted dramatically. The once-sacred Saturday, a bustling hub for newsagencies in the days of fewer lotto draws and limited weekend trading, has seen its shine diminish for many. But don’t let those Saturday sales simply drift. It’s time for a considered and planned campaign to inject new life into your Saturdays, making your shop the destination for weekend fun and value.

Remember, the specific actions you take will depend on your local context and customer base. The key is to make shopping at your newsagency on a Saturday a more engaging and rewarding experience. Here are some ideas to spark your creativity:

Think Fun & Engagement:

  • Host Monthly Brand Parties: Turn your shop into a mini-celebration! Choose fun-related brands you stock and host a themed “party” each month. Think product demos, special offers, and a lively atmosphere.
  • Nurture Local Clubs: Connect with local groups that align with your product range. Could you host a monthly knitters’ club if you sell craft supplies, or a jigsaw puzzle club if that’s a popular item? This fosters community and brings in regular Saturday visitors.
  • “New Arrivals Saturday”: Position Saturdays as the day for discovering fresh stock. Make a bit of theatre out of unpacking new products, creating excitement and anticipation.
  • Saturday Playtime: Make your shop interactive! Offer product samples to try, set up demonstration areas where customers can “play” with items, and create a lighthearted atmosphere.

Offer Value & Incentives:

  • Saturday Cake Treat: Partner with a local bakery to offer a free slice of cake at a specific time each Saturday. It’s a simple yet effective way to draw people in and create a positive association with your shop.
  • Saturday Bonus Draws: If you run a lottery second-chance draw, make the draw on a Saturday and offer an extra prize for winners who are in-store at the time. This incentivises Saturday visits.
  • Saturday Showcase: Make Saturdays a day for significant visual changes. Implement noticeable new displays to create a sense of novelty and encourage customers to browse.
  • “Saturday Savers” Promotions: Introduce special deals and discounts specifically for Saturdays, branded as “Saturday Savers” or something similar to create a sense of urgency and value.

Keep Your Business Goals Central:

Crucially, whatever initiatives you choose to implement, ensure they directly benefit your business and its commercial outcomes. While supporting local groups can be valuable, your primary focus on Saturdays needs to be driving sales and engagement within your shop.

You have a choice. You can allow your Saturday sales to continue their current trend, or you can take proactive steps to reinvigorate this valuable trading day. By implementing a considered and engaging campaign, you can make your newsagency the place to be on a Saturday, boosting foot traffic, sales, and overall business success.

This advice is provided by newsXpress, a local Aussie marketing group that helps local small business newsagents thrive.