Times Colonist

Flare to disappear from newsstands

- LAUREN LA ROSE

TORONTO — The new year will usher in a new look on Canadian newsstands as the venerable fashion magazine Flare disappears from the racks and turns its focus toward targeting a younger demographi­c both online and offline.

Sales of single copies of printed magazines have fallen dramatical­ly, forcing the industry to re-evaluate distributi­on and adapt, says Bo Sacks, president of the U.S.-based consulting firm Precision Media Group.

“In the last five years, we have lost 50 per cent of the newsstand sale. And that is a trend that’s not going away,” says Sacks.

“Every year, we seem to lose nine to 11 per cent of the sales we used to have before. This is a trend that seems inescapabl­e. At what point does it plateau? I have no idea. But it doesn’t look like anytime soon.”

Flare is currently averaging 1,800 copies sold on newsstands, which is less than 2.5 per cent of its total circulatio­n, says Melissa Ahlstrand, group publisher for fashion and beauty at Rogers Communicat­ions Inc.

“Essentiall­y, with those kinds of numbers on newsstands, we really had to take a good look at how we distribute our print copies. It’s a very small quantity,” Ahlstrand says, adding that Flare will still publish 10 print editions in 2016 for subscriber­s.

Data provided from the Alliance for Audited Media revealed that Flare had average monthly newsstand sales of 2,658 copies in the first half of the year, while 27,825 monthly digital sales represente­d 28.9 per cent of Flare’s total paid circulatio­n.

Ahlstrand says millennial readers aren’t regular newsstand buyers, and in an effort to connect with “young, cool, smart women,” they’ve decided to invest in another form of print distributi­on to reach that demographi­c: distributi­ng overrun copies in urban centres.

“Where we may lose the visibility in newsstands — albeit small — we’re actually gaining a lot more visibility through this alternativ­e distributi­on.”

Across the industry, a comparativ­e analysis of 56 Canadian titles found overall paid and verified circulatio­n was down 4.8 per cent for the first half of 2014 compared to the first half of 2013, according to AAM.

Verified circulatio­n includes subscripti­on copies designed for readership in public places, such as those in waiting rooms, hotel rooms or by airlines.

While single-copy sales saw a three per cent increase, paid subscripti­ons were down 10.1 per cent.

Sacks argues the newsstand is still “critical to the long-term survival of magazines,” despite the drop in sales.

“This is where people discover magazines,” says Sacks. “Sure, you can save a lot of money by eliminatin­g your print title. But long-term, discoverab­ility becomes a much bigger problem.”

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