Posted on 05/20/2018 6:49:45 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
Its with a spasm of profits.
For a preview of the newspaper industrys coming death, turn your gaze to Colorado, where the withering and emaciated Denver Post finds itself rolling in profits.
The Posts controlling owner, vulture capitalist Randall Smith, has become journalisms No. 1 villain for having cheapened and starved not just its Denver paper but many of the titlesincluding the St. Paul Pioneer Press, the San Jose Mercury News and the Orange County Registerthat his firm, Alden Global Capital, operates through the Digital First Media chain. At the Post, Smiths firm cut the newsroom from 184 journalists to 99 between 2012 and 2017, Bloomberg News Joe Nocera writes. Over the same time, Smiths Pottstown Mercury fell from 73 journos to 10 while its Norristown Times-Herald went 45 to 12. And the cuts just keep on coming. For newspaper lovers, the cuts have been a disaster.
Journalists and citizens have protested and rebelled against the Alden cutbacks to no effect. The Posts editorial page editor resigned recently after writing an editorial calling on its owners to sell. The editorial page editor at the chains Boulder Daily Camera just got sacked for self-publishing a critique of his owners and a fund has been established to fund the journalism of Posties that have been let go. This week, employees from several of the chains newspapers took their complaint to Manhattan, where they demonstrated outside Smiths offices to demand that he either invest in his papers or sell them to somebody who will.
But why on Earth should Smith sell? Aldens newspapers recorded nearly $160 million in profits during fiscal year 2017, analyst Ken Doctor reported in a comprehensive piece recently at NeimanLab. The chains 17 percent operating margin makes it one of the industrys best performers. Over the course of seven years, Alden doubled profits in its Bay Area News Group newspapers, another home to cutbacks. At the Pioneer Press, where its staff is down to 60, the paper produced a $10 million profit at a 13 percent margin.
Smith may be a rapacious fellow, but his primary crime is recognizing that print is approaching its expiration date and is acting on the fact that more value can be extracted by sucking the marrow than by investing more deeply or selling.
Allow yourself to sympathize with Smith for a moment. Hes deeply invested in a stagnant industry whose primary audience is approaching its own expiration date. Think of the Denver Post and most other newspapers as your grandfather who is on dialysis, has a pacemaker and totes an oxygen tank behind him. He looks alive, but hes overdue. Your grandfather is a pretty good stand-in for the average newspaper subscriber, too. Habituated to his morning newspaper, hell resist cancelling his subscription no matter how raggedy the paper gets or how high the owners jack up the price. (Alden is among the most aggressive in boosting subscription prices, Doctor tells the Daily Beast.)
The business-school label for tactics like Aldens, in which you get fewer customers to pay more for less, as Philip Meyer wrote in his book The Vanishing Newspaper, is harvesting market position. By raising prices and lowering quality, a stagnant business can rely on its most loyal customers to continue to buy the product, allowing it to squeeze and squeeze and squeeze its customers as they croak. This slow liquidation of an assets value, destroying even its reputation in the process, kills the product. Wherever newspapers can be found reducing page size, cutting news pages, narrowing coverage area, reducing staff, shrinking circulation area, postponing the purchase of new equipment and raising subscription prices, they are harvesting market position. Faced with two business options, earn small sums from his newspapers over an indeterminate time or cash in big all at once, perhaps hastening the end, Smith has chosen the latter.
Its a truth universally acknowledged by those who dont let sentiment cloud their thinking that the newspapers time will soon passexcept for rare titles like the New York Times and a few others that can attract national audiences. The old model of a general-purpose newspaper fit the industrial age when advertisers needed mass audiences to sell the products of mass production. But the marketplace no longer supports the model of a few messages to many people. Now it is many messages, each to a few people, Meyer tells me via email.
Why pin exclusive blame on Smith for the demise of the Denver Post when theres plenty of blame to go around? In 2008, then-Detroit News reporter Charlie LeDuff spotted another villain in the rot and decay of his newspaper as it downsized to three days a week of home delivery. The owner didnt decide to shrink the paper. The reader decided to shrink the paper, LeDuff said. It was readers who stopped subscribing. It was readers who stopped using newspaper classifieds. It was readers who stopped reading. Readers are the true villains in this murder mystery.
