Tag BusinessWeek

Rock’n'roller Josh Tyrangiel to leave Time.com, pogo over to lead BusinessWeek

Josh Tyrangiel
Rock’n'roller Tyrangiel to head BusinessWeek

Michael Bloomberg’s new play thing, the top (but loss-making) BusinessWeek magazine will have 37-year-old Josh Tyrangiel as its new editor, once the acquisition from McGraw-Hill completes in December.

In his “On Media” blog within the BusinessWeek site, Tom Lowry wrote today:

By selecting the 37-year-old Tyrangiel who is not a business journalist per se, Bloomberg clearly wants a leader for BusinessWeek who is not only a highly-regarded editor but someone who has demonstrated he knows how to reach a wider array of readers in both print and online.

Tyrangiel, a deputy managing editor at Time magazine and the editor of Time.com, is actually a bit of a rock’n'roller. Prior to taking the reins at Time.com he was the magazine’s music critic and also wrote for publications such as Vibe and Rolling Stone. While he may never have interviewed Bernard Madoff or Warren Buffet, he can count Bruce Springsteen, George Clooney and the Dixie Chicks among his interviewees.

Bloomberg’s chief content officer and former Time Inc. editor in chief Norman Pearlstine, was reported by Lowry as saying:

“I saw Josh in a number of leadership positions as he took on increasing responsibilities at TIME.”

He continued:

“Working closely with him …. I came to appreciate his intelligence, curiosity, energy, and integrity. Josh is recognized within Time Inc. and its parent, Time Warner Inc., as an ‘editor’s editor’ and a natural leader. His understanding of the ways in which print and online publications can work together will serve Bloomberg well as we expand our consumer media offerings.”

Changes have been sweeping through BusinessWeek since the sale to Bloomberg was announced last month. Jobs have gone and staff fear the venerable old magazine will become a promotional tool for Bloomberg, with the real business being done online. With his strong online credentials, Tyrangiel, who will replace Stephen Adler, may well help confirm those fears. His tenure at Time.com saw web traffic soar from 400 million page views in 2006 to what could be an estimated 1.8 billion page views this year, Lowry wrote.

Top Time Editor To Become BusinessWeek’s New Editor

Posted by: Tom Lowry on November 17

Josh Tyrangiel .jpg
Josh Tyrangiel, a deputy managing editor at Time magazine and the top editor of its online operations, will become the first editor of a Bloomberg-owned BusinessWeek. The acquisition, announced Oct. 13, is expected to close in early December.

By selecting the 37-year-old Tyrangiel who is not a business journalist per se, Bloomberg clearly wants a leader for BusinessWeek who is not only a highly-regarded editor but someone who has demonstrated he knows how to reach a wider array of readers in both print and online. A major reason Bloomberg LP executives pursued BusinessWeek was to reach a broader audience beyond Wall Street and the professional investor communities.

“I saw Josh in a number of leadership positions as he took on increasing responsibilities at TIME,” says Norman Pearlstine, Bloomberg’s chief content officer and a former editor-in-chief of Time Inc., Time’s parent. “Working closely with him …. I came to appreciate his intelligence, curiosity, energy, and integrity. Josh is recognized within Time Inc. and its parent, Time Warner Inc., as an ‘editor’s editor’ and a natural leader. His understanding of the ways in which print and online publications can work together will serve Bloomberg well as we expand our consumer media offerings.”

In some media circles, Tyrangiel was considered a leading candidate to succeed Time managing editor Richard Stengel. According to sources, Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes was so impressed with Tyrangiel that he tried to recruit him to be come the editor of CNN.com, the online arm of the 24-hour cable news channel, but Time Inc.’s current editor-in-chief John Huey intervened and convinced Tyrangiel to stay at Time with the promise that he might one day succeed Stengel.

During his tenure at Time.com, Tyrangiel boosted the Web site’s traffic from 400 million page views in 2006 to what could be an estimated 1.8 billion page views this year. Previous to Time, Tyrangiel worked at Rolling Stone and Vibe magazines and served as a news producer at MTV.

“Josh Tyrangiel will be a tremendous asset as we build the market presence of BusinessWeek backed by Bloomberg’s global multimedia news organization, to create the most compelling business news for the most sought-after readers.,” said Bloomberg L.P. President Daniel Doctoroff.

