Perhaps zero is the loneliest number.
That’s the number The New York Times Co. — the United States’ second largest newspaper company — ended up with 2012, as it reported revenues last week. The most accurate number, when the year’s anomalous 53rd accounting week is taken out, is 0.3 percent up. Still, that’s a variety of zero, especially when we look at NYT Co.’ last quarter, where it ended down 0.7 percent.
Zero would seem to indicate not much happening here. Zero is an unsexy digit for corporate revenues — flat, as in pancake. It’s not growth, and it’s not death-spiral decline — both phenomena much easier to describe. So zero is causing lots of problems for those — financial analysts, investors, and media beat reporters — trying to describe the state of legacy print media today. But, in fact, the Times’ zero is noteworthy, and tells us much about the strategies — and straits — of our publishing times.
The New York Times Co.’s zero, in fact, is actually a milestone number. It’s the first increase, however meager, in overall revenues since 2006, when it managed a 1.8 percent increase in revenues.
Check out the chart below and you can see, year by year, the sharp decline in NYT Co. revenues. Back in 2007, advertising and circulation revenues totalled almost $3 billion. The decline since then has happened almost entirely in advertising.
If you take out the $276 million earned in 2007 by the company’s Regional Newspaper Group (sold off in 2012), the Times’ remaining flagship and New England properties would have produced about $1.7 billion in advertising back then. That means ad revenues are 52 percent of what they were seven years ago — a number highly consistent with overall newspaper ad loss in the U.S. Since hitting a top of almost $50 billion in ad revenues in 2005, industry ad revenues (print and digital) will come in around $22B for 2012. Yes, that’s a $28 billion difference.
Circulation revenues, on the other hand, have been comparatively steady. While the number of copies sold has declined, increased pricing has kept that revenue relatively consistent. In fact, with its just released 2012 report, the company’s circulation revenue is at all-time high, considering that the 2009 number included those regional dailies. It’s not hard to imagine it topping the $1 billion mark. In fact, if the Times can repeat its 2012 growth rate in 2013, it will reach that pinnacle for the first time.
Zero isn’t boring: It took the Times a hell of a lot of work to get to zero. All that activity is a reflection of the worldwide newspaper model in transformation. It’s a struggle the Times shares with many other newspaper companies: Zero turns out to be an important number, a plateau on a long, downward journey, a stopping point on a mad path to finding growth somehow, somewhere.
Most others aren’t there yet; they still aspire to zero. McClatchy just reported its revenues were down 4.9 percent for 2012; A.H. Belo was down 5 percent. Gannett, the largest U.S. newspaper company and second largest globally, was down more than 2 percent for the year. Of the public companies, News Corp.’s publishing activities shared a flattish resemblance to the Times, though the imprecision of its reporting provides only hazy confidence in that number. Only a few companies report, privately, that their circulation revenue gains are now exceeding advertising losses. Significantly, all of them have put good metered paywalls up and have adopted best practices to maximize reader revenue.
It’s important to differentiate between a revenue percentage and a profit percentage. As revenues of these companies have declined, they’ve kept cutting expenses. Consequently, either their meager profits haven’t dropped, or their small annual losses haven’t worsened. Cutting is a only short-term way to stay to get or stay in the black; top-line revenue growth is essential if newspaper-based companies are to re-find their mojo.
NYT Co.’s zero is driven by its two-year-old digital circulation strategy, which has allowed a nice plus sign for circulation to balance a corresponding minus for advertising. For 2012, Times Co. circulation revenue was up 8.5 percent. Advertising revenue was down 7.5 percent. The company’s major focus on all-access and digital circulation is behind that 8.5 percent number.
Figure that the increase — in dollars, $73 million — is driven by two big plays. First, the Times’ increased pricing on its seven-day and Sunday print/digital products — now more than $800 at full price outside New York City. Second, 640,000 digital-only customers at the Times and 28,000 at the Globe.
On the ad side, the company has had to work very hard to bring in 92.5 percent of the ad revenues it brought in in 2011. On its year-end call for analysts, “headwinds” were the favorite metaphor for the ad decline. CEO Mark Thompson, in his debut performance as the Times’ emcee, correctly named such “structural” headwinds as programmatic buying, ad exchanges, overall downward pricing pressure, and the faster movement of national advertising — about 75 percent of the Times’ business — to lower-cost digital from higher-priced print.
He also cited “cyclical” headwinds, which usually means the damage that down economies have on ad spending. The latter is no longer true, as the U.S.’ mildly up economy is helping generate an overall ad spending increase in the neighborhood of 3 percent. In its intense fight to hold on to as much of that lucrative print advertising and to forge forward as a premium buy in digital, it managed to lose only 7.5 percent.
Overall, the zero plateau provides at least the illusion of a resting point. A point from which to figure out how to find growth, or at least how not to go negative again. That’s the company Mark Thompson has inherited; his job: find life above zero.
So let’s drive forward three years, keeping in mind the Times’ current revenue split, and see where the Times is likely to be. Those splits: 48 percent circulation, 45 percent advertising, 7 percent other.
