by Rebecca Theim
From Hell and High Water by Rebecca Theim, © 2013, used by permission of the publisher, Pelican Publishing Company, Inc.
After seeing what had happened in New Orleans and the seeming
advantage the element of surprise there had given Advance, newsroom
employees of the Cleveland Plain Dealer launched their own
pre-emptive move in anticipation of being the next Advance newspaper in
line for the "digital-first" experience. (Like the Times-Picayune, Advance officials acknowledged that the Plain Dealer was still profitable, at least as of the end of 2012.)
The "Save The Plain Dealer"
campaign borrowed some of New Orleans's tactics, although it was able
to launch a true advertising campaign thanks to the financial support of
Newspaper Guild Local 1, one of only four unions left at Advance
newspaper nationwide, and the guild's parent organization, the
Communications Workers of America. (The other three unions at Advance
newspapers are at the company's largest, the Newark [N.J.] Star-Ledger,
where employees responsible for printing and production of the
newspaper are represented by the Graphic Communications Conference Local
8-N, Teamsters Graphic Communications Conference Local 1L, and
Teamsters New Jersey Mailers Local 1100.17)
The Plain Dealer's campaign included half-page ads in the
newspaper, bus placards, and YouTube video spots featuring union members
and Cleveland celebrities alike (actress Valerie Bertinelli from the TV
show Hot in Cleveland was one), emphasizing the importance of a
daily newspaper and lobbying for its preservation. "We're trying to get
out ahead of this thing and give people a stake and a say in what
happens," John Mangels, the leader of the guild committee that created
the marketing campaign, told the Plain Dealer in early November 2012. "It really ought to be the community's fight as well as ours."
Advance's target in Cleveland, however, appeared to be less the daily
print newspaper, and more the newsroom's union.
In a deal reached in
late 2012 between the Guild and Advance, the union accepted a workforce
reduction of fifty-eight employees in exchange for a guarantee of no
further large-scale layoffs through 2019. Without the agreement, Advance
warned it would purge eighty to eighty-five Plain Dealer
employees when the current contract expired in a few months, and also
would likely begin docking employees' wages for a portion of health
insurance premiums now covered by the company.
The new contract instead
protects most existing Guild members, restores the 8-percent wage cut
they had taken to avoid layoffs in 2009, and provides for Advance to
shore up their underfunded pension and health care funds.
Although potentially devastating for the roughly sixty employees who
have or will ultimately lose their jobs, the union contract looked
surprisingly generous on the part of Advance—until one looked at the
fine print. Previously, work by non-union Cleveland.com journalists was prohibited from appearing in the pages of the Plain Dealer, while Plain Dealer reporters' work appeared both in the newspaper and on Cleveland.com,
an arrangement that assured the union local would be supplied with new
members as long as a print newspaper existed.
That, however, changed
under the new contract, with online reporters' work now also being
allowed into the pages of the newspaper. "It's a major concession by the Newspaper Guild, and it'll weaken the union over time, since new hires
will likely be on the online side," Cleveland Magazine senior
editor Erick Trickey wrote on the publication's blog. The change will
result in a "shrinking unionized newsroom and a new, non-union digital
news staff."
The union acknowledged as such. "A big part of that is we've given
them some language that could, over the years, really diminish our
numbers," Guild chairman Harlan Spector told Poynter.org.
"That was probably the biggest and hardest thing we gave up, and it was
a very contentious point," the Guild's administrative officer, Rollie
Dreussi, recalled in a May 2013 interview with me.
"We understand what it could mean in the long run, but no one knows
for sure how it will work out. Sometimes you have to do what you can to
stay in the battle just to keep fighting the war." The symbolism of
Advance's checkmate also probably resonated with its historically
anti-union owners. The "1" in "Local 1," after all, represents the
first. An early predecessor of the Plain Dealer was "the birthplace of the [country's Newspaper] Guild," on March 20, 1934.
