Christian Retailing

The Essential Guide: Small gains Print Email
Written by Rhonda Sholar   
Wednesday, 23 September 2009 04:35 PM America/New_York

The children's category is an increasingly important one, especially in tough times

 

CraveKids2While sales in the children's department don't equate to the biggest moneymaker in a Christian retail store, the category may be one of the least affected by a downturned economy.

In many cases, experts believe, the category could even benefit from a recession. The primary reason: Parents are willing to do without in order to be able to provide for their children—and for Christians, that includes feeding and nurturing their youngsters' faith.

And when parents do buy for themselves, they often pick something up for their junior shopping companion as well.

Meanwhile, children's games lend themselves to being recession-proof not just at Christmas, but also throughout the year.

Said Rob Anderson, president of Cactus Game Design: "In tough economic and spiritual times, parents like spending more time together as a family and games are a great vehicle for family time."

Children's products are also less affected by online sales—where books and music have been hijacked—because of a high "touch and see" appeal at the store level, according to Big Idea's Brian Mitchell, director of marketing and licensing.

"In addition to the impulse sale factor for toys, games and branded children's products, consumers are more likely to physically shop with their children to make the best selection rather than buy online as they would books and music," he said.

Like the juveniles it serves, the Christian children's category has experienced some growing pains as vendors try to match the quality of products in the general market and top-selling brands become oversaturated, leaving stores and vendors in search of the next big thing.

Several factors have contributed to flattened sales, beginning with publishers who over-published, according to Christian children's market expert Mary Manz Simon, a longtime trend watcher.

"For the past 10 years, many CBA-released children's picture books were text-heavy," she said. "Parents might buy one book, but after kids won't sit for a too-long story, parents don't make that mistake again."

In the area of videos, Simon said the under-pricing of some titles changed both customer and retailer expectations.

"To rack up big sales numbers, some CBA companies dropped the suggested retail price," she noted. "As a result, everyone expected every kidvid to sell for, say, $9.99. The companies that didn't lower prices didn't sell their videos, especially as the economic climate changed."

 

Brand recognition

Branding still drives children‘s products, but vendors and retailers have learned that some parameters must be put in place.

Mitchell, for VeggieTales creator Big Idea, contended that offering a variety of branded and licensed products creates a much larger presence for advertising and at store level.

Licensed partners for the company for 2009 include VeggieTales shoes and shoe charms from Jibbitz, a subsidiary of Crocs, a Sing-Along Brush-Along toothbrush from Ranir Oral Care, Christmas ornaments from DaySpring and AIM Global and plush toys from Pint Size.

Michael Turner, director of special products and markets for New Day Christian Distributors, takes the same approach. "If a company that is familiar to customers makes a product, the stores will be more likely to carry it when otherwise they may not," he said.

In the last year, the distributor has brought brands like Fisher-Price, Lego and Jibbitz to the Christian market.

The category has received attention from other vendors who traditionally set their sights on other areas. In 2008, Christian Art Gifts unveiled its "Christian Art Kids" line with fun, Scripture-based educational products like puzzles, games and Bible storybooks. Integrity Music released its first quarterly curriculum this summer for ages 5-10 based on music from its "Shout Praises Kids" series.

Harvest House Publishers is seeking to expand its children's offerings.

"Up until about four or five years ago, we really had no strategy for this category only because we didn't realize the demand was so great," said Jean Christen, gift director for Harvest House. "That all changed when I took a closer look at the market and realized that our children's books were performing consistently well within our entire gift line."

Thomas Nelson is bringing back its Tommy Nelson children's imprint after scrapping it in 2007 when its "One Company" initiative was implemented and its publishing functions were organized around consumer categories.

Lindsey Nobles, director of corporate communications, said that the return of Tommy Nelson was due to feedback from retailers and consumers.

DaySpring has a new entry into the Christian children's products market with its "Really Woolly Kids" initiative.

Rooted in significant consumer insights that showed kids' interest in the Internet and inspired by the company's No. 1 greeting card brand in the last 13 years, the company has partnered with Flying Rhinoceros to release two DVDs that tie in to a virtual world at www.reallywoolly.com, with retailers asking for more.

 

Small size for small fries

Small space doesn't necessarily mean small kid revenue. With the exception of jewelry and maybe framed art, toys and games can deliver as much retail dollar per square foot as anything else in the store, according to Anderson.

"Merchandisers could create a ‘Little Things for Little People' area near the register to showcase fun, colorful, inexpensive items for curious kids and parents," said Jilene Framek, president of Angel Toes, parent company of Good Newz Temporary Tattooz. "Compact racks will densely display hundreds small books, stickers, furry pencils or, in our case, themed temporary tattoos in an organized, efficient manner. For small stores, this keeps the cost per square foot down, and the kid content up."

Small stores can always start their children's department by ordering through distributors.

Mastering a small space seems to be working for stores, according to Laura Minchew, vice president and publisher of specialty books for Thomas Nelson.

"We've been delighted at the strength of the independent stores with children's product over the last 12 months," Minchew said. "Call out a kid's area—even a small one with color and merchandising material that look different from the rest of the store."

More creativity is required in the children's area than in other areas of the store—and more hands on to keep it looking that way. The wood fixtures and neutral colors that are typical for adult sections of the store would never keep the attention of an 8-year-old boy looking to kill some time while his mother shops.

"We keep it fresh by totally overhauling the department once or twice a year, including painting the walls and moving furniture," said Jennifer Marshall, manager of the Christian Book Outlet in Harrison, Ark. "It's also this department that we have to straighten more than any others, but it's to be expected."

Marshall noted that children's products are an immediate need, not something parents are interested in special-ordering should what they need—or what their child wants—not be on the shelf.

For some small stores, the best hope for a kids' department might be e-commerce.

"All stores, regardless of size, are missing a huge opportunity if they don't have a vibrant, up-to-date Web site," Simon said. "Small stores, with limited in-store inventory, should work especially hard to build their online services."

Consumers also expect fresh content and continuing innovation, with multi-channel selling becoming important in the coming year.

"This implies that mom will place an order online for a child's birthday party gift and dash by the store pick-up window to get her wrapped gift," Simon said.

 

Measuring up

The gap in quality between general market and Christian children's products has become much smaller in the past five and 10 years, according to Dan Lynch, vice president and publisher—family entertainment and vice president—children's marketing at Thomas Nelson.

"More time and consideration is spent in the creation of virtually every product, as it's not just about profit and sales," Lynch said. "Yes, that's key, and it keeps us all in business, but the message is critical, and we work hard to make sure these products are designed and produced at high levels."

The Christian market is a step behind in creating and selling quality video games in various platforms, Mitchell said, though "this category has eclipsed music and DVD sales at an astounding rate over the past five years. It's low-hanging fruit awaiting the right product to hit the market."

Despite a pricetag at just under $100, one such product that has done well is Guitar Praise, a family-friendly alternative to the general market favorite Guitar Hero. Maker Digital Praise reported that many Christian retailers sold out of its Guitar Praise game during the Christmas season last year.

Last month, Digital Praise released an expansion pack with 25 hits from artists ranging from Steven Curtis Chapman to Stryper—songs compiled from customer requests.

Simon believes that while kids' products should reflect that their world is digitally driven, they should also help kids develop 21st-century skills.

"Critical thinking, problem solving, self-reliance, cross-cultural awareness and media literacy will become increasingly important," she said. "This skill set is rarely reflected in CBA-generated products, and yet our companies could consider incorporating these elements in developmentally appropriate ways."

Charitable giving is also helping children grow up as citizens of the world.

"Retailers, suppliers and publishers need to offer opportunities for children and their families to demonstrate generosity and empathy, both locally and around the globe," Simon said.

This fall, Big Idea teamed up with Operation Christmas Child to help collect gifts for needy children throughout the world. More than 65,000 churches will have the opportunity to hold a screening of Saint Nicholas, where kids and families will be encouraged to "share the spirit of giving" this Christmas by donating shoe box gifts.

Hage's Educational Supplies in Muskegon, Mich., which started in the 1930s, reported seeing more children in the store in June buying books for summer reading and in August to get ready for the next school year.

"The key is to segment what people are asking for and make that available so that they can shop easier," said Patrick Ritsema, store manager and grandson of the store's founder. "We organized our kid's area by category rather than by age."

Several 4-foot units showcase devotionals, Bible storybooks, early readers, coloring books, mid-level readers and a special-needs category that includes titles on coping with death, adoption, divorce and illness.

 

Serving young customers

While parents enjoy a quick lunch or Bible study in the café of The Crave Bookstore in Lebanon, Tenn., their children can enjoy a healthy lunch of their own or be entertained with a movie or book within their parents' view.

With a goal to create a safe environment for families, Bridgette Belew, store owner and mother of four, created a menu with healthy choices for kids.

She continues the theme of building healthy families by offering products that bring families together. A display in the center aisle of the store features games—including the popular Find It game distributed by New Day—and Christian DVDs.

The store offers select dolls and plush at half price with the purchase of a kid's book, in order to turn slow-moving dolls. In the process, doll sales have increased to 10 in six months.

"We want this to be an oasis for people, and it includes moms who have been to Wal-Mart for an hour and can't keep their kids in the buggy," Belew said. "If children come as children, they'll want to come back as teens. You are creating lifelong relationships."

As with any store, when kids are around, things get broken. And some kids may not understand about store etiquette, so mishaps and breakage happen. Parents are embarrassed, and children may feel like they are not welcome to return.

"Our response has to be careful," said Beverly Snyder, events coordinator for the Northwestern Book Stores location in Maple Grove, Minn. "We approach calmly and squat down to the child's level and ask if they are OK. I remind them that we have to be careful in the store, (that) we don't want them to get hurt, and we don't want to hurt or scare other people either.

"Although we may inwardly cringe at the cost of some broken item, it is better to just let it go. The well-being of our customer and the compassion we show their children will go much farther to draw them back into our store again."

 

Category leaders

The popular "Berenstain Bears" titles from Zonderkidz have made their mark in the Christian retail market, with four out of the top 10 titles for the first six months of the year from the series. Bibles for children are ongoing best-sellers.

 

1. The Beginner's Bible (Zonderkidz) $16.99

2. Jesus Wants All of Me: Limited Edition, Oswald Chambers and Phil A. Smouse (Barbour Publishing) $4.97

3. Berenstain Bears Say Their Prayers, Mike Berenstain (Zonderkidz) $3.99

4. Berenstain Bears: God Loves You!, Mike Berenstain (Zonderkidz) $3.99

5. Berenstain Bears and the Golden Rule, Mike Berenstain (Zonderkidz) $3.99

6. The Lion Day-by-Day Bible (Kregel Publications) $24.99

7. Berenstain Bears Go to Sunday School, Mike Berenstain (Zonderkidz) $3.99

8. Mission Possible: A 40-Day Adventure With Jesus, Charles R. Swindoll (Thomas Nelson) $2.99

9. Jesus Storybook Bible, Sally Lloyd-Jones (Zonderkidz) $16.99

10. Little Bible, black (David C. Cook) $1.19

 

The ECPA list is compiled from sales of Christian books in hundreds of Christian retail outlets nationwide, collected using Pubtrack Christian (www.ptchristian.com). These best-sellers reflect sales from January through June 2009.

 
Industry Forum: International markets alive with potential Print Email
Written by Jim Powell, president, Christian Trade Association International   
Tuesday, 01 September 2009 10:49 AM America/New_York

Suppliers who invest overseas stand to reap spiritual and economic benefits

jim powellAs the global economic crisis shakes nearly every industry, many are calling international sales a bright spot in the current Christian products market. Is this true? Yes and no—but mostly, yes.

In general, industrialized nations are feeling the slowdown more, while developing countries are affected less. CLC International—a distributor with branches worldwide—reports sales in Western countries are down, but overall sales are up 8-10%, and sales in some developing nations are even stronger. CLC's International Director Neil Wardrope reports that in Sierra Leone sales are up 30%.

Koos Fouché, a senior manager with South Africa-based Lux Verbi, which owns rights to the New International Version in Africa and distributes products from companies including Zondervan and LifeWay, reports similar findings. Sales in more developed South Africa are struggling, while those in many other African nations are not.

"Africa is growing as a market because Christianity is growing in Africa. Nations there are growing more stable politically," Fouché said.

Ghana-based Parchment House—the publishing arm of evangelist Dag Heward-Mills' Lighthouse Chapel International, which includes more than 1,000 churches in 54 countries—also credits its financial tactics with protecting the company from the brunt of the crisis. President Robert Dodoo said the economy has affected sell-in somewhat, but not company operations.

"We work on cash, building resources until we can afford to publish," Dodoo said.

The recession is affecting more economically developed regions—such as Western Europe, South Africa, Canada and Australia—in similar ways to the U.S. However, those countries also have viable, often long-established customer bases that still need and want Christian products.

Although the overall worldwide demand for Christian resources is growing, some U.S. business-as-usual approaches may not work well internationally. So, what can U.S. and other Western suppliers do to connect with this vast potential?

 

Strive for cultural relevance.

Cultures are different country by country and people group by people group.

"Learn how different cultures grasp and understand the gospel," Lux Verbi's Fouché said.

Two ways suppliers can make sure they connect with their target audiences are by honing re-published resources for that market—going beyond simple language translation—and finding and developing indigenous authors. Something written by a Western author could have a radically different—or even offensive—connotation in a different culture.

In Africa, Fouché said: "At the very least, Western publishers should have a local expert/editor to tweak products to mesh the message with the local culture and avoid danger areas."

Fouché suggests having local writers create introductions for re-published books, building relationships between the supplier and indigenous author, and presenting a Western book's relevance to that culture. He also recommends that Western authors with a desire to reach another nation should go there and learn firsthand about the people they want to reach.

 

Make products affordable.

Economies vary wildly from nation to nation. Barebones production costs in an industrialized country, plus shipping and import costs, make prices prohibitive in many developing nations.

One solution is to shift production in-country. This avoids high shipping and import fees, and puts production and sales figures on the same economy.

Another is to develop creative financing and distribution paradigms. It's not unusual for an international supplier to spring directly from a ministry and therefore use ministry-style tactics.

For example, Parchment House sells books direct through leadership conferences and negotiates terms to make them accessible for bookshops. As the publishing arm of an international ministry, the company may use donations, partnerships and volunteers—as well as benefit from its strong no—debt policy. One of Parchment House's distribution tactics is "Dag's Literature Crusade," which floods a given area with books through large discounts, partnering with pastors and other individuals who share its vision of "Let the Books Go."

One approach that several American publishers have tried is "international" editions (trade paperbacks of best-sellers priced lower than the Western hardcover). Barine Kirimi of Evangel Publishing, Kenya, points out the problems with this: "When publishers in the developed world insist on selling English versions of their books internationally rather than through rights to local publishers, the latter run out of resources and cannot afford to produce local translations. It's the English editions that are most profitable and help subsidize the cost of translation to local indigenous languages. In addition, international editions tend to still be higher-priced than local production."

Those in more economically developed nations can also be mobilized to help operations in countries with fewer resources. Money may be worth far more (in practical terms) somewhere else. For example, CLC's autonomous branches may cooperate by helping a branch in another country with a building project.

