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By David Brauer | Published Thu, Aug 27 2009 12:42 pm
More from the pretty-sure-it’s-genuine, months-old Star Tribune CEO/Publisher search document:
In addition to a frank acknowledgment of the paper’s ongoing ideology (or lack thereof), the document, prepared by global headhunting consultants SpencerStuart, is mostly frank about the paper’s future and financial strategy.
Come work for new owners — who want to leave
The paper’s lenders — mostly buy-low types or financiers holding the bag from Avista Capital’s 2007 purchase — will assume ownership reluctantly. Therefore, it’s no shock that the document states they don’t want to hang around long.
However, getting out won’t be easy. Acknowledging that the paper will have new owners “for the second time in a little over two years,” the document anticipates “another transition within a few years since the lenders are not likely to be permanent owners.”
Points for honesty. It will be interesting to see which exec takes the job knowing the people who hired her or him already eye the exits. Then again, there aren’t many six-figure media jobs out there, no matter the duration.
The recession as fig leaf
Only the hardest-core laborite would argue the Strib didn’t need to cost-cut in the face of declining revenues. But one head-snapper: Avista would have cut costs “even without the recession.”
The document blames “generations of family and McClatchy ownership” for allowing expenses to “balloon.”
There may be some truth to that, but the uncharitable interpretation? We were cutting your pay regardless of a media-wide advertising depression.
That’s not surprising for a private equity firm, but remember than in 2007 — the last pre-recession year — the Strib pulled down a $56 million operating profit. True, revenues were already falling big time, but that profit was at least $20 million more than debt payments, roughly a 19 percent margin on revenues.
The document accurately predicts that bankruptcy would allow the Strib to renegotiate “outdated” labor contracts and effectively impose management’s final offers. In most cases, that’s exactly what happened. Whatever outgoing publisher Chris Harte’s demerits, he managed bankruptcy swimmingly, from ownership’s point of view.
The good news
As management has subsequently stated in its reorganization plan, the company thinks the worst is over. According to the search document, management’s attention will pass from labor battles and Chapter 11 to implementing “strategies currently being developed to grow revenues.”
Based on facts gathered elsewhere, I'd say those strategies are only now being baked, and will not be implemented (or even settled upon) until the new CEO arrives.
Sure, management might be spinning a rosy scenario to attract candidates, but the document is otherwise blunt about the risks, so I’ll take the prediction as sincere, if optimistic.
What does a leader look like?
In an assessment that will anger many but have some nodding in agreement, the document praises “independent employees and most union employees” (emphasis mine) as “loyal, highly committed and invested in the company’s future.”
However, “they have been through exceptionally turbulent times and need strong leadership as the company emerges from bankruptcy and recession.”
What does “strong leadership” look like? Mostly familiar stuff to corporate vets:
Ideal experience qualities are logical:
How many miracle workers are available? I guess you only need one.
What’s not there
Any notion of taking the Pioneer Press out.
The St. Paul paper is mentioned only once. The document notes the Twin Cities are one of the few remaining areas with two newspapers, but implicitly cautions that a takeover shouldn’t be assumed, because St. Paul (and, I’d add, much of the east metro) has its own identity. That sounds right to me.
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