The acquisition of Stuff for $1 by CEO Sinead Boucher is
arguably the best possible outcome for the company, and potentially a good one for the country.
Crucially, it places a major media player, albeit a terribly weakened one, back in the hands of a New Zealand owner with a solid grounding in
journalism – one that I hope will be reflected in a renewed commitment to
traditional journalistic values.
I’ve been critical of Stuff’s strategy in dealing with the
enormous challenges of the digital era. In particular I felt the company made
the mistake of allowing itself to be mesmerised by the false promise of digital
at the expense of its traditional print product, which generated most of its
revenue. But it’s hardly the only media company to have made such mistakes.
In the process of switching its primary focus to the
internet, and in the carnage that followed as papers were downsized, rationalised
or closed, Stuff alienated many of its core readers and dispensed with some of
its most capable and experienced staff, which I found hard to forgive.
But now we have the prospect of a fresh start, and I wish
Sinead and her 700 employees, many of whom I have worked with (indeed, still
do), nothing but the best. They now have a basis on which to plan for the
future. Few things would give me greater pleasure than to see a revival of a
vigorous and profitable New Zealand-owned print media.
One lesson to emerge from all this, as I’ve written before
(and as former New Zealand Herald
editor-in-chief Gavin Ellis emphasised in a recent blog post) is that we should
never again allow major media outlets to fall into the hands of foreign owners
with no real commitment to New Zealand and no emotional stake in our affairs. As both
an expression and a reflection of national identity, with a crucial role to
play in helping to shape and sustain an informed democracy, the New Zealand news
media are far too important to fall under the control of outsiders interested
in this country only as long as they can extract profits.
German-owned Bauer Media showed the depth of their
commitment when they callously and needlessly destroyed much of the value of
their long-established magazine titles by shutting them down without warning,
meaning that anyone who now buys them must try to rebuild them from scratch
rather than take them over as going concerns. At least Stuff’s former owners, Australia’s
Nine TV network, handed over a company still in working order.
Ironically, the one foreign media owner who did right by his
New Zealand interests – at least for the several decades that he controlled
Independent Newspapers Limited, which Sydney-based Fairfax acquired in 2003 – was the much-reviled
Rupert Murdoch. In hindsight, he looks positively benevolent.
Disclosure: I spent much
of my newspaper career with what was then INL, including more than two years as a not
terribly distinguished editor of The Dominion, one of the two Wellington papers
that merged in 2001 to become The Dominion Post. I continue to provide regular
columns to that paper and to other Stuff titles, although how long that will
continue – as with everything in an industry where the ground is constantly
shifting – remains to be seen.
6 comments:
Lets hope editorial policy changes as well.
Revert to beeing a NEWS paper, not an OPINION paper.
I look forward to them removing the ridiculous stance on climate change.
ie There is only one truth....and we will not brook any discent or criticism.
I too hope they can pull back from what they have become. There some shining examples of great reporting there, but they are now few and far between, lost in the mire of clickbait trivia and "what happened on Twitter" articles. Fingers crossed!
Hi Karl
Stuff has 700 staff! Who knew? I too which them well, as I wish every NZ business and entrepreneur well, but in a media market that is already crowded with those on the ideological left they will find it difficult to compete. There is a gap in the market for quality journalism if they wanted to occupy that space.
Anyway, I read an article today (below) on the state of journalism in the USA, the (dis)trust in the media, and the reason why Joe Rogan who has just signed a $100M podcast contract with Spotify could not be employed in any American newsroom. It is relevant to your previous post on the reasons why the public have lost faith in the media, but is equally applicable to Stuff's future:
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/dreher/big-journalism-embraces-propaganda-model-joe-rogan/
Well, as has been said before:-
Foreign ownership means that we do not own the business or the land or whatever has been allowed to be owned by foreigners. Once we sell our company or our land, it is no longer ours. It is no longer New Zealand's. We do not get it back.
Did this country not learn the lessons of history from the Maoris who sold their land cheaply to foreigners over a hundred years ago, and are still struggling to get it back?
Stuff is not welcome in our home. A propaganda outlet and a disgrace to journalism.
What an exciting, exhilarating chance for Sinead Boucher. Is she perhaps a Rupert Murdoch in waiting. I most certainly do not claim to know anything at all about the running of a news agency - but it seems to me that it must shake itself loose from the dependency on advertising which is so expensive when printed. Won't the most likely future lie with digital newspapers? The cumbersome, expensive printed papers of old have had it - we nostalgic oldies notwithstanding.
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