 

Know the market.

Take the time to learn as much as possible about Christian-industry operations in a nation you want to serve. Relationships between producers, distributors and retailers have evolved uniquely everywhere.

Government and customs regulations also vary widely. Some nations—such as mainland China, some Islamic countries and India—also have various requirements and restrictions on content, sales and/or marketing and promotion. Suppliers need to be able to navigate these successfully.

 

Invest in training.

In many countries, Christian retailers are ministry-minded individuals with little practical knowledge of finance, customer service, marketing or any of the myriad disciplines that make stores effective.

Suppliers can provide training helps—printed, online and/or in person—for retailers who sell their products in various nations. They can partner with in-country distributors who offer training, enable retailers to attend business seminars and support organizations—such as CTAI—that specialize in training international retailers and distributors. CTAI, a worldwide association of nations, companies and individuals, holds regional conventions in Asia, Europe, Africa and North America—all including training—and provides other international training opportunities.

Jesus commanded us to "go into all the world," and making Christian resources available globally is a significant facet of answering that call. The international market is also a steady bright spot in a gloomy economic picture. Savvy Christian-industry professionals who go the distance to make their products relevant and accessible around the globe will reap benefits in business now and in eternity to come.

 

 
Retailers Choice Awards 2009 Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Friday, 17 July 2009 03:35 PM America/New_York

Thomas Nelson tops the 'Christian Retailing' contest; Tyndale and Zondervan tie for second place

 

Retailers: help generate sales for your store by making customers aware of the award winners. To print copies of the winners' list, go to www.retailerschoiceawards.com/09winners.html.

 

Thomas Nelson takes the top spot in the 2009 Retailers Choice Awards, winning six trophies in the Christian Retailing-sponsored competition. Retailers chose the winners from among more than 250 products nominated by suppliers in 30 categories.

Nominated products were judged on the impact they have had on staff and customers, including their ability to speak to hearts and evoke emotion, open minds to new ways of thinking, and encourage and affirm Christlike living.

The winning products were announced at a press conference during the International Christian Retail Show in Denver, last month.

Thomas Nelson came out strong in Bibles this year, winning with The Word of Promise: Next Generation—New Testament (Audio), Baby's First Bible (Bibles: General), and Chronological Study Bible campaign (Marketing/Promotion Campaign).

Movie-related books fared well this year, as Eric Wilson's novelization of Fireproof (Thomas Nelson) won in Fiction: General, while The Love Dare (B&H Books/B&H Publishing Group) rose to the top of the Relationships category.

Berenstain is a famous name that took the win in Children's Fiction for Zonderkidz with The Berenstain Bears Go to Sunday School, and Zonderkidz also won the Children's Nonfiction category with the Adventure Bible Storybook.

Backlist—one of three new categories—saw four strong titles as finalists, with Don Piper's 90 Minutes in Heaven (Revell/Baker Publishing Group) as the winner.

Four companies shared victories in the gift categories, with Carpentree the favorite in Wall Décor with a Ten Commandments plaque and DaySpring getting the votes in General Gift Product for its inspirational mugs.

Since its introduction in 2001, the Retailers Choice Awards program has been increasingly acknowledged as an important way of recognizing some of the most significant new life-changing materials.

For a printable list of the winners, visit www.retailerschoiceawards.com. For more information, contact Managing Editor Christine Johnson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


BOOKS/BIBLES

Audio

The Word of Promise: Next Generation—New Testament (Thomas Nelson)


Auto/Biography

Mistaken Identity, Don & Susie Van Ryn and Newell, Colleen & Whitney Cerak with Mark Tabb (Howard Books)


Bible Reference/Study

Rose Guide to The Tabernacle (Rose Publishing)


Bibles: Devotional/Study

ESV Study Bible (Crossway Books & Bibles)


Bibles: General

Baby's First Bible (Thomas Nelson)


Children's Fiction

The Berenstain Bears Go to Sunday School, Mike Berenstain, et al. (Zonderkidz)


Children's Nonfiction

Adventure Bible Storybook, Catherine DeVries and Jim Madsen (Zonderkidz)


Christian Education NEW

Noah's Ark: Thinking Outside the Box, Tim Lovett (Master Books/New Leaf Publishing Group)


Christian Living

Crazy Love, Francis Chan (David C. Cook)


Church and Culture

What in the World Is Going On?, David Jeremiah (Thomas Nelson)


Evangelism

The Purpose of Christmas, Rick Warren (Howard Books)


Fiction: General

Fireproof, Eric Wilson (Thomas Nelson)


Fiction: Mystery and Suspense

Dead Heat, Joel C. Rosenberg (Tyndale House Publishers)


Fiction: Women's

"Sunrise Series": Sunset, Karen Kingsbury (Tyndale House Publishers)


Health and Fitness

HEAL: Healthy Eating & Abundant Living, Allie Marie Smith and Judy Wardell Halliday (Group Publishing)


Personal Growth/Prayer

Fasting, Jentezen Franklin (Charisma House/Strang Book Group)


Relationships

The Love Dare, Stephen and Alex Kendrick (B&H Books/B&H Publishing Group)


Social Issues

American Heroes, Oliver North (B&H Books/B&H Publishing Group)


Women's Nonfiction

John: 90 Days With the Beloved Disciple, Beth Moore (B&H Books/B&H Publishing Group)


Youth/Teen

Teen Study Bible, NIV, Lawrence O. Richards and Sue W. Richards (Zondervan)


GIFTS

Accessories/Apparel

Stick With Jesus T-shirt (Kerusso)


General Gift Product

Inspirational mugs (DaySpring)


Gift Books

Looking Up When Life Is Looking Down, Beth Moore (Thomas Nelson)


Wall Décor

Ten Commandments #22780 (Carpentree)


OTHER

Backlist NEW

90 Minutes in Heaven, Don Piper with Cecil Murphey (Revell/Baker Publishing Group)


Children's Media

'Friends and Heroes' No. 5: True Heroes (Tyndale House Publishers)


DVD/Video

Nooma 019: Open, Rob Bell (Zondervan)


Marketing/Promotion Campaign NEW

Chronological Study Bible campaign (Thomas Nelson)


Spanish

Amor redentor (Redeeming Love), Francine Rivers (Tyndale Español)


Vacation Bible School

God's Big Backyard (Standard Publishing)

 
Broadening their appeal Print Email
Written by Eric Tiansay   
Thursday, 09 July 2009 08:56 AM America/New_York
Christian stores find ‘really good mix’ by branching out with unusual partnerships

From sharing space with an auto repair shop and hosting a local high school prom to selling flowers and wigs, several Christian retailers nationwide have discovered that it is good for business to broaden their appeal with some unlikely combinations.

They say branching out from the offerings of traditional Christian bookstores has helped spur sales and boost foot traffic as well as alleviate the impact of the recession, big-box retailers and the Internet.

Read more...
 
Seen and heard Print Email
Written by Staff   
Friday, 19 June 2009 03:14 PM America/New_York

Authors and artists offer their book and music suggestions

Customers may be enjoying the fruits of their labor, but what’s on the hearts and minds of some of today’s top Christian authors and artists? Christian Retailing asked some Christian retail favorites to share what has most touched their lives recently.

 

FRANCESCA BATTISTELLI, music artist:

“One of the most influential books in my life over the past few years has been Captivating by John and Stasi Eldredge (Thomas Nelson). It’s one that I keep coming back to year after year because, as a woman, I find I’m constantly needing to be reminded of how God views me as His daughter. It’s a book that I think every woman, teenager to grandparent, should add to her library. Tenth Avenue North’s debut album, Over and Underneath (Reunion Records/Provident-Integrity Distribution), is one that’s really made an impact on my life. The lyrics are heartfelt and glorify God, and the music is awesome.”

 

ROB BELL, author of Velvet Elvis (Zondervan):

“I can’t say enough about John Dominic Crossan’s book God & Empire (HarperOne). I was deeply moved by Tim Keller’s The Prodigal God (Dutton Adult), and Surprised by Hope by N.T. Wright (HarperOne) is a must-read. Shane Hipps’ Flickering Pixels (Zondervan) will blow your mind, and I can’t wait to get my hands on Thomas Cahill’s A Saint on Death Row (Nan A. Talese/Random House).”

 

BONAFIDE, GRITS:

“There are a couple of books that I would recommend—Every Young Man’s Battle by Stephen Arterburn, Fred Stoeker and Mike Yorkey (WaterBrook Press) and Every Young Woman’s Battle by Shannon Ethridge and Stephen Arterburn (WaterBrook Press). Those are books that will help young people go through the challenges they have to face that are taboo to other people, the way they think on certain things, especially when it comes to relationships, so we definitely encourage young people to go out and pick up that literature. Those are books that are trying to help them in life, with male and female relationships, how to handle them in a level of integrity with the character of Christ.”

 

SHELLEY BREEN, music artist, member of Point of Grace:

“I have absolutely fallen in love with a new artist named Meredith Andrews. Her record, The Invitation (Word Records/Word Distribution), has got to be one of the best releases that I have encountered over the last several years, to be honest. She has a fresh intensity and candor in her songwriting. Her project is not only encouraging to me when I need a lift and need to be reminded of who God is, but her worship style is unique and current, without being overly ‘trendy.’ I believe she is going to be a leader in our industry for a long time. The Invitation is and will be a gift to all who listen.”

 

COLLEEN COBLE, author of Cry in the Night (Thomas Nelson):

“I seldom read nonfiction since I’m a storyteller gal all the way, but I recently read Same Kind of Different As Me by Ron Hall and Denver Moore (Thomas Nelson). It was life-changing and made me stop and take stock of my life and how I’m interacting with others. Too often we make snap judgments about other people, and it affects how we treat them. I think everyone in the country should read it. I can see why it’s been on the best-seller list so long.”

 

NATHAN COCHRAN, MercyMe:

“I still listen to Phil Wickham’s Cannons (INO Records/Provident-Integrity Distribution) a lot. It’s a great worship record for us. We get the privilege of knowing Phil and knowing his heart so it makes it even better.”

 

BRANDILYN COLLINS, author of Exposure (Zondervan):

“The book I’ve been telling everyone about is Same Kind of Different as Me (Thomas Nelson), a true story written by Ron Hall and Denver Moore, with Lynn Vincent. Ron Hall is white, a wealthy art dealer. Denver Moore is black, raised in virtual slavery. Ron’s wife, Deborah, and her dreams bring the two men together. You will be a better person for having read this book. Lynn Vincent has done a masterful job in re-writing the original manuscript written by the two men. The story is presented in first person, both from Ron’s point of view and from Denver’s. These points of view—so radically different in perception and sound—come across distinctly, strongly characterizing each man.”

 

RAY COMFORT, author of The Way of the Master (Bridge-Logos Publishers):

“I was so impressed with Foxe: Voices of the Martyrs (Bridge-Logos) I ordered (it) in bulk to give to donors of our ministry. In these days, when it is popular to preach that the Christian life is one of abundance and prosperity—where Jesus is the answer to all of our worldly problems—it’s refreshing to have a solid book that tells it like it is. Eleven of the disciples were murdered for their faith in Jesus. Stephen was stoned to death. Before I changed the name of my book to The Way of the Master, it was called God Has a Wonderful Plan for Your Life and had a picture of Stephen being stoned to death, on the cover. I often regret changing the title. Millions have died cruel deaths down through the ages, and it is good to be reminded that all who live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution. Foxe: Voices of the Martyrs is 473 pages of sobering reminders that if we are not suffering persecution, we probably aren’t living godly in Christ Jesus.”

 

MICHELLE DUGGAR, co-author of The Duggars: 20 and Counting! (Howard Books), and star, with husband Jim Bob and their children, of TLC’s 18 Children and Counting:

“My girls like to read Before You Meet Prince Charming by Sarah Mally (Tomorrow’s Forefathers). It’s such a good resource for young ladies. We buy as many copies of that book as we can. Our girls even buy it with their own money. They look for opportunities to give to other young ladies. It’s a good book for young ladies because it shows them where their heart should be when they’re going through changes from age 11 on up.”

 

MARGARET FEINBERG, author of The Sacred Echo (Zondervan):

“Andy Crouch’s Culture Making: Recovering Our Creative Calling (IVP Books/InterVarsity Press) is simply the best book that I’ve read recently. Not only is it brilliant—in thought, pen and design—but one of the things that makes Andy’s writing so great is that while it’s intelligent and well-spoken, it’s still accessible. Now that doesn’t mean there aren’t moments when you won’t be stretched, but by the end of each chapter, the truths explored are explained in a simple, reachable way. I cannot gush about this book enough. It really is that good.”

 

SHAUNTI FELDHAHN, author of For Women Only (Multnomah Books):

I recently read John Bevere’s 2006 book Driven by Eternity (FaithWords), and it has profoundly affected me. His message has given me such a vision of what matters most from the perspective of heaven, and has directed a piercing spotlight on just how much I focus on in my life that will simply not matter in the end. Once you start thinking about things from the perspective of heaven, it changes everything. Suddenly, so many things that I cared about—even if I would never have admitted it—seem so small and unimportant. And I suddenly see everywhere the opportunities that God presents to do what He cares about and values most.”

 

GLORIA GAITHER, author, songwriter and music artist:

“Three recent books that I would recommend to Christian readers are Andy Andrews’ The Noticer (Thomas Nelson), Chuck Colson’s The Faith (Zondervan) and Leonard Sweet’s 11: Indispensable Relationships You Can’t Be Without (David C. Cook). Andy Andrews’ use of story to pull the reader into the discovery of powerful and necessary life skills and healthy attitude adjustment makes all of his books a ‘double whammy.’ The Faith is a reality check and a refocusing on the major tenets of our faith. Colson’s clear and direct style of communication makes him, in my opinion, one of the great apologists for the faith in our time. Leonard Sweet’s 11 is a joyful survey of the 11 character types we need in our lives to give us balance, advice, experience and spiritual health. Sweet uses 11 biblical characters with different traits.”

 

LIZ CURTIS HIGGS, author of Bad Girls of the Bible (WaterBrook Press):

“I read Robert Benson’s latest book, The Echo Within (WaterBrook Press), en route to a spiritual retreat with four other Christian friends. On the long flight, I savored every page, laughing out loud at Robert’s delightfully droll sense of humor, blinking away tears when his gentle words of truth probed a tender spot. Once we gathered, I found myself sharing passages from the book, describing how God has called each of us to live and to work. As our days together unfolded, The Echo Within served as a lovely ‘echo’ of the many things we were discussing while we studied Scripture and compared notes about our separate yet intertwined journeys. Again and again we reached for Robert’s book and found just the wisdom needed. Stock your shelves with this small, powerful resource, meant for readers of all ages and stages.”

 

KARI JOBE, music artist:

“I have been enjoying the worship of Kim Walker (Jesus Culture Music). She is a refreshing voice of prophetic worship, and I enjoy turning on worship and just having time with the Lord with her music. I also download teachings from Hillsong conferences—what amazing tools to learn more about worship, leadership and just loving people.”