After the fifty-odd layoffs that occurred the final day of July 2013,
the newsroom stood at 110 employees, down from 350 a decade ago. In
earlier negotiations for the union contract now in force, the newspaper
guaranteed that only five more employees would lose their jobs in the
subsequent six years. Union members have suggested that their campaign
may have saved its daily newspaper status. It, like the Post-Standard and the Oregonian, is printed daily, but home-delivered only four days a week, as of August 5, 2013.
When the layoffs finally occurred, management apparently was keen on
avoiding the unemployment "death march" scene that had unfolded in New
Orleans and Alabama. It directed newsroom employees to stay home, but be
by their phones between 8 and 10 a.m. for calls telling them whether
they'd be "separated from employment," according to the internal memo
circulated the day before. Those receiving the "bad call," as staffers
referred to it, were then directed to pick up their severance materials
the next day, not at the newspaper, but at its distribution facility ten
miles away. (The story on the website of Bloomberg Businessweek detailing the indignities included a photo from the 1996 slasher movie Scream,
in which actress Drew Barrymore is screaming into a phone moments
before encountering a grisly death.)
One-third of the newsroom
ultimately was slashed, and the resulting flood of tweets told the story
in a way neither the company nor the union could. "I just got the call
from [assistant entertainment editor] John Kappes," columnist and former
longtime Friday! magazine editor Chuck Yarborough tweeted. "I
still have a job, but I want to throw up . . . if I can just stop crying
long enough." Among those not so fortunate: business editor Randy
Roguski, photo technician Cynthia Baecker and graphics artist James
Owens. "Newspaper bosses keep opening veins on the sick patient,
thinking if they can drain the body of blood, they can make it better,"
author and Edmonton, Canada Journal columnist Terry McConnell
tweeted in response to the news. (The next day, layoffs began at
newspapers across the country owned by the Gannett Company, Inc., the
nation's largest newspaper chain.)
If contentions by the Plain Dealer union were true, the day's
events did seem to further demonstrate that the Guild itself was a
target as much as any employee.
By the time the specific cuts were
announced, about two dozen newsroom employees already had voluntarily
left the newspaper, Cleveland.com
reported, which the union assumed meant that fewer than the previously
agreed-to fifty-eight would face the chopping block. Guild President
Spector and "Save the Plain Dealer" Leader Mangels both
volunteered for layoffs, in an attempt to spare others, and at least a
half-dozen other employees also voluntarily left the newspaper (in
addition to the earlier departures that occurred in the months since the
news of the coming cutbacks first broke).
However, the Guild cried foul, saying the company reneged on the
original agreement to first extend offers to any employees it wanted to
hire at Cleveland.com and count
those "transfers" against the original number of mutually agreed upon
layoffs. The company instead distributed its telephonic pink slips and
plans to extend employment offers at Cleveland.com later, meaning that any departures of survivors who choose to leave the Plain Dealer in favor of Cleveland.com
will further reduce the ranks of unionized employees at the company.
For its part, the company insisted that it had bargained with the Guild
in good faith. "This has been our practice in the past and we will
continue to do the same in the future," publisher and president Terrance
Eggers said in a statement reported on Cleveland.com.
Another twenty employees lost their jobs at the Sun News, a chain of
eleven Advance-owned weekly newspapers circulating in the Cleveland
suburbs. "Will the last journalist out of the newspaper business please
turn off the lights?" one tweet asked. By the middle of September 2013,
"digital first" would claim about 1,600 jobs at Advance newspapers from
Portland, Oregon, to Mobile, Alabama.
"Noise Out There"
The day the details of the changes and the resulting layoffs were
spelled out for Advance employees in New Orleans and Alabama, Steven
Newhouse, chairman of Advance.net and
presumed arbiter, if not mastermind, behind the company's digital-first
strategy, gave a rare interview to a publication not owned by Advance.
Most of his reported conversation with Campbell Robertson, the New York Times's New Orleans-based Southern correspondent, was unremarkable, but one thing Newhouse said about the Times- Picayune
raised the ire of just about every New Orleanian who read or heard it:
"We have no intention of selling, no matter how much noise there is out
there."
