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Friday, October 30, 2009

BusinessWeek’s Future Is Cloudy, but Better Than It Could Have Been: The Grim Non-Bloomberg Scenario

clint-escapesBusinessWeek employees are waiting to hear if they’ll have jobs once Bloomberg takes over the publication, and I’m told that staffers expect to hear their fate shortly after Thanksgiving. That has to be unnerving, but I can at least offer a little bit of comfort in the worst-case scenario employees would be facing had they been purchased by private equity firm ZelnickMedia. The short version: Almost everybody gets fired.

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Whoops! Are Reports of the Ad Recovery Greatly Exaggerated?

sunshine-cloudHere’s the counterpoint to Publicis’s mildly optimistic take on the ad market yesterday: Rival ad-holding company Interpublic Group’s report, which is mildly pessimistic. But the takeaway is the same: If things get better, anyone who’s not Google won’t see much real sign of it until next year.

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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Bloomberg Buys BusinessWeek For a Song, Plus Up to $5 Million

newstandWhat’s one of the biggest names in magazine publishing worth? These days, maybe $5 million.

That’s the high end of the range Bloomberg will be paying for BusinessWeek, reports BusinessWeek. Next question: How many of the magazine’s employees stay on once the deal closes later this year? BusinessWeek publisher Keith Fox can’t make any assurances. But he does call the deal “exciting.”

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Friday, October 9, 2009

Condé Cuts Continue: 15 at Digital, More to Come

conde-nast-buildingCondé Nast, which shuttered four magazines this week, said it won’t be cutting any more titles. But that won’t be the last of its cuts: The publisher is looking to cut costs by roughly 25 percent at all the magazines it publishes, likely leading to layoffs in many cases.

Today’s example doesn’t come from a magazine per se, but from the company’s digital group, which let go of “more than” 15 people, Expect more to come from Condé, and from other publishers, in coming weeks.

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Friday, August 14, 2009

UGO, Hearst’s Dudes/Gaming Site, Needs a New CEO

jmoses_bigUGO, the dude-centric videogame site that Hearst bought for $100 million two years ago, needs a new CEO.
J Moses, who co-founded the company in 1998, left in June, as did Michael McCracken, his longtime COO. The company is currently being run by Hearst Interactive president Ken Bronfin.

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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

How to Survive the Media Meltdown: “Imagination, Enthusiasm”

sunriseStill have a job in media? Looking for a wee bit of inspiration in a gloomy week in a miserable year? Here’s a free pep talk.

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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Forbes.com CEO Jim Spanfeller Out. Here’s the Internal Memo.

jim-spanfellerForbes.com CEO Jim Spanfeller, who has run one of the Web’s biggest finance sites for the last nine years, is leaving the company at the end of the summer. No replacement has been named. Spanfeller’s departure comes amid a flurry of bad news for finance publications.

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Friday, May 15, 2009

Steve Forbes: We’re Not Making More Cuts

forbesJust because Roger McNamee of Elevation Partners is stepping down from the Forbes Media board, to be replaced by a cost-cutting expert, doesn’t mean more cuts are coming, says CEO Steve Forbes: “Various media outlets today noted that Roger McNamee of Elevation Partners has stepped off the Forbes Media board and that this portends an imminent round of additional cuts. It does not.” Here’s the complete internal memo.

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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Will Time Inc. Have to Cut Again?

ann-mooreTime Warner’s AOL can spin positive news out of the miserable results it offered up today. But Ann Moore, who runs Time Warner’s Time Inc. publishing business, will have a tougher time selling that story to investors and Time Warner executives. Will she need to make a second round of cuts?

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Why Portfolio’s Peers Shouldn’t Be Celebrating

newstandWhile the chattering classes continue to pick over Portfolio’s bones, it’s worth checking in on the business titles Condé Nast was targeting with its ill-fated magazine. In short: None of them are suffering from a Portfolio-like swoon, but they’re all in lousy shape. And while we’re at it, let’s dispense with the story that Condé Nast burned $100 million or more on this one.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

Condé Nast Shuttering Portfolio

portfolioCondé Nast is shuttering its troubled Portfolio title and accompanying Web site. The publisher informed its staff of the decision at a meeting this morning. “The company is deeply grateful to Portfolio’s readers and for the broad support of marketers and executives all around the country,” says publisher David Carey.

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Limits of Steve Jobs’s Power: Even the Apple CEO Can’t Make Options Interesting

411px-steve_jobsCongrats to the folks at Forbes for a journalistic coup: They’re the first media people to get their hands on sworn testimony Apple CEO Steve Jobs gave last year in a civil lawsuit. It is, as Forbes notes, “a rare look at Jobs in his own words.” Alas, Jobs in his own words, when he’s talking about options backdating, is just like anyone else: a snooze.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Forbes Starts a Second Round of Layoffs; Who Else Will Join It?

forbes-mag

Forbes Media has begun a new round of layoffs and will let go of more than 50 people on its editorial and business teams, I’m told. The cuts are roughly proportional to the ones the business publication made in November and January when it consolidated its Web and magazine operations.

The question for the rest of the industry: How many other publishers will have to make a second round of cuts themselves?

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

Video: Eli Broad Explains Why He Wants to Save the Los Angeles Times

eli-broad-youtubeEli Broad is reportedly worth $5.2 billion, down from $6.7 billion last fall. Why does he want to burn more money on a regional newspaper?

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Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Is the L.A. Times a Charity Case? Yes, and I’ll Take It On, Says Billionaire Eli Broad.

eli-broad

One frequently floated solution to the newspaper industry’s woes: Find sugar daddies who are willing to fund them via an act of charity. Now, Los Angeles billionaire Eli Broad says he’s willing to do that to save his hometown daily.

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About Peter

Peter Kafka has been covering media and technology since 1997, when he joined the staff of Forbes magazine. Most recently, he has been the managing editor of the tech and media Web site, Silicon Alley Insider.

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Ethics Statement

Here is a statement of my ethics and coverage policies. It is more than most of you want to know, but, in the age of suspicion of the media, I am laying it all out.

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