 

DAVID KINNAMAN, co-author of unChristian (Baker Books/Baker Publishing Group):

“I was coming home from a trip, and on a long flight back to California. I popped The I [Heart] Revolution (Integrity Music/Provident-Integrity Distribution)—the DVD featuring the worldwide tour of Hillsong United—into my computer. It’s hard to explain in a paragraph how God used the worship, the band’s story, the music and the imagery to change my heart that night, but He did. I have watched the DVD a lot recently, just to to get a better sense of what God is doing today.”

 

 

 

MANDISA, music artist:

“My favorite CD that’s come out in the past year is Francesca Battistelli’s My Paper Heart (Fervent Records/Word). I adore her. Of course, I hear her music on the radio all the time, but when I actually got the CD and listened to all the songs, I felt like I was actually able to hear her heart. I personally think, especially for young people today, it’s such a great album, because she’s so vulnerable and transparent in what she has to say, and I think it makes a lot of sense for young people today.”

 

BART MILLARD, music artist, member of MercyMe:

“I’ve been able to hear Aaron Shust’s new record (Take Over, Brash Records/Word Distribution) that’s soon coming out, and it could possibly be one of the best records I’ve ever heard in my life.”

 

 

 

FRANCINE RIVERS, author of Redeeming Love (Multnomah Books) and The Last Sin Eater (Tyndale House Publishers):

“Right now, I’m reading Carol Kent’s When I Lay My Isaac Down (NavPress). It’s wonderful. Another favorite is Heaven: My Father’s House by Anne Graham Lotz (Thomas Nelson). I try to keep that on hand to give away. And anything by Robert Benson. His newest is The Echo Within (WaterBrook Press), and it’s Robert’s account of his own search for what he is truly called to do and be. I love his work.”

 

TODD STARNES, author of They Popped My Hood and Found Gravy on the Dipstick (Pathway Press):

“I’m a huge fan of Joel Rosenberg. I got hooked on the fast-paced action of his novels, but right now I’m reading his nonfiction Inside the Revolution (Tyndale House Publishers). It’s given me some amazing insight into the political and spiritual battles in the Middle East. I’m sort of all over the map when it comes to my taste in Christian music. Mandisa’s new album, Freedom (Sparrow Records/EMI CMG Distribution), is in my iPod. Her music helps take my daily five-mile runs in Central Park to a new level.”

 

 

 

GARY THOMAS, author of Sacred Marriage (Zondervan):

“(I’d recommend) Overcoming Emotions That Destroy by Chip Ingram and Becca Johnson (Baker Books/Baker Publishing Group), because it expresses the reality of anger, demystifies it, and helps us to marshal this emotion in healthy and biblical ways. Start Your Family by Steve and Candice Watters (Moody Publishers) because it applies solid biblical teaching to some of the most fundamental issues any Christian couple faces—why and whether to have children, and when.”

 

GARY WHEELER, director of The List (20th Century Fox Home Entertainment/Word Distribution):

“For me, one of the most powerful viewing experiences I’ve had in recent years was the film Bella (Lionsgate). Rarely do I see a film that is both artistically excellent and spiritually powerful. This film was both, and left me wanting to see it again and again.”

 

 

 

DALLAS WILLARD, author of The Divine Conspiracy (HarperOne):

“Todd Hunter’s Christianity Beyond Belief: Following Jesus for the Sake of Others (IVP Books/InterVarsity Press) is a really important book by a frontline leader in contemporary church planting on a discipleship model ... church planting that brings in people outside the pre-existing churches: people who are our contemporary, not-church people, often because they just don’t know about Jesus’ project on earth. Also, Longing for God: Seven Paths of Christian Devotion by Richard Foster and Gayle Beebe (IVP Books/InterVarsity Press) is a rich feast of Christian life and practice drawn from the lives of Christ’s people from the post-apostolic age to the 19th century. It is powerfully instructive on how serious people make real progress in the life with God.”

 

ERIC WILSON, author of Haunt of Jackals and the novel Fireproof (Thomas Nelson):

“I am a big fan of Claudia Mair Burney. Her novels Zora & Nicky (David C. Cook), Wounded (David C. Cook) and The Exorsistah (Pocket Books) are cutting edge, relevant and so full of spiritual depth in the trenches of real life and relationships.”

 

 

 

 

 

JOSH WILSON, music artist:

“There’s a book that made an impact on me recently, and it’s The Reason for God by Timothy Keller (Dutton Adult). It really is just digging into who God is, who the Bible says He is, learning about God so we can grow closer to Him.”

 

BETH WISEMAN, author of Plain Perfect and Plain Pursuit (both Thomas Nelson):

“The Christian book that has enriched my life the most is The Shack by William P. Young (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA). Everyone has heard of it, and I struggled to see if there was another book that inspired me the way that The Shack did, and there just isn’t. Even though it’s fiction, it represents the way I see myself identifying with God—as a friend I can casually chat with and who is always with me in a way that I can know Him, not be afraid and face my troubles with the faith that He is always there. I’ve read too many books about fearing God, and while I’ve enjoyed some of them, The Shack was in line with my beliefs about who the Father, Son and the Holy Spirit really are.”

 

 
‘Real Help for Your Business’ Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Thursday, 18 June 2009 01:42 PM America/New_York

Events at Denver show aim to help retailers thrive in tough times

With the theme “Real Help for Your Business,” CBA’s 60th annual summer convention will be held in Denver, July 12-15, shortened by one day this year. The 2009 slim-and-trim International Christian Retail Show (ICRS), at the Colorado Convention Center, will keep attendees extra busy as they look for bargains, take in training and enjoy networking with their fellow retailers in the Christian products business.

“The show will provide real help for dealing with real issues in these real hard times,” said CBA President Bill Anderson. “We want to help retailers understand and deal with the realities of our current economic climate, but recognize that they are not going it alone. The road may be rough, but it is not a dead-end street.”

Seventy-five exhibitors have engaged with CBA to help get more retailers to the show. Expressing their partnership with retailers and CBA in a new way, “these exhibitors are engaging in a collaborative campaign to bring real help for retailers’ businesses through show-exclusive specials that can help retailers save more than $11,000 through their regular course of doing business at the show,” Anderson said.

There are 259 vendors exhibiting this year. “Most every supplier who was at ICRS 2008 will be exhibiting in Denver at ICRS 2009,” Anderson reported. “Unfortunately some companies have gone out of business this past year, but we also have 38 new companies exhibiting.”

Although attendance is expected to be down because of the economic climate, Anderson noted that what’s more important is “how valuable the show is to retailers who do attend and the companies who do choose to exhibit there.”

The new Town Center will be the hub of all activity on the show floor—the place to find show information, tools to help retailers save money, new products, cross-merchandising idea centers, the free Cyber Cafe, a lounge and food service.

The Town Center is the place to be to celebrate CBA’s 60th anniversary, Monday, 1:30-2 p.m. Attendees are invited to enjoy a piece of cake at the event, sponsored by several suppliers who want to recognize the advancement and dedication seen in the industry in the last 60 years.

CBA is providing the usual services as well—the Ship Home Room, open during floor hours to send home promotional items and catalogs; complimentary convention center/hotel shuttles for transportation to and from the convention center and designated show hotels; and luggage check in the convention center for show attendees.

Among the new aspects to the 2009 show are category-related tours. “Product Intelligence Tours are designed to help retailers grow specific categories in their store, in partnership with sponsoring exhibitors,” said Bill Anderson, president of CBA. “Each tour will explore the latest consumer research and trends as it relates to a particular category of product, and how to increase traffic and sales in this category with the most recent products and merchandising tools available.”

The new “Debut Avenue” will be helpful to retailers planning to look for new sources of supply. It’s “a brand new way of connecting retailers with new suppliers—in a completely new environment,” Anderson said.

Attendees can also look forward to a new Sunday afternoon session on consumer intelligence, Indie Time, for independent stores, and the Heart of the Author luncheon with Karen Kingsbury.

 

SATURDAY, JULY 11

A significant pre-show event, the two-hour Christy Awards reception will start at 7 p.m. at the Denver Marriott City Center. Scaled back this year, the 10th annual event will be presented at a dessert reception rather than the usual banquet affair. Best-selling author Richard Foster will keynote the event, presenting an address titled “The Spiritual Formation of the Writer.”

The Christy Awards honors excellence in Christian fiction, and is open to the public. Reservations are available for $30 by contacting Donna Kehoe at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or online at www.christyawards.com.

 

SUNDAY, JULY 12

The first day of the show, the registration desk will be open 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Retail buyers will receive vouchers at registration, and the first 2,000 who redeem them will receive Buyer’s Bags filled with goodies and coupons.

The Sunday morning service, Worship Now: An Opening Worship Celebration, running 10-11:30 a.m., sees Anne Graham Lotz (Zondervan) back this year by popular demand. Artist and songwriter Matt Maher (Essential Records/Provident-Integrity Distribution) will lead attendees in worship to start the week, and Warren Wiersbe (David C. Cook), author and Bible expositor, will also address the audience. Worship leader and minister Norman Hutchins (IR Music Group/Central South Distribution) will contribute to the musical offerings as well.

The offering at Worship Now will provide scholarships for members of ChristianTrade Association International (CTAI) to attend training events and conventions in various parts of the world. For those who have pre-registered, the CTAI International Vision Celebration with author and global evangelist Reinhard Bonnke will focus entirely on international attendees. Scheduled for noon-3 p.m, this is an opportunity to meet attendees from around the world and learn more about what God is doing in other nations.

At 3 p.m., the 90-minute General Session: Consumer Intelligence with Ed Stetzer (B&H Publishing Group) begins. This new Sunday afternoon General Session will provide information on industry trends, research and best practices. Kelly Gallagher of R.R. Bowker will present the latest in consumer research relevant to the Christian retail market. Stacy Mitchell, author of Big-Box Swindle: The True Cost of Mega-Retailers and the Fight for America’s Independent Businesses (Beacon Press), will address the state of America’s independent businesses and the advantage Christian retailers have in overcoming even the fiercest price cuts from competitors.

Bookstore Manager users will convene for their annual meeting, 4-5:30 p.m. in the convention center’s room 405 with Randy Voorhees demonstrating the latest features of RMS software and discussing pertinent store issues.

Also at 4-5:30 p.m., the Denver Marriott City Center plays host to the Standard Publishing Sneak Peek Product Party and Grand Prize Giveaway, which showcases new products for the company’s re-launch into the children’s trade market. Retailers can also get a peek into VBS 2010, meet Standard authors and check out new adult resources.

Pacesetter returns to Sunday evening, 6-7:30 p.m., with author Josh McDowell (Regal Books) and author and former NFL coach Joe Gibbs (Tyndale House Publishers) offering a timely message on living with hope for the future. GRAMMY-nominated worship band SonicFlood (Resonate Records/Word Distribution) will perform songs from the group’s newest album, A Heart Like Yours.

Pacesetter will also include the presentation of the CBA Spirit of Excellence Awards, a celebration of the industry’s best and most innovative practices.

“This is not only an exciting time of celebration, but a marvelous opportunity to learn ‘what works’—so retailers can take home practical ideas already proven successful in other Christian stores,” Anderson said.

Retailers eager to hear the ways Christian music has impacted others will want to attend the two-hour 8 p.m. event The Power of Music: Music for All Ages, offered by CBA in conjunction with the Gospel Music Association. Musically, the concert will feature something for everyone, and will include the opportunity to see up-and-coming artists as well as longtime favorites. The event will be hosted by comedian Jeff Allen (Guardian Studios/EMI CMG Distribution). Musical artists performing will include pureNRG (Fervent Records/Word Distribution), GoFish (GFK Records/Word Distribution) and Phil Stacey (Reunion Records/Provident-Integrity).

 

MONDAY, JULY 13

Registration runs from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a soft close until 6:30 p.m.

The 30-minute Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony starts early, at 8 a.m., in the atrium lobby, celebrating the industry’s 60th year with musical entertainment as well as a brief address to kick off the opening of the exhibit floor. Floor hours Monday will be 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.

WinePress will hold its WinePress Publishing Gala from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the Town Center presentation area. Attendees are invited to meet select WinePress Publishing authors, enjoy music by recording artist Joshua Williams, receive free resources and discover the answer to “How can I become a published author?”

Product Intelligence Tours will take place from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. The tours are available for $10 for members and non-members, which allow for participation in one or all of the tours. Participants must sign up for each tour individually as space will be limited.

All are invited to the Industry Prayer Gathering, to be held at the Town Center. Participants from each segment of the Christian products industry will lead attendees in prayer.

The exhibit floor has a soft close at this year’s convention, from 6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Along with other training sessions at the show, the two-hour Publishers’ Institute: Essential Skills for Entrepreneurs, sponsored by the Christian Small Publishers Association, starts at 6:30 p.m. at the Hyatt Regency Denver—Granite AB. The seminar is designed for publishers and anyone interested in becoming a publisher. Publishing professionals will offer tips for success in publishing and marketing. Registration fee is $20.

Those interested in some entertainment can join B&H Publishing Group for the movie premiere of The Samaritan, which will run 7:30-9:30 p.m. in the Denver Pavilions—Regal Theater (16th Street Mall).

The film is slated for release during the Easter 2010 season and is a true story of human rights, international intrigue and sacrificial love.

 

TUESDAY, JULY 14

New attendees coming to the show Tuesday can register from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The exhibit floor opens at 8:30 a.m. and closes at 6 p.m., with a soft close until 6:30 p.m.

Bookstore Manager hosts Computerizing Your Store, 9:45-10:45 a.m. The session will address point-of-sale, inventory control, merchant services, product databases, Web sites, kiosks and burn-on-demand as options for stores.

Best-selling novelist Karen Kingsbury hosts, courtesy of Zondervan, the new Heart of the Author Luncheon, which runs 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. CBA members pay $15, nonmembers $20. Attendees will have the opportunity to meet several authors, with the aim of the luncheon to help retailers understand the heart of the authors whose books they sell.

The new Product Intelligence Tours run 1-4 p.m.

Indie Time, 1:30-2:30 p.m., is another new addition to the schedule, designed for independent retailers and addressing how prosperity in business is found through partnership among fellow independent businesses. Indie Time will offer hands-on, tactical methods from successful projects. Jeff Milchen, co-founder of the American Independent Business Alliance, will share simple ways to persuade customers to “shop local.” Retailers will learn how to create a culture of support for independent businesses in their communities.

 

WEDNESDAY, JULY 15

On the last day of the show, participants can register from 7:30 a.m. to noon.

The exhibit floor opens at 8:30 a.m. and closes at 4 p.m.

The 7-8:15 a.m. CBA Members Breakfast & Town Meeting, hosted by Chris Fabry, fills in CBA members ($10, no non-member admission) on what’s new from the retail association. CBA plans to convey to retailers how they can operate more efficiently and thrive in the difficult economic times through industry partnership and more. The breakfast event also addresses tough topics and offers real retail solutions.

 

MORE DETAILS

For the final information from CBA on this year’s International Christian Retail Show, go to www.christianretailshow.com.

 

Meet with ‘Christian Retailing’

Take a few moments to visit with the editors of Christian Retailing at the show. Bring your ideas for articles, comment on something we’ve written, share some news with us—or just stop by to get acquainted—during the 2-3 p.m. hour.