Although stunning in its insensitivity, Steven Newhouse's
pronouncement confirmed the type of relationship the secretive and
tight-knit Newhouse family was seen to have with its nearly three dozen
newspapers spanning both coasts: a seemingly contradictory combination
of laissez faire management that generally deferred to the sensibilities
and predilections of local publishers and their perceptions of the
community, but a stance that also could enforce a corporate overlord
mentality on major, and usually controversial, issues—or as a 1992 New York Times
headline described it, "Newhouse Maintains Loose Reins with a Tight
Grip."
It also perhaps revealed a shift in how the third, and latest
generation, of the Newhouse family viewed and expected to conduct
business with the Times-Picayune, and by extension, its other newspapers.
Advance had owned the Times-Picayune just a few months short
of fifty years at the time of Steven Newhouse's proclamation, and the
utterance was a slap in the face to New Orleanians who cared deeply
about their daily newspaper.
"Hello? Steve Newhouse? It's WTF calling,"
was the headline on a column appearing on NolaVie, the nonprofit
lifestyle and culture website that shares select content for posting on NOLA.com. "That was the eulogy Steven Newhouse read at Tuesday's funeral for our beloved Times-Picayune," columnist Brett Will Taylor wrote. "Only he didn't deliver it in person. He read it over the phone. To the New York Times. Which leads me to ask all of us mourners, we family members of the dearly departed, the following question: What. The. F%*#?"
Others also weighed in, including an editorial in the region's alternative weekly Gambit, published two days after Taylor's column:
"Noise?" Is that what he thinks New Orleanians have been pouring out
from their hearts? What Mr. Newhouse calls "noise," we recognize as the
voices of our friends and neighbors. When a billionaire absentee owner
refers to the heartfelt pleas of his customers as "noise," it tells us
that all the pretty puffery about a more "robust" news product is pure
bunk. Local business owners, many of whom for years have faithfully
advertised in Mr. Newhouse's paper, know all too well that ignoring the
voices of customers—particularly in New Orleans—is a recipe for failure.
Oddly enough, we suspect that's the Newhouse plan: sooner rather than
later, there will be no printed edition of the Times-Picayune.
Steven Newhouse later in the summer backpedaled from the harshness of
his remark and some of the tactics that had been employed by Advance
newspapers as they implemented "digital-first."
"Some of the criticism was well founded," he wrote in the August 2012 commentary on Poynter.org,
about the outrage and negative media coverage that greeted the
company's "forced march to digital," as newspaper analyst Ken Doctor
coined it. "We could have communicated our decisions more openly and
sensitively to our employees, our readers and our communities." It
nonetheless is almost impossible to imagine Steven Newhouse's father,
Donald, the family member who has overseen Advance's three-dozen-odd
daily and weekly newspapers for roughly six decades, making such a
tone-deaf public comment about any of the company's properties.
Although he had infrequent direct contact with the rank-and-file, Times-Picayune
employees had for years spotted the elder Newhouse at the newspaper's
downtown headquarters during his regular business updates with Ashton
Phelps, Sr. and Jr. Many Newhouse relatives and Advance executives had
trained or worked at the newspaper over the years, including the younger
Newhouse brother, the late Norman Newhouse, and the family's support of
the newspaper following Katrina had strengthened employees' gratitude
to the family.
Advance, however, had been operating for close to a decade in a very
different era than it did in the heyday of the media empire amassed by
Steven's grandfather and Donald's father, S.I. "Sam" Newhouse Sr. During
the newspaper industry's financial zenith that began in the late 1970s
and extended through the middle of the first decade of the new
millennium, publishers almost printed money along with their newspapers,
and few were better at it than Sam Newhouse. "It used to be that
running a newspaper was slam-dunk easy. It was a beautiful business to
be in," said Alan Mutter, a former newspaper reporter, editor, and
columnist turned industry analyst and consultant who bills himself as
"perhaps the only CEO in Silicon Valley who knows how to set type one
letter at a time." "You were the only one in town, you could raise rates
at will any time you needed to, and back in the day, people didn't have
a choice. You needed to hire a secretary? You took out a [help wanted]
ad in the [local] newspaper for $600 because there wasn't another
option. Monster.com or Craigslist
didn't exist. Now, the newspaper business is anything but easy. It's
incredibly complicated. It has gone from being stupid easy to being
almost unbearably difficult."