Circulation, better now called reader revenue, is the star. The Times itself (subtracting the Globe’s 28,000) grew its overall number of digital-only subs to 640,000, a 57 percent increase over its end-of-2011 total of 406,000. That’s a torrid pace. It’s also a pace it will find difficult to keep up. Already, the Times is at about two percentage of its domestic unique visitors, a number that includes lots of duplication given multiple digital devices per person. Early on, I’ve pegged its natural core, pay-one-monthly price for the Times at about 3% of those uniques. I think the Times could climb to somewhere around 900,000 to 1 million digital-only subs. That would be a huge number and another milestone, a number that would significantly exceed its paid print circulation.
But even with its industry-leading success (in a league only with The Wall Street Journal and Financial Times), the law of big numbers makes the next few years tougher. That’s why we see the closing of purposely-left-open leaks in the paywall and an expanded, better promoted corporate digital circulation program. That’s why “global” is often the first or second word (alongside “video”) coming out of Mark Thompson’s mouth. About 10 percent of the Times’ digital subs come from outside the United States. With 95 percent of the potential market outside our borders, global digital circulation is a priority — but one likely to grow at an agonizingly slow pace, despite the Times’ moves (“The newsonomics of the Times’ global digital strategy”) into China and Brazil.
In last week’s analyst call, Denise Warren, who heads both advertising and the digital business, talked about premium digital products and dropped hints about a coming Times product aimed at youth.
My sense is that the next big digital frontier is, indeed, new products. A one-size-fits-all newspaper (whether print or digital) is Phase 1. Phase 2 means a set of digital products limited only by the imagination (“The newsonomics of 100 products a year”). These are topically, generationally, and geographically appropriate products. Politico, with its Pro line (“Politico Pro, one year in”), is one model. Considering the Times’ resources, imagine what it could do with Pro-type products. Paywalls, backed by the Times’ own technologies or offerings from the likes of Press+, TinyPass, Piano Media, and Cleeng, enable all sorts of one-time buying and sampling. In this game, a handful of the big magazine publishers are ahead in testing, and selling, one-off products.
Without these kinds of new revenue products, expect circulation revenue growth to slow, perhaps dramatically. One reason is the legacy side of the business. While the Times has impressively priced up print subs, it’s losing about 6 percent of subscribers a year. In the short term, the money is good enough to make those economics work. Over a three-year period, it’s trouble. A potential loss of another 20 percent of print subscribers would result in both reduced high-dollar subscription revenue and a markedly reduced rate base for print advertising. Over time, it will get harder and harder to make up lost revenue by charging a smaller and smaller set of print subscribers more money.
Perhaps, the Times can charge its digital-only subscribers lots more. Its top price for digital access (web plus smartphone plus tablet) is $455 a year. That’s about 57 percent of its top print price, and of course smartphone-only or tablet-only users pay less. If you want complete digital access from The Wall Street Journal, at full rate, you’ll be paying about 83 percent of the Journal’s six-day print price. Will that gap close? It’s an open question how much digital subscribers to the 2016 New York Times will be asked to pay.
Given most of these trends, we can figure that the Times’ circulation revenue might be 15-18 percent higher than what it is today then — but it will require significant further innovation in new products to reach that number.
Now let’s take circulation’s evil twin: advertising. Take out 2012’s 53rd week, and the fourth quarter was down 10.2 percent in print. More troubling: Digital ad revenue was down 1.7 percent for the quarter. The Times has said it expects the first quarter, which we are midway through, to be similar to the last one.
If ad revenues were down 7.5 percent in 2012, recent history suggests a similar decline this year. While it’s possible the slope could moderate as the base dwindles, there is no end in sight for print ad loss. The issue for the Times is that national ad revenue is moving more rapidly digital than local, and it’s getting a smaller and smaller share of fast-growing digital ad spending.
Put it together, and we can expect ad revenues to be down about 25 to 28 percent from current levels in three years.
Put ad and circulation revenue together, and it looks like a widening gap in the wrong direction — the loss in ad revenue is 10 points larger than the gain in circ revenue. There’s the core of the core problem. Zero, in that scenario, would be a high point. That’s the world Mark Thompson faces.
In a world of declining revenues, cost-cutting remains one important option. While the Times newsroom has been protected far more than its metro newspaper peers, the Times has been cutting costs for half a decade, including its recent elimination of 30 more editorial positions. The Times plans low single-digit expense cuts again in 2013, but that pace won’t be enough to maintain a small profit by 2016, if ad and circ forecasts are right. In fact, the Times would need to transform its cost basis through heavy use of technology or risk deep cutting into its world-class core asset — its 1,000-person-plus newsroom — to keep itself in the black.
The most hopeful projection would be that the Times finds new substantial sources of revenue. Maybe it re-cracks the code and finds significant new digital ad money. A set of new digital products — some reader-paid, maybe some sponsored — is one possibility. Its events business — currently growing, but not big enough to be a game-changer — is another. The Times is not making a major move into marketing services, as many regional newspaper companies are, so that promising revenue stream won’t help the company. It’s not planning much in the way of acquisitions, says Thompson, even as its cash position outdistances its debt for the first time in a long time. We’ll have to see what the new CEO has up his London-starched sleeve.
This zero isn’t an alternative product, like Coke Zero. It’s a core number in the rebuilding of publishing businesses. The Times and its move — up or down — from zero will be much watched by news publishers worldwide.
Collage made up of photos of zeros by chrisinplymouth, used under a Creative Commons license.