At the Christian Retailing booth (#1814), you will find:

MONDAY: Andy Butcher, editor

TUESDAY: Eric Tiansay, news editor

WEDNESDAY: DeWayne Hamby, assistant/book editor

For our on-the-floor comments on the show, follow Christian Retailing on Twitter. Go to http://twitter.com/ChristianRetail. And to receive daily show news, sign up for our free e-newsletter, Christian Retailing Update, at www.christianretailing.com.

 

CITY GUIDE

Downtime in Denver: ICRS host city has plenty of interest

If a shortened schedule for this year’s International Christian Retail Show (ICRS) gives attendees more free time in the host city, there will be no shortage of things to do.

Named the “most photo-friendly city” in America by Popular Photography magazine, Denver is home to a wide array of attractions, from culture and history to entertainment, recreation and shopping.

That may partly explain how MSNBC came to name the Mile High City as one of its “7 Great Tax Refund Vacation” spots, earlier this year. Other 2009 accolades include making the list of Fast Company magazine’s “Fast Cities” for “exemplary initiatives ... improving neighborhoods, transforming lives, and helping build better, faster cities for the future.”

There’s plenty to see and do without venturing far from ICRS accommodation near the Denver Convention Center—which, incidentally, is home to a new solar power system. Covering 30,000 square feet atop the center, the 300-kilowatt system is “both a practical example and a symbol of the city’s commitment to renewable energy,” according to Mayor John Hickenlooper.

Those ready to explore on foot will be pleased to learn that Denver’s downtown was graded the fourth most walkable downtown in the country, by the Brookings Institution. The city’s famed 16th Street Mall, lined by 200 trees, stretches a mile from Broadway to Wynkoop and is serviced by a fleet of free extra-low emission hybrid-electric shuttles, for anyone whose feet get tired.

In addition to stores, there are 39 street cart vendors and 28 sidewalk cafes, while 28 horse-drawn carriage companies operate on the Mall and downtown.

Visitors to the Colorado State Capitol that pause on the 13th step on the building’s west side will find themselves at 5,280 feet above sea level—one mile high.

The city has spent more than $8 billion in the last decade on attractions, including building three sports stadiums, a downtown amusement park, a world-class aquarium, three art museums and an opera house.

Away from downtown, Denver also boasts the largest city park system in the country, 90 golf courses and more than 850 miles of paved trails.

Visitors lifting their eyes will see further draws on the horizon. More than 100 miles of snowcapped peaks of the Front Range can be seen from Denver.

Best mountain viewpoints are the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, with an outdoor deck that identifies visible peaks; The rotunda of the Colorado State Capitol, with bronze plaques naming visible peaks; and Cranmer Park, at Cherry and East 3rd Ave., which also has a plaza that names some of the visible peaks. State law prohibits building any structure that would block the view of the mountains from the state Capitol.

With 300 days a year of sunshine, Denver boasts an average maximum August temperature of 85.9 degrees Fahrenheit and minimum of 57.4 degrees. The sun feels warmer because it is that much closer, and visitors are advised to drink plenty of water to keep hydrated.

All that is available for tourists to do might account for the fact that Denver was also recently named the nation’s third “Fittest City” by Forbes magazine.

However, ICRS attendees staying the weekend after the convention who want to sit and take things easy might check out Colorado’s Mile High Music Festival, to be hosted at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park, July 18 and 19. Headliners include Christian band The Fray on the Sunday (July 19).

Other performers will include Ben Harper and Relentless7, Buddy Guy, Ani DiFranco and India Arie.

 

Source: Denver Metro Convention and Visitors Bureau. For more information, call 800-2-DENVER (336837), or visit Denver’s official Web site at VISITDENVER.com.

LOCAL MEDIA:

Newspaper:

www.denverpost.com

Television:

www.9news.com

www.thedenverchannel.com

www.kdvr.com

 
The Essential Guide to Christian Retailing: Sell me a story Print Email
Written by By Natalie Nichols Gillespie   
Thursday, 18 June 2009 01:06 PM America/New_York

Despite time and technology, books remain Christian stores’ bread and butter

 

If you own a store in a retail segment that has seen major takeovers, downturns and closings in the last five years, now topped off by a country-wide, full-fledged recession, how do you keep your doors open and turn a profit?

Christian retailers who are surviving and even thriving in 2009 say it’s by prayer, by leveraging new technology and by finding innovative techniques to get back to the old basics: selling books that meet customers’ needs.

Stores interviewed by Christian Retailing on average generate 40% or more of their annual sales from books—not including Bibles—and have not significantly changed the amount of floor space devoted to books in the last five years.

Book sales come from new titles and backlist, from fiction and nonfiction, from children’s books and reference books, from brand-new authors and the tried-and-true. Topics and trends can drive significant sales—from the emergent church to money management—and retailers who want to keep making it are constantly finding ways to reach customers with the right prices and products.

“I would say our floor space has remained about the same for books,” said Jeff Andrews, book manager for Wellspring Christian Resources in Urbandale, Ill. “And when you look at our overall sales, nearly every day books are still on top.”

 

FROM FRONT TO BACKLIST

Rick Warren’s Zondervan blockbuster The Purpose-Driven Life became the best-selling hardcover book of all time in both the Christian and general markets. Gary Chapman’s The Five Love Languages (Northfield Publishing/Moody Publishers) has been around for nearly two decades and has appeared on the New York Times Paperback Advice best-sellers list more than 90 times. Spinoffs of the original book—The Five Love Languages: Singles Edition, The Five Languages of Apology and more—have multiplied the series’ impact.

Titles such as Warren’s and Chapman’s are examples of books whose sales have expanded into the many channels available today—from airport bookstores to Amazon and from Barnes & Noble to digital downloads on Kindle.

Now, with brand-new titles being sold in these diverse channels, backlist has become a bigger focus for Christian retail. Stores and suppliers say they are giving more marketing and promotional emphasis to their backlist titles, blogging about them, pairing an author’s new and older titles on displays, and watching news and cultural trends closely in order to promote books on popular topics.

“If I don’t have a deep backlist, if I just have what’s new and current, you can get that at Wal-Mart,” said Sue Smith, manager of Baker Book House in Grand Rapids, Mich. “In fiction, especially, I need to have everything that is in print by their favorite authors. In Grand Rapids, there are Christian bookstores everywhere. There are other Christian stores a half-mile from me in both directions. I can’t afford to be out of what the customer wants.”

Retailers must understand their store’s customers in order to know just what to stock.

“We can’t afford to carry all of the depth that we used to, but we try to make sure that we are constantly carving out our niche that fits our customers,” said John Pope, owner of Cornerstone Bookstore in Boone, N.C. “We are always reviewing our categories. We have a new section on emerging issues. We have also set up a section for college students on dating and the like. We have a Christian history section, and we carry charismatic books.”

Successful stores know their locale and anticipate what books their customers will need, and they also keep on top of trends—both in publishing and in society. Savvy retailers promote books that match topically with “hot buttons” in the church, current news topics and upcoming blockbuster movies.

Many retailers bring popular authors’ backlist titles to the forefront to populate displays when a new title is released. Some stores pair nonfiction and fiction equivalents; for example, if a novel’s protagonist suffers from depression, a nonfiction book on the subject might be sold with it.

“We are absolutely doing backlist better,” said Sally Holefca, assistant manager for Baker Book House in Grand Rapids, Mich. “We are definitely looking at the long tail”—fewer products selling in large quantities—“and firmly believe in having more than just frontlist best-sellers. People do come in looking for titles that are 2 or 3 years old. We also have a separate area with out-of-print books.”

 

COMPETITIVE PRICING

The constant retail challenge, booksellers agreed across the board, is pricing. Customers, especially in today’s economy, go where they can get what they want at the best price. That means finding a way to match or beat Wal-Mart, Amazon and Christian Book Distributors, all known for selling books at lower price points than traditional brick-and-mortar booksellers.

In the last year, Holefca said Baker Book House has put its money where its mouth is, offering a deal to local churches to beat Amazon’s prices on books purchased from their store. The effort is becoming a big success.

Publishers have begun to lower the prices of hardcover titles from around $25 to the $22-23 range, but retailers would like to see that come down even further.

“Twenty dollars seems to be the breaking point for customers,” Pope said. “So if a book comes in at $23, I have to decide if I can take a hit on it to sell it under the $20 mark.”

On the other hand, trade paper prices have increased in the last couple of years, with many books now priced at $14.99.

“Price points are edging up on trade paper books from $13.99 to $14.99 as kind of a standard price,” said Steve Oates, vice president of marketing for Bethany House Publishers. “They have been at $13.99 for five to seven years, so a 7% increase over that span of time is actually quite low when you think of it in terms of inflation. Book prices in the CBA (market) are not rising as quickly as inflation.”

Oates agreed that $20 is the breaking point for customers.

“We are seeing more market resistance to hardcover books, I think more from the retailers than from the consumers,” Oates said. “When we are doing hardcovers, we are marking most of them under $20 to make them seem more affordable right now. People are being very careful with their spending, and we need to be sensitive to the consumers and their situation.”

Christian retailers also have the opportunity of selling digital books through the Symtio program, with the average transaction ringing up at $14. Buyers of Symtio product cards can purchase a book to read in a variety of formats, on a personal computer, PDA or iPod, for example.

 

FICTION THEN AND NOW

Today’s Christian fiction is coming of age, covering topics that once would have been taboo, among them homosexuality, extramarital affairs, illegitimate children, divorce, remarriage and bipolar disorder.

By examining these real-life struggles through the lens of a Christian worldview, authors are giving hope a voice in the fiction market.

Christian fiction readers are dedicated fans. According to a 2008 survey by R.R. Bowker of 6,400 U.S. book buyers, the general adult population reads on average of 4.4 hours per week, book buyers (in general) read 5.2 hours per week, regular fiction buyers read 6.3 hours per week, but Christian fiction buyers read eight hours per week. The study also found that Christian fiction buyers are significantly more influenced by personal recommendation and the placement of books than by other book buyers and are significantly less influenced by advertising.

“Christian fiction has changed so much just in the last three or four years,” said Sherry White, senior buyer at American Wholesale Book Company, supplier for Books-A-Million stores. “There are so many good, fresh new voices out there.”

And while there are a lot of new authors, it can be tough for publishers to expend the resources to “groom” an author who doesn’t sell a lot of books right away.

“As we observe the best-seller lists for CBA, we don’t notice much change in the authors who appear on the list. We see many of the same authors each month,” said Cheryl Kerwin, senior marketing manager for Tyndale House Publishers, which plans to release around 50 fiction titles this year.

“It is becoming more challenging to break out new authors,” she added. “We’ve seen some recent success with some of our new authors that write in what might be considered a more literary style of novel. We’re excited to see the demand for writing from these authors as they grow into ‘fan favorites.’ ”

In terms of genre, Kerwin said suspense and thriller novels are on the rise in the Christian and mainstream markets, “primarily because there are quite a few good writers coming into the ranks, such as Susan May Warren (‘P. J. Sugar’ series) and DiAnn Mills (‘Call of Duty’ series).”

Avid fiction buyers love to connect, so if a frontliner knows and loves fiction, it will go a long way toward turning a one-time shopper into a returning customer. Avid fiction readers also look for two things: the newest title from their favorite author and the stories everyone else is reading. Consider the success of the New York Times best-seller The Shack by William P. Young (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA) and the novel based on the recent Christian movie Fireproof by Eric Wilson (Thomas Nelson). Fiction readers continuously consume what has been termed the “next big thing.”

For Christian retailers, that means an opportunity to capitalize on what’s hot, but also to expand sales to a backlist deeper than many departments can sustain. Once fiction fans decide they like an author, they will want to read everything that author has written. And while they can find the latest Ted Dekker or Karen Kingsbury novel at Wal-Mart, they won’t find what Dekker wrote five years ago or what Kingsbury had out in 2001. That’s where CBA stores continue to find their fiction niche.

 

BUILDING TRAFFIC

Although books remain the bread and butter for Christian retailers, overall traffic is still a challenge.

The trick in today’s retail climate is not only to get customers in the door, but also to keep them coming back. That means keeping a good variety of fresh voices on the shelves while maintaining inventory at a manageable and affordable level. When customers can order books with the click of a mouse and have them delivered to their front doors the next day or download them digitally onto Kindles and iPods, there has to be a compelling reason for the consumer to keep visiting their local Christian retail store.

“The reading habits haven’t changed much—it’s really where they are shopping,” said Sue Brower, acquisitions editor for Zondervan. “There is a larger selection of outlets to purchase books.”

What helps retailers win customers is the constant availability of the newest titles from big-name authors and word-of-mouth, as well as a good depth of backlist titles from which they can choose.

“It’s always exciting to find retailers who want to partner with us on new promotions and share the risk as we find ways to grow author brands and increase awareness about the amazing stories being published right now,” said Jennifer Deshler, senior marketing director for Thomas Nelson.

“I love it when a Christian retailer takes note of their customers’ individual tastes in reading and makes recommendations accordingly,” said author Mindy Starns Clark, whose latest suspense novel, Shadows of Lancaster County (Harvest House Publishers), released in January. “Nothing communicates ‘we value your patronage’ better than a bookseller who remembers previous transactions and/or feedback and offers relevant buying suggestions on subsequent visits.”

One way Smith at Baker Book House keeps her staff engaged is to hold brief, daily training sessions. They take only a few minutes each morning, but the effort keeps the 32 employees of the 16,000-square-foot store knowledgeable about current inventory and departments.

“Every morning we pray together; then we train on product knowledge,” Smith said. “We take different sections of the store and take like 10 minutes to go through them.

“Each person is responsible for a department and reads a book out of that department to review the best-sellers for us. By reviewing the book for us, that person trains the rest of the staff on that title. Our staff can take any of the books home for free as long as they bring them back with the spine intact. The training keeps us sharper. Today, you can’t just sit around.”

Efforts like these pay off in the minds of customers and authors alike.

“I think Christian retailers know their product,” said best-selling author Kristin Billerbeck (“The Trophy Wives Club,” Avon Inspire). “In my local store, they are such a safe environment for hurting people. They pray for needs and can hand-select a book to comfort or be of help to the customer. I also think it’s great how they keep an author’s backlist.”

 

RETURNING CUSTOMERS

Stores that succeed change their displays often, dedicate endcaps to new product and keep customers notified through e-mail updates and special promotions. Beyond having a Web site, they are creating a presence on social network sites like MySpace and Facebook, and blogging and joining Twitter. And they are creating databases of customers and regularly e-mailing coupons to be redeemed in-store.

Books-A-Million has book clubs that attract customers to an interactive reading experience, and many Christian retailers still bring in authors for book signings. A coffee bar or comfortable seating with free Wi-Fi also creates an engaging atmosphere.

Social networks, blogs, podcasts and video sites like YouTube are helping authors connect directly with fans.

Angela Hunt, Karen Kingsbury, Robin Jones Gunn and many other fiction authors maintain up-to-date Web sites with dates of their appearances, latest projects and fan perks like contests and giveaways. Many also send regular e-newsletters.

Gunn held a virtual tea party with her Facebook friends, and Hunt invited her Facebook friends to join her in watching the Hallmark TV movie Taking a Chance on Love, a sequel based on her popular characters from The Note, her 2001 novel that was made into a 2007 Hallmark original movie.