Newhouse newspapers, before the full-bore arrival of the Internet as
an information and entertainment medium, routinely enjoyed profit
margins among the best in the industry—between 20 percent and 30
percent, leading newspaper analysts John Morton and Ken Doctor
estimated.
Morton projected that Advance's profit margin is now probably
half of what it was at its apex, while Doctor said the company's
newspapers probably would fetch 10 percent of what they would have a
decade ago. Because Advance is a privately held company—and a secretive
one at that—it is essentially impossible to obtain financial information
that provides meaningful insight into its performance.
While the company and the Times-Picayune released limited financial
data after public sentiment developed so forcefully against them, it has
by-and-large been cherry-picked information that supports their
narrative or a particular position they are trying to advance.
For
example, NOLA Media Group president and publisher Ricky Mathews told the
Wall Street Journal in the fall of 2012 that NOLA.com's
online revenue grew 20 percent year over year, but he wouldn't say from
what base, making it impossible to assess the website's relative
performance, or evaluate it against industry standards.
Even when
executives do release figures, they don't always match up. In a January
2013 commentary published on NOLA.com
that assessed NOLA Media Group's performance since the change,
Times-Picayune editor Jim Amoss wrote that, "In 2012, 41 million viewers
came to NOLA.com, 7 million more viewers
than in 2011." "Viewers" is not a recognized industry metric, so in
writing about the commentary for CJR, the magazine's "Audit" editor Ryan
Chittum presumed Amoss was referring to unique visitors. Amoss' numbers
averaged 3.4 million unique visitors a month in 2012, and 2.83 million
in 2011. However, Mathews and Amoss presented numbers to an industry
conference in New Orleans some six weeks later that were significantly
larger than the figures Amoss cited in his commentary.
Although independently compiled figures often vary widely, numbers
generated by nationally recognized web analytics company Quantcast
indicate that both men overshot the runway, and that the website
actually received hundreds of thousands of fewer unique visitors a
month, on average, in 2012. (Full 2011 figures aren't available on the
Quantcast site for a 2011 comparison.)
In a comprehensive story published by Columbia Journalism Review in
March 2013 about the Times-Picayune since it became a less-than-daily
publication, the magazine estimated that the newspaper and NOLA.com
annually generate roughly $90 million in revenue and $9 million in
operating profit, "which come overwhelmingly from the print side." In a
report he wrote for the Nation that cited both publicly available and
proprietary figures shared by employees, New Orleans author and
freelance investigative journalist Jason Berry concluded that the
newspaper probably made about $8 million in 2011.
CJR estimated the
Times-Picayune's circulation revenue at roughly $25 million to $30
million annually, which, if true, meant the print newspaper generated
more than 90 percent of the company's revenue before the changes "and
still likely brings in five of every six dollars in revenue," CJR
concluded. "If NOLA Media Group were a standalone business with no
newspaper to support it, its costs would exceed its revenue by many
times." As mentioned earlier, global market research company Kantar
Media projected that the Times-Picayune brought in $64.7 million in
print advertising revenue in 2011, while NOLA.com earned less than one-tenth of that, or $5.7 million.
Given that the Times-Picayune has publicly acknowledged that it was
still profitable before the changes were implemented, the situation is
likely no better, and potentially far worse, at other Advance
newspapers.
For example, New York Magazine in 2009 reported that the
company's largest newspaper, New Jersey's Newark Star-Ledger, may have
lost as much as $40 million in 2008. The newspaper will lose a projected
$51.6 million in 2011- 13, publisher Richard Vezza disclosed in June
2013, a figure the newspaper's three labor unions flatly reject.
Mobile,
Alabama's Press-Register—earlier nicknamed the "Cash Register" in
journalism and Mobile business circles because of its reported
historically high levels of profitability—saw its profits sink from $7.3
million in 2006, to about $4 million in 2007, and $313,000 in 2008,
before its 2009 budget projected a loss of $200,000, according to
information presented in the lawsuit former Press- Register publisher
Howard Bronson brought against the newspaper and Advance in 2009. "No
one in the [Newhouse] family believes the newspaper business is coming
back," New York Magazine reported in 2009.