Its not like the newspaper industry didnt have advance warning of its demise. In 1976, long before the internet arrived, Los Angeles Times media reporter David Shaw wrote in a lengthy Page One report about the newspapers worsening vital signs. Are you now holding an endangered species in your hands? he wrote.
Why cant the Denver Post find a Jeff Bezos to save it? Unfortunately for newspapers and I write this as a fanatic of the mediumthere arent enough newspaper-loving billionaires to go around. Go ahead and hate Randall Smith all you want, but do so with the understanding that, like the mortician, hes figured out a way to make money off of death.
“I just love these uplifting stories, this one makes my day. Watching journalists self destruct before our very eyes bring warmth and joy and is well deserved.
“
just not happening fast enough for my taste ... i don’t have that many years left on the planet ...
“Ill buy one rarely just to have fire starter available for my grill.”
around here in the Denver Metro area you can occasionally snag free newpapers at the temporary sales stands they sometimes set up in some of the grocery stores ...
Perhaps the News will rise again.
It must have been some of the people that worked for the news going to the post that confused me. My mind is not what it used to be.
Last time I saw one, the entire paper was a whopping two sections of the narrow European paper size. Nether section had more than 16 or so pages.
This was including the classified ads.
Soon it won't even qualify to be fish wrap.
Guppy wrap, maybe...
No amount of hand wringing, blame slinging, political hay making, bargaining, crying, screaming, begging, reorganization, name changing, or obfuscation will help at all when your business model is obsolete and no longer viable.
Goodbye papers.
Electronic ink devices have been available since 2004.
It isn’t as if there were no viable choice.
The spouse has to absolutely have the Sunday edition of The (daily worker) State paper delivered.
Another copy still shows up at the house we moved from and are getting ready to put on the market soon.
I chuck it in the trash.
The daily worker has been told before not to deliver there.
Smith has a pair! What he’s done would be like investing in Mickey Mantle in 1967.
Oil dry at any parts house works nicely for oil leaks.
That was the name of the LAFB newsletter.
Colorado can always convert to rolling papers.
The RMN was a good paper while it lasted. Many of the stories were wire copy, yes, but the columnists were mostly conservative and it was nice to sit in a cozy chair on a winter morning and read the columns and the sports pages along with the occasional local story of interest. They used the “tabloid” style of layout (like reading a large book) which made it easier to hold for long stretches instead of the normal widespread newspaper layout.
I never took the Denver Post seriously since around 1970 when they declared all pistols costing less than $45.00 (1970 dollars)to be SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIALS. The firearm shown was a Ruger Mk II semi auto.
Omaha World Herald has been “downsized” in both content and size. Looking more like small town rag. There have been rumors of future layoffs.
Because Denver's not a national capital.
It's not quite a regional (multi-state) capital either.
So the audience and influence of a Denver paper is bound to be limited.
Newspapers are dying anyway, but a billionaire who wants influence in the country and the world might still be found to buy a New York or Washington DC paper.
That's a lot less likely to happen in other cities.
This slow liquidation of an assets value, destroying even its reputation in the process, kills the product. Wherever newspapers can be found reducing page size, cutting news pages, narrowing coverage area, reducing staff, shrinking circulation area, postponing the purchase of new equipment and raising subscription prices, they are harvesting market position.
Isn't the product dying anyway? Aren't newspapers, if they survive, likely to get smaller and thinner, whatever publishers do?
Silly me! What was I thinking ;-)
My wife loves getting the local paper, so we get it. They reduced the size of the paper (width) but it was fairly subtle. Then they stopped publishing a Saturday edition, changed their mind and now do a ‘Sunday’ paper on Saturday. Fewer pages, of course. At least it hasn’t gone liberal.
Thing is, 100 years ago, owning a newspaper typically made one rich. Now owning a newspaper is akin to owning a camera store.
I call El Estado the daily worker because it annoys the people who blindly believe the rag.
I'm a grandfather and I won't buy any MSM crap at any price. Don't watch the news or listen to the radio. Journalists have slit their own entitled, narcissistic, manipulative throats.
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