Kingsbury for years has contacted retailers personally, held contests, created her own brochures for retailers and given away cruises, opportunities to name a character in one of her novels and more. She has endeared herself to readers by answering letters and making frequent appearances.

Most recently, she began posting videos on YouTube, showing her family on game nights and promoting her favorite causes and books.

It’s Kingsbury’s kind of dedication, coupled with a warm retail environment, that keeps customers loyal.

“With the economy the way it is, we can reach people in a crisis,” Pope said.

 

TOP 10 BOOKS FOR 2008

The chart below shows the value of a backlist book. It especially pays for stores to stock books such as 1992’s The Five Love Languages that seem to have nine lives, but others, even those just a few years old, can continue to pay dividends in terms of sales and customer satisfaction.

1. The Shack, William P. Young (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA, 2008), $14.99

2. The Love Dare, Stephen and Alex Kendrick (B&H Books/B&H Publishing Group, 2008), $14.99

3. 90 Minutes in Heaven, Don Piper with Cecil Murphey (Revell/Baker Publishing Group, 2004), $13.99

4. The Five Love Languages, Gary Chapman (Northfield Publishing/Moody Publishers, 1992), $14.99

5. Love & Respect, Emerson Eggerichs (Thomas Nelson, 2004), $22.99

6. Someday, Karen Kingsbury (Tyndale House Publishers, 2008), $13.99

7. 3:16, Max Lucado (Thomas Nelson, 2007), $24.99

8. Captivating, John and Stasi Eldredge (Thomas Nelson, 2007), $14.99

9. The Purpose-Driven Life, Rick Warren (Zondervan, 2007), $14.99

10. Jesus Calling, Sarah Young (Thomas Nelson, 2004), $13.99

The 2008 best-seller list is compiled from sales of Christian books in hundreds of Christian retail outlets nationwide, collected using Pubtrack Christian (www.ptchristian.com). All rights reserved. Copyright 2009 Evangelical Christian Publishers Association.

 
CBA at 60 Print Email
Written by Christine D. Johnson   
Wednesday, 17 June 2009 10:50 AM America/New_York

Looking back at the highlights of the trade association’s summer conventions

 

This year CBA is marking 60 years of serving the Christian products industry. In this retrospective, Christian Retailing looks back at some of the highlights of CBA summer conventions past.

CBA is celebrating its milestone “by calling attention to the 60 years of progress our member retailers and suppliers have made,” Bill Anderson told Christian Retailing, noting that in that time, “we’ve seen a tremendous amount of growth in the quality of product, marketing of product, product packaging, music production, DVDs.

“Christian retail has catapulted forward, employing retail disciplines, technology, aggressive marketing, customer relationship management, fresh concepts, using improved locations and increasing the strength of their specialization is Christian retailers. They’ve done all of this without losing their ministry focus.”

 

1950: The Hotel LaSalle in Chicago hosts the inaugural CBA show. Forty-eight exhibitors presented their products to the 279 in attendance.

 

1951-1953: The show remains in the same location for several years, increasing each time in attendee and exhibitor count, from 374 attendees and 66 exhibitors in 1951 to 467 attendees, 59 exhibitors in ‘52 and to 603 attendees, 66 exhibitors in ‘53.

 

1954: Though the convention stays in Chicago, it changes locations to the Morrison Hotel. In attendance were 603 convention-goers, 66 exhibitors.

 

1955: Just over 100 exhibitors and 881 attendees travel to the Shoreham Hotel-Motor Inn in the nation’s capital for the first CBA show outside of the windy city. CBA’s annual report notes the availability of roadside signs to retailers, and bookstores order more than 200 of the 6-by-8-foot signs.

 

1956: It’s back to Chicago, with the Sherman Hotel as the convention site and 1,207 attendees, 108 exhibitors and 270 stores. Attendance is 35% higher than last year. CBA’s new president is R. Gordon Mitchell of the Home Evangel Book Shop, Toronto, and a past vice president of CBA.

 

1957: Aug. 18-22. Chicago is once again the site of the show, with record-breaking attendance: 1,325 total and 290 stores. With the convention’s theme “Knowledge on Fire,” one reporter notes its “remarkably deep tone.” A Michigan retailer says: “I can go back and sell records better than before having seen the consecrated people who make them.” CBA passes its membership goal with 614.

 

1958: CBA’s convention at the Sheraton-Jefferson Hotel in St. Louis sees 1,100 total, 109 exhibitors and 280 stores in attendance. CBA introduces a $2 registration fee. Henrietta Mears of Gospel Light Press is banquet speaker, with tickets at $3 each. International flavor includes two missionaries interested in literature distribution in Hong Kong and Colombia.

 

1959: The 10th CBA convention, held in the Pantlind Hotel, Grand Rapids, Mich., sees 1,586 total attendees and 125 exhibitors. Theme: “He Profits Most Who Serves Best.” Key workshops address bookstore accounting and audiovisual sales. Uncas Manufacturing Co. gives away the first CBA gift jewelry this year.

 

1960: Aug. 7-11, it’s back to the Sherman Hotel in Chicago, with 1,804 attending, 134 exhibitors and 130 first-timers, a record. Theme: “The Written Word Endures.” Robert Kregel of Kregel’s Book Store in Grand Rapids, Mich., is voted in as CBA president. The banquet speaker, courtesy of Word Records, is commentator Paul Harvey.

 

1961: Aug. 6-10 is the date and an Ocean Row site, the Deauville Hotel, is the location for the Miami Beach convention. The theme is “Christian Booksellers for Times Like These.” There are 138 exhibitors, and CBA membership hits 830. Fleming H. Revell launches a daily newspaper, CBA Convention Daily News. Banquet address is by Sen. Frank Carlson of Kansas. Plans for a half-million dollar Bible promotion are laid out by the Ecusta Paper Division of the Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. Tie-in ideas for booksellers are demonstrated at a special display. The promotion aims to reach more than 80 million readers in November and December with the message that the Bible is “The greatest gift of all.”

 

1962: It’s July and once again, the convention is back at Chicago’s Sherman Hotel, not Miami. There are 1,811 delegates, 387 stores and 153 exhibitors present, and the theme is “Eye Hath Not Seen.” Attendance tops the 1960 record at the same location. For the first time, a dealer choir is organized and sings at the banquet and other activities. A resolution is passed, adopting “Big Brother,” a correspondence prayer fellowship program with overseas or missionary bookstores. Living Letters by Ken Taylor is introduced. Concordia is giving away a book, How to Fight Communism Today.

 

1963: After eight years’ absence, the convention returns to the Shoreham Hotel-Motor Inn, Washington, D.C., Aug. 11-15. Total attendance is 1,649 with 144 exhibitors, and the theme is “Christian Booksellers—Workers Together With Him.” Speakers are Don Brandeis (Baker Book House) and Harold Lindsell (Harper and Row, Publishers), with devotions by J. Sidlow Baxter (Zondervan Publishing House). The youth program divides children into groups for ages 6-11 and 12-18 with a full schedule of activities, including sightseeing. Speakers include Carl Erskine, former Brooklyn Dodger pitcher (Fleming H. Revell). Workshops include how to sell handcraft (cost of materials: $1) and a session on gold-stamping.

 

1964: Attendance is 1,170 with 156 exhibitors. Banquet speaker is Richard Halverson, an associate of Bob Pierce of World Vision. Publishers representing European and Far Eastern countries exhibit at the first International Exhibition of Publishers and Booksellers—Centro Biblico from Italy, Committee of Literature for the Evangelical Churches or CLIE from Spain and The Epworth Press from England.

 

1965: The theme is “Freedom—A Gift From God” for the Aug. 1-5 convention at the Sheraton Hotel, Philadelphia. Attendance is 1,941 with 146 exhibitors. This year’s site is chosen in part because of proximity to New York’s World’s Fair. John Bass, appointed new executive secretary, succeeds William F. Moore, who is to become general manager of Family Bookstores of America. Walter Knott of Knott’s Berry Farms is a luncheon speaker, Zondervan having published his most recent book.

 

1966: July 31-Aug. 4 sees 1,812 total attendees at the convention at the Sherman Hotel in Chicago. The theme is “United to Serve.” For those placing orders at the show, C.W. Boyer Co. has a giveaway—a novelty “Tranquilizer Pill Bottle”—and Zondervan is celebrating its 35th birthday with a party. Ethel Barrett is the first woman CBA banquet speaker.

 

1967: The El Cortez Hotel in San Diego sees 1,565 CBA convention-goers with 133 exhibitor personnel, July 30-Aug.3, marking the first CBA convention on the West Coast. A higher ratio of first-timers and more internationals than ever before are present. Eighty-five delegates fly to Hawaii afterward for a reconvened session incorporating discussions with Hawaiian booksellers. Bill Zondervan is named Salesman of the Year.

 

1968: Chase-Park Plaza Hotel, St. Louis. There are 1,600 attendees with 132 exhibitor personnel. Charlie “Tremendous” Jones, insurance salesman and sales counselor offers lots of personality, his “combination of buffoonery, practical sales suggestions and basic spiritual truths set the pace for the four-day convention,” writes a Christian Bookseller reporter. Canadian store managers choose to formally organize.

 

1969: Netherland Hotel, Cincinnati, with 1,924 in attendance, 154 exhibitor personnel and more than 400 stores, an all-time high. Charlie Shedd, author of The Stork Is Dead, Letters to Karen and Letters to Philip, wins over some attendees who once thought he was mistaken on his views of sex. Twelve young people participate in the Third Annual Future Christian Booksellers Association Institute, the first held during the convention.

 

1970: The Leamington Hotel in Minneapolis has a 40,000-square-foot convention hall and air conditioning. The theme for the convention Aug. 2-6 is “Successful Seventies.” Most workshops are standing-room-only. “ ‘Gone was the circus-like clatter of past years,’ one publisher remarks. “Yet, selling was done—fantastic sales for some exhibitors. Most convention-goers liked the change, but one confessed he sort of missed the excitement and showmanship of the past,” reports Christian Bookseller Magazine.

 

1971: The theme is “70s—Decade of Decisions.” A record-breaking 2,341 are registered with 159 exhibitors. Held up by a Senate vote, Sen. Mark Hatfield addresses a capacity crowd by telephone, later making a personal appearance at a Word reception and staying through the next day to sign his book Conflict and Conscience. The banquet features music by Dino and Doug Oldham.

 

1972: July 30-Aug. 3 are the dates in Cincinnati with Francis Schaeffer of L’Abri Fellowship speaking at a luncheon. Thursday’s banquet sees George Beverly Shea, recently turned author, speak and Dale Evans sing. CBA’s new president, Dan W. Jantz, is also presented.

 

1973: For the July 16-19 convention in Dallas, Word Inc. in Waco, Texas, has lined up a concert with a 70-piece orchestra, Ralph Carmichael conducting. Hal Lindsey speaks at the banquet and Pete Gillquist at the Teen Banquet with Andrae Crouch and the Disciples performing.

 

1974: July 21-25, Minneapolis. This marks CBA’s silver-anniversary year, with the convention featuring Anita Bryant, Evie Tornquist and 2nd Chapter of Acts. Retailers are encouraged to visit local host companies Augsburg Publishing House, Bethany Fellowship and World Wide Publications.

 

1975: Anaheim, Calif. Johnny Cash performs at the convention, which also includes Catherine Marshall, Joyce Landorf, Lloyd John Ogilvie and Robert Schuller. There is a large number of new, small exhibitors and a proliferation of order desks. Suppliers are often sharing a booth because space is limited.

 

1976: James Dobson speaks at the convention in Atlantic City, N.J. About 5,500 booksellers are present, amid fortune tellers and shooting galleries in this tourist area. Several new hymnals are highlighted as well as higher-quality creative gifts than in years past. With an election nearing, there are more books on politics. The Miracle of Jimmy Carter (Logos) sells more than 600,000 in a month.

 

1977: July 10-14, Kansas City. Attendees number 7,298, about 2,000 higher than the previous year. Representing 36 countries are 118 foreign publishers and booksellers. More than 2,000 are present to hear closing banquet speaker Charles Colson.

 

1978: Denver. Bill Anderson’s first convention as part of the CBA staff, as its first full-time convention manager. New author Charles Swindoll speaks at the show, and Herbert Lockyer Sr. is keynote speaker.

 

1979: July 16-19, St. Louis. Bob Benson emcees the 30th convention banquet. CBA sues the city of St. Louis to protect its contract for convention center use.

 

1980: Closing banquet speaker at the Dallas Convention Center is pollster George Gallup, whose The Search for America’s Faith (Abingdon), written with David Poling, is announced as “the religious publishing event of the year.” The 200th anniversary of the Sunday school movement is celebrated, while Warner Press marks its centennial year.

 

1981: At the Anaheim Convention Center, Calif., New Leaf Press introduces TV host Tammy Bakker’s autobiography, I Gotta Be Me. Vision House premieres excerpts of its new film series, “Walter Martin Speaks Out on the Cults.” The presenter is a convention speaker, along with Tim LaHaye. Visiting authors include Cheryl Prewitt, Miss America 1980, whose autobiography, A Bright-Shining Place, is published by Doubleday. Chuck Swindoll is the banquet speaker, and Herbert Lockyer Sr. the keynote speaker.

 

1982: Author and artist appearances at the Dallas Convention Center include Calvin Miller (“The Singer Trilogy,” InterVarsity Press), Andrae Crouch (Lexicon Music), Charles Swindoll (Strike the Original Match, Multnomah Press) and John MacArthur (The Family, Moody Press). Sandi Patty also makes her first CBA appearance. The convention features the world premiere musical presentation of How Firm a Foundation, celebrating Thomas Nelson’s New King James Version. Joyce Landorf is the keynote speaker.

 

1983: In the Year of the Bible, the convention goes to the capital, where former Nixon aide Charles Colson is the keynote speaker at the Washington Convention Center. David C. Cook introduces three Narnia board games based on the classic C.S. Lewis series. NavPress and The Navigators hold a 50th anniversary reception.

1984: CBA’s 35th convention features Lloyd Ogilvie, R.C. Sproul and Debby Boone. Oxford University Press debuts its Oxford NIV Scofield Study Bible at the Anaheim Convention Center. Scripture Press Publications marks its 50th anniversary. New releases include Tyndale House Publishers’ The Book, a special CBN edition of its The Living Bible.

 

1985: Bill Anderson is named CBA president. Richard Foster and Philip Yancey are featured speakers.

 

1986: Washington, D.C. Charles Colson is the banquet speaker.

 

1987: July 11-16, Anaheim, Calif. For the first time, CBA welcomes some 3,000 consumers to the exhibit floor during a special preview showing called the “Books, Music Gifts Expo for the Christian Family.” Some suppliers report up to 75% increase in sales from the 1986 convention, which also attracts 300 members of the press. Presidential candidate Pat Robertson is the banquet speaker.

 

1988: July 16-21, Dallas. A VCR screen with a continuous presentation of convention highlights is placed near entrances for passers-by to watch. About 250 Dallas-area pastors, music directors, youth leaders and seminary students attend CBA’s Outreach Adventure, which includes a tour of the convention floor. Sandy Patti, Twila Paris and Steve Green perform.