Regardless of the continued day-to-day involvement of octogenarians
Si and Donald Newhouse, it's clear they have begun to pass the mantle to
younger Newhouse family members. The third generation not only must
manage the radical shift in the very underpinnings of the family
business, but they also are likely intent on defying that traditional
"third-generation jinx" that fells so many previously successful
family-owned enterprises. Front and center is Steven Newhouse, labeled
in 2012 by the New York Observer as "the third-gen Newhouse to watch," who, with the changes at the Times-Picayune
and other Advance newspapers "has proven himself a savvy businessman
who little relishes underwriting a failing business model."
An unlikely defender of Steven Newhouse is Dan Shea, one of the Times-Picayune's
two former co-managing editors who was unceremoniously forced out by
the 2012 layoffs, and has since been hired as chief operating officer
and general manager of the Advocate by its new owner, New Orleans
businessman John Georges. "When I see people condemning [the Newhouses]
and saying that they're doing this just because they're greedy, I don't
think that's the case," Shea said in March 2013, six weeks before
landing the job with the Advocate. "Steve Newhouse doesn't want to be
the generation that runs this off the rails. I don't ascribe evil
motives to it. People don't understand business and the serious role
Steven Newhouse has in preserving his family's fortune." But Steven, his
two siblings, and their cousins have limited options, given the
company's overwhelmingly "legacy media" assets in today's increasingly
digital media world. "They're saddled with the legacy, and they're a
prisoner of that legacy," Mutter observed. "They got caught when the
music stopped. The value of their newspaper assets is shrinking, and
they long ago missed the opportunity to get out while the getting was
good."
Although Donald and Steven Newhouse have been adamant that their
company will not sell the Times-Picayune, Mutter's observation
points to the reality that the Newhouses' intransigence may very well
represent less of an unwillingness to sell, and more of an unwillingness
to sell at the price their newspapers would fetch in today's market.
The third generation of Newhouses are "pissed because they didn't
sell when they should have, they're pissed because they couldn't do
anything about New Orleans after Katrina, and they're pissed now that
they've got this rich guy [Georges]who's suddenly confronting them with a
form of potentially asymmetrical warfare, a competitor who appears to
have the assets and desire to do what it takes to be the dominant
publisher in southern Louisiana," analyst Alan Mutter observed. "They're
between a rock and hard place. They don't want to be the ones to turn
off the lights at the newspapers. They don't want to be the ones who
fail."
But improved profitability via cost reduction is the real short-term
goal, Doctor, Edmonds, Morton, Mutter, and others conclude. "All of this
suggests that [Advance is] trying to maximize near-term profitability
against the day when [daily newspapers are] no longer a viable
business," Mutter said. "What can you do this month, and next month, and
for the foreseeable future? You can control your expenses to maximize
short-term profitability. The plan is to keep figuring out ways to make
money, and the day they figure out that they can't make money anymore,
they'll close it.
On his "Reflections of a Newsosaur" blog, Mutter borrowed the term popularized in 2004's The Vanishing Newspaper:
Saving Journalism in the Information Age by former newspaper editor and
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill professor emeritus Philip
Meyer—the "Milk It" strategy: Accept the inevitable decline and fall of
the traditional newspaper model and then whack costs to extract the most
profits from the decaying business for as long as possible. As
unfortunate as it may be that Ann Arbor, New Orleans or Mobile are
deprived of the power of a vigorous press, the strategy evidently
selected by Advance makes sense if you believe that the best days of
newspapering are behind us. By cutting staff to a bare minimum and
printing only on the days it is profitable to do so, publishers can milk
considerable sums from their franchises until the day these
once-indomitable cash cows go dry.
Doctor predicts Advance will be more profitable in 2013 than it was
in 2012, "but their print advertising is declining with everyone else's.
The only way they maintain the newer, higher profit is to continue to
cut expenses because they don't have increasing reader revenue. If they
want 12 percent, or 15 percent profit, the only way to achieve that is
to continue to cut. They will have to continue to cut content, and
that's simply not a strategy."
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