November 14, 2024

Joseph Ripp Named New Head of Time Inc.

Mr. Ripp’s appointment comes at a challenging time for Time Inc., the nation’s largest magazine publisher with titles like Time, People, Sports Illustrated and InStyle. Confronting a slumping advertising market, Time Warner explored a plan earlier this year to combine most of its magazines with titles from the Meredith Corporation. When that deal fell through, Time Warner said in March it would separate its print publications into a new company, allowing its main business to focuson the more lucrative television and film assets.

Mr. Ripp worked at Time Warner for nearly 20 years, holding a variety of senior positions, before leaving in 2004 to pursue a career outside of the company. He comes to Time Inc. from OneSource Information Services, a digital marketing and information company, which he joined in 2012 when the investment company he worked for acquired it.

In a phone interview Monday, Mr. Ripp said that while he was chief executive at OneSource he had chosen to use cash flow to reinvest in new data sources and a new computer system. He said he planned to adopt that pattern of reinvestment with Time Inc., though not necessarily with print magazines.

“Their subscription unit generates a lot of cash,” he said of Time Inc. “In the past, they were restricted with how to use that, and cash flows flowed to Time Warner. Now we have opportunities to reinvest in making the Web better and the iPad app better and into different industries as well.”

The selection of a new chief executive for Time Inc. was seen as critical because the challenges facing the newly created publishing company were expected to be substantial. The magazine industry has been under intense financial pressure as advertisers have migrated to other media platforms.

Time Inc.’s first-quarter revenue this year dropped 5 percent, to $737 million, as circulation revenue fell 11 percent. In January the company laid off about 500 employees, or 6 percent of its global staff.

One big question surrounding the future of Time Inc. is how much debt it will have to assume when it separates into a new company. Mr. Ripp said he had talked to Time Warner’s chief executive, Jeffrey L. Bewkes, specifically about that issue and had received assurances it would not be too steep.

“Look, Time Warner has already had two successful spinoffs,” he said referring to Time Warner Cable and AOL.com, and he said that Mr. Bewkes was invested in having this separation be successful as well. “So I am not worried,” he said.

In tapping a longtime former executive to head Time Inc., Time Warner may be adding a needed element of stability to its leadership. An earlier head of the division, Jack Griffin, was forced out of the job after less than six months in early 2011. He was replaced after a nine-month search by Laura Lang, whose background was in digital advertising.

Time Inc.’s titles continued to struggle, however, and when Time Warner announced the publishing spinoff, Ms. Lang said she would be stepping down. Mr. Ripp will succeed her in September, the company said.

Another executive who was widely considered a leading candidate was Michael Klingensmith, chief executive of Star Tribune Media Company in Minneapolis. Summer Wilkie, a Time Warner spokeswoman, said the company would not comment about speculation on anyone else. “But we’re really happy with Joe, he was our top choice candidate,” she said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/23/business/media/joseph-ripp-named-new-head-of-time-inc.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: Time Warner in Talks to Spin Off Majority of Magazines

3:53 p.m. | Updated Time Warner is in early talks to shed much Time Inc., the country’s largest magazine publisher and the foundation on which the $49 billion media conglomerate was founded, according to people involved in the negotiations.

The company is currently in talks with the Meredith Corporation to put most of its magazines, including People, InStyle and Real Simple into a separate, publicly-traded company that would also include Meredith titles like Better Homes and Gardens and Ladies’ Home Journal.

The deal being discussed is one of several options Time Warner is exploring in order to reduce its troubled publishing unit, said these people who could not discuss private conversations publicly.

As part of the agreement, existing shareholders in Time Warner and Meredith would receive stakes in the new company, which would essentially amount to a women’s magazine company, led by People, the popular celebrity magazine and crown jewel of Time Inc.’s slate of 21 publications.

Time Warner would continue to control news-based magazines, Time, Fortune, Sports Illustrated and Money. Meredith did not express interest in including those titles and Time Warner believed those magazines can fit into its journalistic efforts at CNN and CNNMoney.com, said a person briefed on the discussions.

A Time Warner spokesman declined to comment. News of the talks was first reported by Fortune, a magazine owned by Time Inc.

The talks come weeks after Time Inc. announced it would lay off 6 percent of its global work force of more than 8,000 employees during an industrywide decline in subscription and advertising revenue. Overall revenue at Time Inc. has declined roughly 30 percent in the last five years.

Time Warner’s history is rooted in Time, the weekly news  magazine founded by Henry Luce in 1923 on which the giant media conglomerate got its start. But lately the publishing company’s sluggish performance has stood in sharp contrast to the strong performance at Time Warner’s cable channels like HBO, TBS and TNT.

In the last several years, the company has tried to trim some assets unrelated to the television and movie production business. That included shedding AOL, Time Warner Cable, the Warner Music Group and the Time Warner Book Group.

Jeffrey L. Bewkes, chief executive of Time Warner, has denied reports that he would sell Time Inc. He frequently talks about the division’s strongest brands essentially as cable television channels and has aggressively mandated that Time Inc. make its magazines available on digital devices.

“They’re printing pages right now, but they’re also on electronic screens with moving pictures,” Mr. Bewkes said in a previous interview. He added that “a cable channel like TNT or TBS” is “pretty much the same as what People or Time or InStyle should do.”

The company’s exploration of a deal that would allow it to keep male-oriented titles like Sports Illustrated, Time and Fortune would let it maintain its name and historical roots.

“Time’s name is on the door. I think Jeff feels it would be better to hang onto it and not sell it for what would be a low price,” said a person briefed on Mr. Bewkes’s thinking who could not discuss private conversations on the record.

Jack Griffin, a former chief executive at Meredith, served a brief and stormy reign as chief of Time Inc. before Laura Lang took over in January. Ms. Lang, previously the chief executive of the digital advertising company Digitas, stepped in at a tumultuous time after Mr. Griffin was forced out after less than six months on the job. She hired Bain Company, a consultancy based in Boston, to assess the business.

Many of  Time Inc.’s magazine titles have been struggling as more readers have been reading material online, and newsstand sales have dropped. Even titles like People, which long helped financially bolster Time Inc.’s less lucrative titles, has suffered. People’s newsstand sales declined 12.2 percent in the second half of 2012 compared to the year before, according to figures released last week by the Alliance for Audited Media. Its advertising pages dropped by 6 percent in 2012 compared to the year before, according to the Publishers Information Bureau.

Last month, Ms. Lang said she was cutting staff 6 percent, or about 480 people. Magazines like Time and People asked employees to take buyouts and said they would lay people off if they did not meet those numbers. Wednesday is the last day for employees to raise their hands for buyouts.

On a conference call with analysts last week, John K. Martin, chief financial and administration officer at Time Warner, said that “very challenging industry conditions weighed” on the company’s results.

The talks come as News Corporation prepares to sever its publishing assets, including newspapers like The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post, from its more lucrative entertainment division, which includes the cable channels FX and Fox News. The separation is expected to be complete this summer.

Christine Haughney and David Carr contributed reporting.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/time-warner-in-talks-to-sell-off-majority-of-magazines/?partner=rss&emc=rss