 

1989: July 8-13, Atlanta. CBA unveils LifeDiscovery, a $3.8 million national image campaign and marketing partnership to be launched in October 1990. A record number of more than 10,000 people from 46 countries attend the 40th annual convention. Authors Gordon MacDonald and Frank Peretti speak at the banquet.

 

1990: July 14-19, Denver. Children’s merchandise creates the biggest stir, with virtually every major publisher offering an expanded selection of children’s books. A record number of 11,071 people, with 2,000 stores represented, attend.

 

1991: First time in Orlando, Fla., and attendance is high, at 12,000, but sales are slow and there is theft at the booths. There are approximately 1,300 booths. The “McGee and Me” video series debuts. A special event is held at SeaWorld, and the closing banquet features Chuck Swindoll and Jerry Jenkins.

 

1992: The convention, with the theme “Take Flight,” is moved to Dallas because of the delayed completion of the scheduled San Diego Convention Center. There is a record number of exhibitors, with total attendance (including exhibitors) at 12,050. Attendance and sales are up. Dallas is better than Orlando, some say, because buyers are buying, not sightseeing. Suppliers report sales exceed their expectations.

 

1993: Atlanta. Attendance is 12,663, with 2,634 stores represented and 414 exhibitors. Actor Charlton Heston cuts the ribbon to open the show. Exhibitors report flat sales. The banquet features Oliver North.

 

1994: Denver. The convention’s date is moved up to June 25-30. Attendance is down to around 12,000, representing 2,500 stores. There are 1,465 booths, many reporting increased sales. Convention’s theme is simply “One.” Wendy’s Dave Thomas cuts show floor ribbon. Nearly 70 attend the bookseller school for new and prospective retailers. Dan Quayle speaks.

 

1995: Denver. Nearly 800 international delegates are visiting from 58 countries. Michael W. Smith cuts the exhibit floor ribbon.

 

1996: Anaheim, Calif. Record attendance this year is 13,663 with 2,801 registered stores, 419 exhibiting. Jars of Clay, Point of Grace and The Imperials perform.

 

1997: The July 12-17, Atlanta CBA convention is a strong order-writing show. There are 13599 in attendance with 2,773 registered stores, 438 suppliers exhibiting. International attendance grows 50% from 1994 to 1996. Foreign rights business is booming. Music suppliers are in favor of their location on the newly divided floor.

 

1998: July 11-16, Dallas. All-time high of 13,741 attendees. Number of stores present declines from 2,773 to 2, 679.Just In Time inventory is a hot topic. The show features for the first time a fully segmented floor, which receives mixed reviews. Author signings are at exhibit booths rather than at personality booths on the floor’s perimeter.

 

1999: July 10-15, Orlando, Fla. The 50th anniversary tops last year’s all-time high of 14,694 attendees. CBA’s second International Marketplace nearly doubles, with 29 exhibiting companies representing 12 countries. For the first time, CBA offers a convention chaplain—author John Trent.

 

2000: New Orleans, La. July 8-13. Attendance is down, 12,107 (representing 2,629 stores). Exhibitors numbers 525, with some suppliers choosing not to attend because of location. Pacesetter event features Alan Keyes. Bibleman cuts the opening ribbon. First annual Christy Awards take place, honoring the best in Christian fiction.

 

2001: Atlanta. July 7-12. There are 14,239 in attendance—2,687 stores represented. Christian African-American Booksellers Association has a display at the show for the first time. Crossway launches the English Standard Version translation. Bruce Wilkinson—whose The Prayer of Jabez (Multnomah) is named Charles “Kip” Jordon Christian Book of the Year—speaks at the Sunday morning worship service. Joni Eareckson Tada is inducted into CBA’s Hall of Honor.

 

2002: July 13-18, Anaheim, Calif. For an unprecedented second time, Bruce Wilkinson’s The Prayer of Jabez (Multnomah) is named Christian Book of the Year. During the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association awards banquet, Wilkinson challenges publishers to expand their reach globally. Attendance totals 13,129.

 

2003: Actor Mel Gibson surprises those in attendance at CBA’s Impact Awards ceremony in Orlando, Fla., by making a brief appearance to mobilize support for his The Passion of The Christ. President George W. Bush speaks via video to attendees.

 

2004: June 26-July 1, Atlanta. CBA’s attempt to bring attendees together in prayer for industry issues is met with lackluster response, as fewer than 15 retailers gathers for the Industry Prayer Meeting. New strategies include a new show schedule, and training and exhibit floor changes.

 

2005: Denver, July 10-14. The convention’s new name is the International Christian Retail Show, with the theme this year “Success In Store.” Registered attendance totals nearly 10,000, almost 1,000 down. Professional attendance reaches just over 3,000, and exhibitor personnel is 6,679. Changes at the show, including the Solution Centers with practical merchandising and marketing ideas, are a result of CBA’s reinvention effort. Products tied to the forthcoming movie The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe are a big presence.

 

2006: Denver. July 9-13. Attendance is down 9% across the board, while the show’s ironic theme is “Be Part of Something Bigger.” The show features appointment-only times on the exhibit floor. Les Dietzman, president of Berean Christian Stores, is announced as the next chairman of CBA’s board. Wal-Mart buyers come to the show, but keep a low profile.

 

2007: Atlanta. July 8-12. After six years of declining numbers, more than 9,000—including nearly 3,000 professionals—attend, a similar number to 2006. Church store attendance increases 16%. Exhibitors drop to 6,007, and there are 67 first-timers exhibiting. Workshops focus on CBA’s More From the Core initiative and CBA WebSearch is unveiled, allowing users to search the Web sites of member suppliers.

 

2008: Orlando, Fla. July 13-17. The theme is “It’s a New Day.” However, numbers are notably down at 7,448 total. Professional attendance is down 17%, and exhibitor personnel comes in at 4,787. William P. Young’s The Shack (Windblown Media/Hachette Book Group USA) gets the most attention among new books, and Symtio, an iTunes-style card program, is announced by Zondervan.

 
Fiction: the great escape Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 08 June 2009 01:01 PM America/New_York
Growing category is a bright spot fornewcomers, fueled by ‘hunger for hope’

Defying current sales trends, Christian fiction continues to grow, offering a bright spot for retailers, publishers and readers in a bleak economy.

In the midst of the economic recession, some publishers are targeting growth while others are launching new fiction lines for the first time.

Although some have suggested that even flat sales are good in the current economy, considering a February Association of American Publishers (AAP) report of a 19% drop in religious books for the month, news of growth is even better.

Read more...
 
Retail reformation Print Email
Written by By Jim Seybert   
Monday, 08 June 2009 10:42 AM America/New_York
How the economy is impacting consumer habits and business practices

A Christian Retailing industry survey

 

Changes in the national and world economies are ushering in what cultural observers refer to as a “re-setting” of consumer attitudes and behaviors.

Rather than being just temporary adjustments evidenced after major events, such as following 9/11, futurists say these shifts are the dawning of a new era of business built on new realities and different perspectives.

Our latest Vital Signs surveys looks at how some of these new factors are affecting Christian retail:

 

CONSUMER CHANGES

Shoppers at Christian stores this Easter season were more likely than last year to purchase only items that were on sale (62%), while two-thirds of retailers said they saw more evidence of price comparison shopping this year.

Credit card use was up in 42% of the stores compared to last Easter, and just over one-quarter of the stores (28%) saw an increase in the use of coupons. Meanwhile, consumers responding to our survey reported a 46% increase in personal coupon use, indicating perhaps a need for the Christian products industry to look more closely at coupon offers.

Sales of books to help with financial challenges were up in 27% of stores, as were Bible sales (35% of stores reporting higher sales) and special orders (28%). Meanwhile, nearly one in three stores (28%) said they had seen drops in the number of people buying gifts for others and in the sale of products focused on helping people live healthier lives.

The category with the most significant decline was inspirational art, with 65% saying that customer demand was less this Easter than last.

 

BUSINESS BASICS

Christian retailers are paying more attention than ever to the business side of their operation. Four out of five (81%) are working harder this year to reduce expenses, and three-quarters (77%) are looking more closely at inventory control.

Greater effort is being applied in six of eight key operational areas, including product selection, price competition and customer relations.

The only areas not posting increased attention are church relationships, where 48% are sticking with last year’s level of focus, and employee training, where 60% are doing the same as in 2008 and 5% are doing less.

 

ECONOMIC EXPECTATIONS

Industry members were more hopeful about their economic futures than they had been on New Year’s Day and in mid-February. In our latest poll, in mid-April, 48% of suppliers said they were more hopeful about the economy, compared to 37% who felt the same in February.

Retailers were not as upbeat, with 38% acknowledging higher hopes in April. However, fewer of them were less hopeful than they had been in previous months. In mid-April only 19% said they were less hopeful, compared to 26% in February.

 

QUESTIONS

The objective of our Vital Signs project is to act as a catalyst for meaningful dialogue. As you consider the new business models needed in the wake of the economic “re-setting,” use these questions as a starting point:

How could the Christian retail industry answer consumer desire for more coupons?

What might be the result of shoppers wanting more sale-priced items?

Are you doing more, or less, to build relations with local churches? Why?

 

Jim Seybert is an author and consultant living in Arroyo Grande, Calif. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

 

MORE COMMENTS: Hear more from those who took part in our survey. Read individual comments online at: www.christianretailing.com/index.php/retail-focus/vital-signs.

WHAT DO YOU THINK? ...of the findings and comments? Write to Vital Signs at: Christian Retailing, 600 Rinehart Road, Lake Mary, FL 32746, or e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Graph information courtesy The Jim Seybert Co. This Vital Signs survey was conducted online in April 2009 among readers of Christian Retailing’s Christian Retailing Update news service. Of 323 respondents, 178 were retailers. Vital Signs is a joint project of Christian Retailing and Jim Seybert, who are solely responsible for its content.

 

 
ICRS Exhibitors2009 Print Email
Written by Staff   
Friday, 15 May 2009 04:46 PM America/New_York

International Christian Retail Show: 2009 exhibitor listing

Plan your floor time with this guide to the book, music, gift and service suppliers at the show

See our upcoming July 6 issue for show specials from the 2009 ICRS exhibitors.

 

3 Arches, #335

AMG Publishers, #1211

Abbey Press, #533

Abbott Hall/Sudbury Brass, #1534

Abingdon Press, #1823

African American Expressions, #2144

Alpha Omega Publications, #1508

Ambassador International, #1452

American Bible Society, #1831

American Church Lists, #825

Amity Printing Company Nanjing, #1751

Anchor Distributors/Whitaker House, #1500

Anchor Wallace Publishers, #2138

Art & SoulWorks, #505

Artistic Manufacturing Corp., #1732

B&H Publishing Group, #1645

BJU Press, #1900

Baker Publishing Group, #1933

Barbour Publishing, #1923

Bardin & Marsee Publishing, #1930

Bargain Books Wholesale, #2130

Beyond Digital Imaging, #745

Black Family Press, #1932

Bob Siemon Designs, #523

Book Depot, #2127

Booklog, #926

Bookstore Manager Software, #723

BounceBack from Cash Flow Solutions, #1247

Bridge-Logos Publishers, #1653

Bridgestone Multimedia Group, #1106

Brownlow Gifts, #717

CASI/QLT, #736

CLC Publications, #1755

CTA (Christian Tools of Affirmation), #710

Carpentree, #400

Casscom Media, #811-813

Cathedral Art Metal, #515

Catholic Book Publishing Corp., #2039

CNI Distribution, #905

Charles Capps Ministries, #1530

Christ for the Nations, #2052

Christian Art Gifts, #750

Christian Focus, #1908

Christian Liberty Press, #2035

Christian Oil Co., #322

Christian Small Publishers Association, #1948

Christian World, #916

Christianaudio, #1624

Christianity Today International, #1433

ClearPlay, #1007

Cliff Weil, #621

Concordia Publishing House, #1815

Cosmos Gifts Corp., #631

Creation By Design, #502

Crocus Art Designs, #500

Crossway, #2000

Crown Financial Ministries, #2009

Dake Publishing, #1714

Dantek Group, #1423

David C. Cook, #1445

DaySpring, #601

Dear Cards, #845

Design Identity, #928

Destiny Image Publishers, #2223

Dexsa Co., #609

Dicksons, #438

Divinity Boutique, #644

EMI CMG Distribution, #913

ERJ Publicaciones, #1531

Editorial Patmos, #2150

Emkay Candle Co., #614

Eternal Pictures, #906

Evangelical Press, #1838

Evergreen Press, #1538

Every Good Gift, #313

Faith Library Publications, #1301

Faith One Publishing, #2238

FaithWords, #1945

Fireside Catholic Publishing, #1545

First National Merchant Solutions, #1244

Foundation Publications, #1601

Franklin Electronic Publishers, #1306

Fun Express, #410

G.T. Luscombe Co., #512

Gale Cengage Learning, #1904

The GoBible, #1532

God’s World Publications, #2144

Gospel Light/Regal Books, #1312

Gratefulimages, #503

Gray Communications (Freedom Begins Here), #1551

Gregg Gift Co./Enesco, #423

Grizzly Adams Productions, #TBD

Group Publishing, #1535

Guideposts/Ideals Publications, #1427

HJ Sherman Co., #314

Hannibal Books, #2135

Harrison House, #2053

Harvest House Publishers, #1203

Heartfelt, #639

HeartSteps, #509

Hebrew World/Century One Books, #2239

Hendrickson Publishers, #1745

Herald Press, #1622

Hermitage Art Co., #1717

Heroes Cross, #3105

His GEM, #613

Holy Land Gifts, #1853

Hope for the Heart, #2227

Howard Books, #2123

Howard Imprinting Machine Co., #823

Howard’s Jewelry, #739

Innovative, #932

Inspirational Closeout Solutions, #2031

Integra Interactive, #922

Intercontinental Greetings, #338

InterVarsity Press, #1409

Ironfish, #309

J.M.S. Marketing & Sales, #1851

James Lawrence Co., #611

Jason Imprinting Systems, #1310

Judson Press, #1302

Kerusso, #530

Kirkbride Bible Co., #1412

Know Him, #944

Korean Bible Society, #2005

Kregel Publications, #1733

Kurt S. Adler Inc., #300

Legacy Publishing Group, #426

Lighthouse Christian Products Co., #430

Lion Hudson, #1637

G.T. Luscombe Co., #512

Meadowbrook Insurance Group, #1246

Mediak, #814

Merry Christmas From Heaven, #513

Moody Publishers, #1913

Munce Marketing Group, #1603

Murphy Cap & Gown Co, #1514

Music Missions International, #1009

Music Wizard Group, #910

NOTW, #807

Nation Promotions/Jerusalem Artists’ Co., #635

NavPress, TBD

New Day Christian Distributors, #1013

New Hope Publishers, #1849

New Leaf Publishing Group, #2023

No Greater Joy Ministries, #1829

Noah’s Ark Distribution, #711

The Northampton Press, #1635

Northwestern Products, #602

Oasis Audio, #1628

Outreach, #1000

Oxford University Press, #1816

P&R Publishing, #1737

P. Graham Dunn, #317

Pacom/Sung In, #1950

Pathway Press, #2049

PlastiCard + Plus, #1248

Praiz POS/Extreme POS, #831

Premier Christian Cruises, #1108

Provident-Integrity Distribution, #817

QuickVerse, #1928

Rainbow Publishers/Legacy Press, #1615

Renaissance Design, #832

Revival Literature/Russian Bible Society, #1633

Rhythm Band Instruments, #501

Robert Spooner Galerie, #623

Rose Publishing, #1609

Ruth Doron Designs, #510

STL Distribution North America, #1700

SW Press Co., #2013

Scripture Candy, #708

Servant Marketing, #306

Shepherd Press, #1353

Singer Co., #712

Siriani & Associates, #839, #1245

Six & Geving Insurance, #1249

Slingshot Publishing (formerly World Christian Posters), #446

Solid Rock Jewelry, #408

Song Garden Music Group, #914

Spirit and Truth Christian Jewelry Designs, #730

Spoken Word of God Ministries, #2045

Spring Arbor, #1435

Standard Publishing, #1522

Strang Communications, #2226

Sudbury Brass Goods Co., #1534

Swanson Christian Products, #945

TAM Retail, #838

TBN The Holy Land Experience, #800

Tabbies (Xertrex International), #1217

Talicor, #606

Tandy Brands Accessories, #733

Thomas Nelson Bargain Books, #1348

Thomson Press, #1953

Trends International, #615

Trinitarian Bible Society, #1304

Truebite, #327

Tyndale House Publishers, #1837

Universal Designs, #411

Warner Press, #1511

Wesleyan Publishing House, #2145

Wholesale Christian Books, #2235

WinePress Publishing, #1345

WingSpread Publishers, #2001

Word Distribution, #1100

Word to World, #2051

WORDsearch Corp., #1850

World Wide Printing, #2017

Xulon Press, #1555

Your Story Hour, #2244

Zondervan, #1623

 
Essential Guide: Gift horse sense Print Email
Written by By Rhonda Sholar   
Friday, 15 May 2009 04:28 PM America/New_York

A life-giving but demanding category needs special care and attention for best results

At a time when every category in the Christian retail market is under scrutiny to ensure that it is performing at a level that warrants the store space it occupies, many have looked to gifts as their saving grace—and rightly so.