Tyrangiel will report to Pearlstine, who in turn will report on editorial matters to Matthew Winkler, Bloomberg’s editor-in-chief. “Norm and Josh are the ideal team to deliver a terrific business magazine that brings the most trusted, most influential and most important news to a global audience of thought leaders,” said Winkler.

Tyrangiel will work alongside BusinessWeek executive editors Ellen Pollock and John Byrne and managing editor Ciro Scotti. Pearlstine announced earlier that they would continue in their roles at the magazine. Tyrangiel succeeds Stephen J. Adler, who announced his resignation as editor-in-chief on Oct. 20.

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Time Inc seen heading for more cuts, NYT reports more losses

'Time Inc_' - www_timeinc_com_homeBad news and more bad (but not so bad) news remain the flavours of the day for US publishing giants Time Inc and the New York Times. A report in this morning’s Financial Times says Time is preparing for a another major fresh round of job cuts to follow on from last year’s massive loss of 600 jobs, or 6% of its staff.

Sourcing the article to “a person familiar with the plans”, the FT said the cuts were expected within the next few weeks.

The nearby New York Times Company reported a loss of $35.6 million in the third quarter as newspaper advertising revenue plummeted nearly 30%. But it still managed to beat expectations on deep cost-cutting and through pushing up its cover price and even saw its stock spike. Tellingly, internet revenue was also down 7.2%, to $78.9 million which was driven by an 18.5% fall in digital advertising revenue at the News Media Group.

Other uncomfortable reading for print publishers would wrap in:

Anyone got any good news out there?

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Fears BusinessWeek to become Bloomberg promotional tool?

So now staff at the Bloomberg-acquired weekly BusinessWeek may have a slightly better view of their future. As reported on this blog on Wednesday senior executives from Bloomberg and McGraw-Hill addressed several hundred employees in their New York HQ yesterday to outline the future for the 80-year old title that has been losing up to $1 million a week.

In an article on his The Num3rati blog, veteran BusinessWeek tech reporter Stephen Baker appears to question the Bloomberg business approach to selling terminals at $20,000 a pop and how the magazine will fit.

How much can this market grow? To listen to Bloomberg execs, they make money from the boxes and invest that money in more news-gathering power, which makes the boxes even more attractive. It’s a virtuous cycle which presumably leads to continuous growth. With BusinessWeek, Bloomberg hopes to extend its brand into the wider business audience, including c-suite executives, and open up further markets for their boxes.

I don’t see it. In my experience, every continuous growth projection encounters some force that disrupts it.

And of the future of BusinessWeek, Baker said:

Yet despite the ambitions expressed at yesterday’s meeting, I’d bet that the magazine will end up serving largely as a promotional tool for the company. The real business will be online. That’s where Bloomberg 2.0 will take shape.

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Bloomberg snaps up BusinessWeek, cuts seen likely to follow

businessweek-logoSo Bloomberg is to acquire McGraw-Hill’s venerable but struggling magazine BusinessWeek for a cash offer of between $2 million to $5 million. Not very precise, but it appears the terms of the deal, which is expected to complete by 1 December, have not been formally announced.

Founded in the Great Depression, but will BusinessWeek be able to take care of its own?

Founded in the Great Depression, but will BusinessWeek be able to take care of its own?

BusinessWeek, founded in 1929 at the time of the Great Depression, was put up for sale in July, and the process has followed a tortuous path over the last few months. PaidContent.org has a useful timeline of its coverage following the twists and turns of the deal here.

The weekly, which competes with fortnightly publications Forbes and Fortune, is thought to have lost around $20 million last yar and was projected to see that figure more than double in 2009. According to a blog posting by BusinessWeek’s senior editor Robin Ajello, Bloomberg will take on all existing liabilities including potential severance payments.

The magazine employs around 400 staff, and Ajello said editor-in-chief Steve Adler has sought to allay fears of a “scorched earth policy” and told his staff  the deal guaranteed that McGraw-Hill benefits would be extended to employees for one year after the deal closes.

The acquisition marks a significant change of direction for Bloomberg that since being established in 1981 has sought to build rather than buy market share.

The full team of top Bloomberg executives, along with McGraw-Hill CEO Terry McGraw, will speak to BusinessWeek staff first thing today.

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