Ross Levinsohn is used to tough jobs. He tried to salvage a business
out of social media site Myspace, and managed Yahoo during a tumultuous
period when the Internet company was reeling from a management scandal
and struggling to find its way.
But this week, the 54-year-old digital media executive took on what
could be his most difficult assignment yet: figuring out how to generate
more revenue from the journalism produced by the 135-year-old Los
Angeles Times at a time when the news industry is grappling with
sweeping shifts in consumer behavior and a proliferation of online
outlets.
“How do we bring that [journalism] to the world in a more aggressive
and speedy manner?” Levinsohn said of his mission in an interview after
he was named The Times’ publisher and chief executive Monday. “That
doesn’t happen by accident. You really have to roll up your sleeves and
have a strategy and the right people.”
The contours of that strategy, Levinsohn said, entail beefing up the
news organization’s politics, entertainment, culture, sports and
investigative reporting to capitalize on The Times’ talent pool and
brand. His bosses at Chicago-based parent company Tronc have tasked him
with making The Times more of a global player, particularly in Asia and
Latin America. He also vowed to provide more resources to a newspaper
that, like many of its peers, has sustained years of budget cuts.
Tronc executives say the L.A. Times is the jewel in the company’s crown and reviving it is of critical importance.
“What we need right now is someone with global vision and the ability
to execute on that,” Tronc Chief Executive Justin C. Dearborn said. “We
need to start growing the business. That will start first in digital.”
Tronc shares rose 5% Tuesday, closing at $14.09. That's still down
from October 2016, when Gannett takeover talks drove the stock price
above $17 a share.
Analysts said that Levinsohn faces daunting challenges gripping the
news industry. He’s also taking over The Times after management turmoil
and more than a decade of ownership changes and a revolving door at the
publisher’s office. Levinsohn is the 17th publisher of The Times, and
the eighth since 2000.
He plunged into his new job Tuesday, appearing on business network
CNBC to make the case that The Times and Tronc have been undervalued by
investors and advertisers. He had lunch with senior editors to meet his
new team and learn more about projects underway.
“Ross is a good guy. He’s smart and he’s been doing digital media for
a long time,” said Larry Kramer, former publisher of Times rival USA
Today. “The only hole in his resume is that he doesn’t have newspaper
experience — but the future of the organization is digital. It’s still
the content that makes the L.A. Times the L.A. Times.”
Newspaper advertising revenue peaked in 2006 with an estimated $49.3
billion spent in the U.S., according to the Pew Research Center. Last
year, the industry registered $18.3 billion in ad sales. Increasingly,
consumers are reading the headlines and articles on their mobile phones.
And while the New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal
have made gains in converting online readers into paying subscribers,
the L.A. Times has lagged.
“When this new ownership group [Tronc] took over, they made a lot of
noise about how they were going to transform the way that content would
be delivered — but we haven’t seen that materialize,” said longtime
publishing analyst Douglas M. Arthur of Huber Research Partners. “And on
the digital advertising side, it has gotten worse.”
Online ad revenue, on which Tronc and other media companies have
pinned their hopes, hasn't increased at Tronc since the second quarter
of 2016. Online ad revenue in the second quarter fell to $47.5 million,
down nearly 9% from the same period a year earlier, according to Tronc
earnings reports.
Online subscriptions across Tronc have grown, but not as much as at
other companies. The number of online-only subscribers stood at 220,000
in the second quarter — about half of them from the Los Angeles Times —
up nearly 90% from a year earlier.
The results prompted Tronc to shake up management Monday, dismissing
three corporate executives as well as the publisher-editor of the Los
Angeles Times, Davan Maharaj, and three other top Times editors.
Tronc business executives acknowledge they have made missteps trying
to balance the amount of advertising on the company’s online sites.
Internet behemoth Google this summer warned the L.A. Times that it was
violating the Better Ads Standards by having too much advertising
clutter on its digital sites.
“In the end, even advertisers will rebel against all the ad clutter,”
Kramer said. “Advertisers don’t want to be in a page with seven other
advertisers.”
Levinsohn acknowledged the problem, saying, “we have to make our consumer experience better.”
Though he has no prior experience working in newspapers, Levinsohn
has expressed a deep reverence for the medium and the mission of
journalists even as they struggle with digital disruption.
"In my adult lifetime, there has never been a more important time for
journalism, for facts, for reporting,” he said. "It used to be the
power of the pen, but now it is the power of the platform. I’m going to
support you and get you more resources.”
Levinsohn negotiated a three-year employment agreement with Tronc
that runs through Aug. 20, 2020, according to a copy of the contract
filed Wednesday with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. He
will be paid about $1 million a year.]
He also will be eligible for incentive bonuses. He’s eligible to
receive up to 10% of the gross dollars that Tronc receives for
syndication of the company’s content outside the U.S. and for the
licensing and distribution of Times content — giving him an incentive to
deliver on the company’s global ambition.
He grew up in New Jersey and was big into sports. He played high school baseball (pitcher and shortstop), soccer and football.
After graduating from American University in Washington, D.C., he
worked at an advertising agency, a marketing firm and later HBO. By the
mid-1990s he was working in digital media, eventually with search engine
Alta Vista and the online site CBS Sportsline.
His big break came when he was at Fox, where he impressed media mogul
Rupert Murdoch. After Murdoch spent $580 million to buy Myspace in
2005, he tapped Levinsohn to manage the young team that built the music
and social networking site.
But Facebook eclipsed Myspace, which Fox sold for $35 million in
2011. Two executives who worked with Levinsohn at Fox said that
Levinsohn does not deserve blame for Myspace’s collapse. Fox bought the
site after its U.S. traffic had already peaked and then wasted millions
of dollars trying to expand the service overseas.
“I learned a lot about what not to do,” Levinsohn said of his experiences at Myspace.
He also got a valuable education from his nearly two years at Yahoo.
Levinsohn, who joined Yahoo in 2010, served as interim CEO for about
three months in 2012 after the previous CEO, Scott Thompson, was ousted
over allegations of resume padding. Levinsohn was a leading contender to
become the permanent CEO, but lost the job to Marissa Mayer, whose
hiring was considered a coup for Yahoo at that time.
More recently, Levinsohn co-founded a boutique advisory firm. He has
served on several boards and invested in media, advertising and tech
start-ups. Levinsohn is an investor in virtual-reality content producer
Wevr and video news producer Attn. (Levinsohn’s contract requires him
to work exclusively for Tronc.)
Such interests could suggest that he'll try to push The Times to
become more video-focused, though Gabe Kahn, a professor at the USC
Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, said that's been a
goal for years.
"The Times has tried to make a stab at video, but it hasn't gained
any traction," Kahn said. "A lot of these companies have been involved
in creating new digital products for consumers, and that development
process and to-market process is important."
The Times’ future comes down to picking its shots and the quality of its journalism, analysts said.
“I don’t think it is too late,” Levinsohn said. “We should benefit
from doing great work by distributing it to people whereever they are.”
Kramer, the former USA Today publisher, said Levinsohn should be up for the task.
“If you can manage the transition to digital, at the end there is a
pot of gold,” Kramer said. “The biggest decisions that he is going to
face are figuring out the priorities. How do you make money at the old
game, while learning how to spend money in the new.”
Staff writer James Rufus Koren contributed to this report.
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