With book sales increasingly spread across various retail sectors and music sales taking a heavy hit from online purchasers, gifts have helped many Christian retailers keep their doors open by providing products with the potential for big returns from little investment, and which have not yet been cornered by mainstream retail.

But as the retail market continues to change, so too do the best practices required of Christian stores. Although there are many similarities between Bibles, books and gifts, producers, distributors and retailers also note that there are significant different demands in selling gifts.

Among the challenges: domestic/overseas sourcing, packaging, returns, margins, merchandising, product life spans.

“Not recognizing these differences can be fatal for a business,” said Gary Foster, founder of Gary D. Foster Consulting, and a longtime industry adviser. “This has a lot to do with why publishers seldom produce gifts, and gift companies rarely publish books. However, retailers don’t have the luxury of neglecting either. They need to offer both to their customers.”

For stores where gifts are doing well, dedicating more space and dollars to the category is a given. But as gifts get more attention, some wonder if losing an emphasis on books is ultimately detrimental to their store and its ministry.

“It’s hard to say where the tipping point is, but I don’t feel the majority of my stores are pushing the envelope yet,” said Matt Dickerson, a sales rep for Dicksons. “Everything we do is to bring us to the Word of God, and if a store dilutes its ministry by having too many gifts, then we are failing as sales representatives and buyers.”

Dickerson encourages stores to create a synergy between categories. “I find most of my stores are cross-merchandising well, thus bringing books/Bibles and gifts together,” he said. “This makes for attractive displays and helps get the customer looking for gift ideas to consider books as well.”

The debate regarding which category in the Christian bookstore has more ministry value—and therefore warrants better positioning in store—is not a new one. “It has gone on for at least 35 years that I am aware of,” Foster said. “Frankly, many bookstores have been able to remain in the ministry/business of selling books and Bibles because they also sold gifts. It’s not a matter of either/or, but one of balance and meeting the needs and desires of customers.”

Although books and gifts need to be viewed and handled differently, Foster said those involved with the creation, distribution and sale of Christian products tend to not have the “front of mind” perspective that books are gifts, too. “We typically view books as books first and not as gifts first. Shoppers do not make this distinction,” he observed. “Frankly, they view virtually everything in a Christian bookstore as a potential gift.”

According to industry research, 61% of Bible buyers purchase them as gifts, while 32% of Christian shoppers give books as gifts—compared with 28% of the general population.

“All of these categories are vital and well-shopped in our stores,” said Michael Hupp, who has spent more than 30 years directing retail merchandise teams with Family Christian, LifeWay and Berean stores as well as Kirlin’s Hallmark stores.

 

MINISTRY EMPHASIS

Now leading Christian Market Consultants, Hupp noted that the ministry value of items like jewelry, home décor, apparel and decorative accessories is “not only underrated in our industry but relegated as inconsequential to a Christian life,” when nothing could be further from the truth. More people are blessed by greeting cards each year, on a case-by-case basis, than by a book because of the volume that is purchased and sent every year, he said.

Of the 7 billion greeting cards sent by Americans a year, DaySpring estimates are that more than 5% have a religious or inspirational message.

Bible, book and music items come in only so many variations, but the non-uniform sizes and compositions of gifts make them unique in their marketing, ordering and merchandising demands. Gifts are very subjective in their appeal, while books and music are usually generic, according to Ken Shirek, sales rep for Magi Marketing, one of the leading Christian gift rep groups.

“Books are almost always driven by advanced marketing—the best-sellers are promoted before release, which generates a desire to buy,” he said. “Gifts are not so driven publicly. We throw them out there and hope they catch on.”

That’s a little unnerving when most gift vendors maintain a “you buy it, you own it” philosophy, Shirek said. While most publishers allow returns of product unsold, most gift companies do not allow returns, making the buying/inventory process for gifts a “roll of the dice.”

Among the reasons that gifts can’t be returned is that re-stocking is labor-intensive. Also, most gift items are packaged in boxes, often with protective wrapping or tissues covering the product inside. Packaging and boxes are often damaged or destroyed by the retailer when removing the product for store display.

“To then send a product to another store after it has been returned and resold but with inferior packaging wouldn’t be acceptable,” Shirek said.

Vendors accept returns of product that is damaged or defective and not the fault of the retailer, and they take back products shipped in error, also paying for return shipping. Meanwhile, vendors who do accept general returns may charge a re-stocking fee of up to 20% of the wholesale value of the items to help cover the labor cost.

Non-returnability is only one in a list of possible reasons that most gifts in the Christian industry come directly from the manufacturer and not—unlike books and music—distributors.

Although STL Distribution North America carries more gifts than other distributors, Rick Regenfuss, vice president of sales there and a former independent retailer for nine years, admits that gifts are not the company’s sweet spot.

“The complexity of gifts—think nonstandardized categories, wide variety of sizes and shapes making bin locations tough, no industry-wide ONIX-type data communication or bar-coding—make it a different ballgame than good old books and Bibles,” he said.

 

REGIONAL DIFFERENCES

Regional differences in consumer tastes also mean that gift inventories vary more between Christian stores than do books. That there is less uniformity in what gifts retailers need probably also makes it harder for distributors to know what to stock, observed Rick Lewis, owner of Logos of Dallas with his wife, Susan.

While it might appear to be more labor-intensive to have to order direct from suppliers, many retailers don’t see it that way. “This is not a problem to us, it’s just how it’s done,” Susan Lewis said. “Gifts are time-consuming, but I think they are worth it.”

Customer preference makes gifts a hard category to manage for Marilyn Hood, owner of two Sweet Spirit Christian Bookstores in Marietta, Ga., with her husband, Frank.

“Knowing how many of a particular size and color to stock is a shot in the dark,” she said. “How do I tell my customer who wants a different color tote that it may take a month to get the order when people are used to waiting two to three days for a book?”

But despite being a challenging category, gifts are doing well at Sweet Spirit. The reason—more flexibility with pricing.

“We have the highly recognizable things such as books and music at a normal suggested retail,” Hood said. “But we’ve found that with gifts outside of the Christian market, there is some margin to play with.”

General market gift companies frequently offer closeouts in order to bring in new lines. Hood recently bought plaques for 50% off the wholesale price. She paid $2.50 for a $5 wholesale plaque, retailing it for $9.99, or $10.99 to cover freight.

The key, Hood offered, is to shop trade shows and develop good relationships with sales reps to get knowledge of specials. She also networks with stores in different states to find out what’s selling for them. Many secular companies sell Christian items that general market stores might not be interested in stocking. “The downside of that is that you have to order often to get the deals,” Hood said.

Improving margin is a must, and gifts are a good way to accomplish this. “Someone taught me years ago, to take your mark-ups where you can,” Susan Lewis said. “For me, it’s all about ‘perceived value.’ Sometimes we use keystone, sometimes we add 50 cents above keystone, or occasionally we take a more generous mark-up. You need to consider your freight costs, gift boxes, damages, theft and many other factors.”

Lewis also countered a common argument that gift orders often come with errors. “We have more errors on book orders than we do on gift orders,” she said.

At Dicksons, after backorders are filled, the company has a fill rate in excess of 95%, Dickerson said. A more common problem is damage in shipment, with vendors usually quick to offer a credit.

When Lewis orders seasonal product at gift markets, the companies combine orders to be shipped from their country of origin. “When they can do their orders in bulk, they often pass on free freight as an incentive,” Lewis said. “Some will also give December dating for Christmas product purchased at the January or June markets.”

Gifts are one category where two heads—or companies—are better than one. Gift sales reps can prove to be a store’s greatest ally—especially at a time when trade shows are waning. “Sales reps are an invaluable resource with gifts,” said Jan Stanley, gift buyer for Sonshine Book & Gift Shop in Lake Jackson, Texas. In addition to product knowledge, “they also tell how other stores have done with it, what the sell-through is and suggest alternatives if something that you need is not available to fill the need.”

As a result of rep help, Stanley said, “we haven’t been to a trade show in years. We just don’t need to.”

 

EFFECTIVE DISPLAYS

Making gifts a successful category requires a store to “make a commitment when buying,” Dickerson said. “Dabbling with a little of this or a little of that makes it hard to display and oftentimes the product just gets ‘lost’ on the shelves. I like to see a buyer get excited about a product category or design and buy in depth, so that the display makes a statement.”

Like other categories, the gift department has been impacted by the downturn in the economy. At Sonshine Book & Gift Shop, where gifts—not including wall décor, cards, jewelry and apparel—occupy 60% of the floor space, overall sales thus far in 2009 are comparable to those in 2008, but gift purchases were down 7% from between February this year and last.

“Our merchandise at Christmas was second to none among home décor stores in our county, and at the end of the season our shelves were bare,” Stanley said. “These are very uncertain times and what people see on TV makes them nervous. People are holding onto their money.”

Gifts—with the exception of dishes, platters and candles—often fall into that category.

“Eighteen months to two years ago, customers were very loose with what they bought and picked up odds and ends,” Hood said. “People are coming with specific needs today. ‘I need a birthday gift for my friend,’ or they have a coupon. People are still buying, but where they were spending $50 for a wedding gift, now it’s $25.”

Donna Baker, gift buyer for Dightman’s Bible Book Center in Tacoma, Wash., reported gift sales holding steady, but said the economy has forced her to tweak her sales strategy. “Gifts that sell are in the reasonable-to-inexpensive price range. I am staying away from large, expensive wall art.”

Bucking this trend is Robert Spooner Galerie, whose average selling price has gone up a net 15% since the start of the recession.

“The higher end is selling the best for us even in this downturned economy,” said Bob Spooner Jr., adding that “gift” or “gallery” in a store name goes a long way in making customers shopping for fine products feel like they’ve come to the right place.

“(Customers) want to spend their money on something lasting, rather than smaller ‘gifty’ items that will possibly end up in a garage sale later,” he said.

 

MAINSTREAM CHOICES

Christian stores willing to try mainstream products have been finding success. Keith Schwartz, owner of Divinity Boutique, told of a mall-based store operator who became a distributor for Ganz’s “Webkinz” plush pets when his business was down.

“He created revenue, increased store traffic and created a reason for consumers to enter his store,” Schwartz said. “Many of these people were new customers who would not shop in a Christian bookstore.”

In similar vein, last year New Day Christian Distributors began building relationships with mainstream suppliers such as Fisher-Price, Mattel, View-Master, Crocs and Jibbitz. “(What) we have found, through working with these companies, is that there are Christians who work with these companies who want to see the Christian marketplace succeed and want their products to be a part of that market,” said Michael Turner, New Day’s director of special products and markets. “These companies are willing to design new products specifically for the Christian marketplace.”

Christian stores must look for avenues that will set them apart from mass merchants as well as other secular stores, according to Peter Trovato, vice president of sales and marketing for Kurt S. Adler.

“An important way to do this is to create unique displays,” Trovato said. “Mass merchants have many stores to deal with, and each store within the chain must look the same, thus they use plan-o-grams and templates. Independent Christian stores have the advantage of being able to spend time and effort on creating beautiful and inviting displays that are unique to their store.”

Logos’ Susan Lewis said individuality means keeping your community in mind. “Shop for items which fit your community,” she said. Her customers enjoy products made by community artists with unique gifts, especially crosses and jewelry.

Knowing the customer also requires stores to anticipate their needs. Divinity Boutique is offering ream rolls of Christian-themed gift-wrap in the hope that stores will want to wrap items as a free service. Divinity’s Schwartz said gifts are the only category where a consumer cannot get the breadth of assortment online or at a big-box retailer. “In my opinion, the stores that will survive in this economy will be changing their product assortment to 50% gift product,” he said.

 

“The complexity of gifts ... make it a different ballgame than good old books and Bibles.”

—Rick Regenfuss, vice president of sales, STL Distribution North America

 

GIFT TOP SELLERS FOR 2008

From church supplies to gourmet to stationery, the inspirational gift market opens up wide-ranging possibilities for today’s Christian retailer to increase store traffic, deliver add-on sales and support church ministries. Take a moment to consider the possibilities by examining some of last year’s best-selling $10-$30 gifts in the broad categories below.

Albums

Baby Girl baptism aluminum album (Dicksons) $13.99

Apparel

2008 VBS Power Lab iron-on transfers (Group Publishing) $12.99

Book & Bible Accessories

Bible highlighting kit (G.T. Luscombe Co.) $12.99

Church Supplies

Communion cups (Standard) $19.99

Games/Toys

VeggieTales steadfast pirate ship (Dicksons) $29.99

Gourmet

2008 VBS Jerusalem Marketplace large herb and spice kit (Group Publishing) $12.99

Home Décor

Reusable plastic candle holder (Emkay Candle Co.) $22

Jewelry

Christ’s Story beaded bracelet (Roman) $15

Kitchen & Dining

Parable custom tea for one (Brownlow Gifts) $25.94

Miscellaneous Gift

Sparkle dome holy family with angel (Dicksons) $12

Stationery/Cards

LuxLeather memo block (Christian Art Gifts) $12.99

Wall Décor

Nativity cross (Dicksons) $10

 

Lists based on sales data for Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 2008, provided by Christian Books & More Gold and used with permission.

 

 
Retailers Choice Awards: Retailers, it’s voting time Print Email
Written by Staff   
Monday, 20 April 2009 09:21 AM America/New_York

Help choose the best of the year, and win a selection of free products

altRetailers, it is time to name your favorite products of the year, in Christian Retailing’s 2009 Retailers Choice Awards. This is your opportunity to vote for the materials that you believe have made the greatest impact on your life and the lives of your staff and customers.

In this year’s new awards, you will also get to tell us which was your favorite Christian education book and which was the best marketing campaign for a particular product.

Voting puts you in line to win hundreds of dollars’ worth of nominated products, absolutely free—to sell in your store, distribute or keep for yourself.

You could win products such as inspirational mugs from DaySpring, a Pick Jesus T-shirt from Kerusso, an ESV Study Bible from Crossway or novels from authors such as Eric Wilson, Terri Blackstock and Joel C. Rosenberg. Winners will be selected at random from participating stores.

This year, 36 companies—including book publishers, DVD producers and gift suppliers—have nominated more than 250 items in 30 categories. All products entered were released in 2008.

Voting is open to any store owner, manager, staff member or volunteer, who can each vote once. To vote, go to the Retailers Choice Awards Web site, www.retailerschoiceawards.com, and click on the link to the ballot.

In voting, you are asked to judge the nominations based on the impact they have had on your staff and customers, including their ability to speak to people’s hearts and emotions, open people’s minds to new ways of thinking and encourage and affirm Christlike living.

Voting closes May 29, so be sure to let the industry know what products and companies you felt were the most engaging and effective. E-mail any questions to Managing Editor Christine Johnson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

 

OFFICIAL RULES FOR THE 2009 RETAILERS CHOICE AWARDS

Products nominated for the 2009 Retailers Choice Awards must have been published/released in 2008 and include clear Christian content, message or worldview.

In the gift categories, “inspirational” items not specifically Christian will be considered, although those contrary to orthodox Christianity will not be included.

Retailers are asked to judge nominations on the impact they have had on staff and customers, including their ability to: speak to people’s hearts and evoke emotion; open people’s minds to new ways of thinking; encourage and affirm Christlike living.

Nominating companies shall not canvass for votes; ballots that have been solicited by suppliers will be disqualified.

The deadline for retailers to vote is May 29. The results will be verified by an independent firm of certified accountants and announced at the International Christian Retail Show in Denver in July.

 

CATEGORIES

BOOKS/BIBLES

Audio

Auto/Biography

Bible Reference/Study

Bibles: Devotional/Study

Bibles: General

Children’s Fiction

Children’s Nonfiction

Christian Education NEW

Christian Living

Church and Culture

Evangelism

Fiction: General

Fiction: Mystery and Suspense

Fiction: Women’s

Health and Fitness

Personal Growth/Prayer

Relationships

Social Issues

Women’s Nonfiction

Youth/Teen

 

GIFTS

Accessories/Apparel

General Gift Product

Gift Books

Wall Décor

 

OTHER

Backlist NEW

Children’s Media

DVD/Video

Marketing/Promotion Campaign NEW

Spanish

Vacation Bible School

 

WINNING RETAILERS

Selected to receive free product from the 2008 Retailers Choice Awards were:

“Thank you so much.” —Sherry Booher, The Connection Bookstore in Grand Junction, Colo.

“God is good! Thank you. It’s truly an honor.” —Jose Burgos, Bread of Life in Bridgeport, Conn.

“Thank you for the tremendous news!” —Curtis Cecil, Family Christian Stores in Des Moines, Iowa

“Thank you for the good news. Awesome!” —Donna Hagedorn, Scholar Shop of St. Meinrad, Ind.

“How exciting!” — Emily Jo Mulholland, Christian Book & Gift Shop in Rochester, Minn.

 
Liturgical show encourages ‘mutual business’ Print Email
Written by By Christine D. Johnson   
Monday, 20 April 2009 09:13 AM America/New_York

Booksellers gather for education, enrichment at RBTE 2009

altLiturgical retailers will soon embark on what for many is an annual pilgrimage to the Religious Booksellers Trade Exhibit (RBTE), a four-day trade show gathering Catholic, Episcopal and other liturgical retailers and suppliers. As for the last 18 years, the Chicago suburb of St. Charles, Ill., will host the show, held this year May 26-29.

Known as much for camaraderie—often in evidence at the sponsored luncheons built into the admission fees—as for its retail training sessions and order writing, RBTE has been called “one of the last civilized conferences because everyone stops and goes and eats lunch together, and in that experience of interaction, you have an exchange between the store owners and each other and store owners and vendors.”

That’s the view of Chris Weickert, president and director of the Catholic Retailers Association, which changed its name last year from the Association of Christian Booksellers to more closely reflect the product mix in member stores.

Cliff Knighten, installed in February as executive director of the Catholic Book Publishers Association (CBPA), also views the show as key in relationship-building.

“It is a significant opportunity for these members to connect with trade bookstores, renew relationships and introduce new products,” he said.

RBTE President Bob Byrns, whose “day job” is in sales and marketing with Paulist Press, has been involved with the show from its beginning.

“Ultimately this is all about vendors getting together to sell and (to) meet retailers,” Byrns said. “It’s a mutual business, it’s a mutual struggle, and let’s do this as best we can in light of each of our own experiences.”

 

AN ‘AFFORDABLE’ SHOW

This year the economy will be much on the mind of retailers, but Byrns believes RBTE can still be a money-maker for them. He encouraged stores to pay attention to vendor specials, to “do their homework and pay for their trip.”

A relatively small show but one of only two main events designed for the Catholic market, RBTE entrance is offered at minimal cost.

“We bend over backwards to make their journey to St. Charles, Ill., as cost-effective as possible,” said Byrns, noting that either $75 or $100—the higher price including the Friday banquet—“buys all of their meals from the moment that they get there on Tuesday morning till they leave on Friday afternoon.”

The location is central to a significant number of retailers who drive in from neighboring states. “Part of the rationale in terms of making it affordable is that 60% of Catholic and liturgical stores are probably within a day’s drive of the city of Chicago,” Byrns noted, adding that despite the transportation costs, a “good number of California stores” also attend.

Dealer (retailer) prices have remained the same for many years, and exhibitor rates have not changed in the last few years, he said. Convention hotel costs also are the same as last year.

From year to year, about 150 vendors take up 200 booths. At press time, Byrns expected continued exhibitor registrations, but had processed more than 100. He also noted “no fall-off at all” in attendance from international publishers, who tend to register early.

 

TAILORED TALKS

This year’s show will likely be less controversial than 2008, which included an appearance by author and bishop of New Hampshire Gene Robinson, a polarizing figure for his views on homosexuality. Though well-received by the booksellers of his denomination, a few Catholic stores opted out of attending RBTE this year in protest of Robinson’s appearance at the 2008 show, though he only spoke at an Episcopal Booksellers Association event.

In light of denominational differences at the RBTE event, choosing speakers can be like walking a tightrope.

“We don’t take a theological stance,” Byrns said. “We try to offer programming that meets the needs of our attendees from the educational perspective, from the inspirational perspective, from a liturgical perspective.”

altBert Ghezzi, author and senior acquisitions editor for Our Sunday Visitor’s book division, wrote Everyday Encounters With God with Benedict J. Groeschel (The Word Among Us Press), and is the speaker for Wednesday’s luncheon, sponsored by The Word Among Us Press.

Esther de Waal, a scholar in the Benedictine and Celtic traditions, has written multiple books, including the upcoming Liturgical Press release Seeking Life: The Baptismal Invitation of the Rule of St. Benedict. She will speak at Thursday’s luncheon, sponsored by Liturgical Press and Canterbury Press/SCM Press.

Additionally, Richard J. Foster and Gayle D. Beebe, who together wrote the InterVarsity Press book Longing for God: Seven Paths of Christian Devotion (Formatio/IVP Books). Foster and Beebe will speak Tuesday morning.

LeAnn Thieman, who has contributed to several “Chicken Soup” books, has co-authored Chicken Soup for the Soul: Living Catholic Faith (Chicken Soup for the Soul Publishing) with Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen, and will speak Thursday at the Catholic Booksellers Breakfast.

For Thursday’s banquet, Catholic author and award-winning documentary filmmaker Paul Wilkes will speak of his own experience of faith. His memoir, In Due Season: A Catholic Life, was published in March by Jossey-Bass.

 

GATHERING THE ‘LIKE-MINDED’

Two retail associations—the Catholic Retailers Association and the Episcopal Booksellers Association—have annual meetings at the show.

“Since most Catholic stores are doing half or more of their total business in books, that extensive access to publishers (found at RBTE) is tremendously valuable,” said Weickert, who owns Vineyard Books & Gifts in Rockford, Ill., as well as three e-retailing sites.

Though outnumbered by Catholics at the show, Episcopalian booksellers—with 81 stores spread out across the country serving not only Episcopalians, but also “Lutherans, Methodists, Presbyterians, Roman Catholics (and) the family of Eastern Orthodox churches,” according to the group’s executive director, Henrietta Speaks—find it valuable to get together at RBTE.

In addition to the retail training on offer, “just having that many like-minded colleagues in the same space at the same time is very nourishing for our geographically spread-out membership,” Speaks added, citing the benefit of building relationships, which is “strengthening for all of us.”

Additionally, on the publisher side, CBPA’s board of directors meets at the show, and also conducts a professional skills workshop for its members.

Considering the need for cooperation in the industry, Knighten said that CBPA members have a “keen interest in the overall health and success of Christian retailers.” He sees RBTE as “an important opportunity to learn how we might better support them in their mission and ministry.”

Rbte will be on May 26-29, St. Charles, Ill. For the 2009 show schedule, visit www.ChristianRetailing.com.

 

 
Industry Forum: It’s time to bury the ‘same old’ thinking Print Email
Written by By David Amster, president, Integra Interactive;   
Monday, 20 April 2009 08:52 AM America/New_York

From fear to friendship—the need to embrace change and make it work for you

altNoted business author and consultant Tom Peters is credited with stating, “If you don’t like change, you’ll dislike irrelevance even more.”

After visiting more than 275 Christian retail channel stores the last two years, I couldn’t agree more. Countless stores I have visited exhibit all the telltale signs of doing the same things and expecting different results. It doesn’t happen. To get different results, you have to deploy a different strategy.

The retail landscape is littered with closed stores that failed to change. The recent liquidations of Linens ‘n Things, Goody’s and Circuit City are just a taste of what 2009 will likely hold.

Many respected retail consultants are saying that up to 14,000 stores will close during the year. The reasons are many: Failure to differentiate from a competitor, poor cash flow, poor merchandise selection or presentation and changing consumer habits top the list. During an economic downturn, execution is even more important because consumers are spending less.

I care deeply about Christian retailing. In 1975, when I created the concept of music demos and listening stations, it began a 34-year history of passionately seeking to help retailers succeed. Now, at the risk of perhaps alienating some of my very own retailer customers, I feel compelled to speak straightforward about Christian stores.

Change is usually not easy. Doing the same things, following the same routines, is what most people prefer. And, let’s be honest, most small businesspeople would prefer not to have to face competition. But doing the same thing over and over again rarely challenges us. Lack of competition leads to complacency and rarely leads to advances.

Meanwhile, innovation and technology have led to a plethora of choices in just about every facet of life, including multiple choices of how and where to purchase many of the products available in Christian retail stores.

Let’s be clear: There’s no point spending one additional minute bemoaning that publishers sell direct, that Wal-Mart carries many of your best-selling books, that Internet retailers undercut your prices and that some people illegally swap music files. None of this is going to change. Debating whether it is right or wrong will not reverse it. The only thing it results in is a negative attitude.

Where is it written that retailers are entitled to have customers shop in their stores? Or that retailers are entitled to sales increases year after year? We are not entitled to anything. We must earn our customers and then continue earning them to keep them coming back. There is no “top of the hill” resting point. We must always be climbing.

Success in anything starts with a positive mental attitude. Years ago I had the privilege of coaching several high school cross country teams to state championships and nation rankings. The key point that I emphasized every day to my athletes was that the real competition wasn’t in the foot race but in the mind. If they didn’t believe they could win, they were already defeated.

So, let me encourage you to begin each day by thinking about how to differentiate yourself to effectively compete in the marketplace. If you’re focusing on your competitor, you’re not focusing on where you should be going. You’ll never be charting your course. You’ll always be reacting to your competitor’s agenda.

How does this play out in the real world of your store? Let’s use the examples of music and technology.

Music sales peaked in 2000 and have declined every year thereafter. The blame has been put upon everything from illegal downloading to a lack of new mega-artists. Certainly piracy has affected sales, but a strong case can be made for the impact of the rise of other entertainment choices, too.

Consider that just nine years ago, video game sales were almost insignificant and movie DVDs were nonexistent. The iPod had not yet been introduced. Broadband Internet service was not widely available and too costly for many consumers.

Fast-forward to today: The video game industry is bigger than the music industry. DVD sales, while having peaked in 2007, are still significant. The iTunes store has sold more than 5 billion songs. Cheap broadband service has allowed e-commerce sites to offer an ever-increasing selection of goods and services.

Technology has certainly made it more challenging for brick-and-mortar retailers of media products to compete. Online retailers of books, music and movies, according to Internet Retailer, now account for more than 15% of all sales of media titles.

Brick-and-mortar retailers can compete, but not if they continue to sell music the same way they’ve always done. This will only result in a continuing sales decline. Forrester Research is forecasting a 9% annual decline in physical music sales and a 14% annual increase of digital music sales through 2013. As a brick-and-mortar retailer, you simply must change your strategy or you will be irrelevant.

One of the benefits of e-commerce is that it can offer a virtual inventory of practically every music CD and movie DVD currently available. No physical store can stock even a fraction of what is available through what is often referred to as “the long tail.” So, how do you, as a brick-and-mortar retailer, compete? By also using technology.

Media-on-demand systems such as Just in Time Digital’s isMOD and my company’s myMEDIA BurnBar kiosk are enabling retailers to “virtually” stock thousands of titles with no associated inventory cost.

Customers using the myMEDIA BurnBar kiosk can choose from more than 18,000 accompaniment track, artist CD, audiobook, video game and software titles. Additionally, they can select more than 60,000 song titles and mix their own custom CDs.

All this can be burned to CD or DVD in just a few minutes. Very soon customers will also be able to purchase songs as MP3s and load them to their portable players.

With these types of kiosks, technology has put physical location retailers back in the game and

given them a competitive advantage. When we analyzed the 2008 sales data of myMEDIA BurnBar, we found that more than 86% of all accompaniment track titles—nearly 9,000—had sold at least once. In January this year, 68% of all the artist CD titles sold only one copy, while an additional 17% sold only two copies.

This tells us that customers want a very wide selection. Retailers using media-on-demand technology are giving customers what they want—and winning their loyalty in return.

Of course, there is much more to fully executing this or any other viable strategy. But it all begins by embracing change and making it an ally. If you don’t, outside forces will change you by hastening the closing of your doors.