Thursday, July 07, 2016

Given all that's going on (including the post-Brexit Blues), do media execs really have control over their companies' success?

It might seem impertinent, but at a time when media companies are battered by powerful external forces – changes in consumer behaviour, competition, technologies, legislation and even post-Brexit economic blues – it’s perhaps not unreasonable to ask: Can media executives really do anything to ensure their firms succeed?

In search of an answer, my research partner Dr Coral Millburn-Curtis, who teaches quantitative analysis to doctoral students at the University of Oxford, and I ploughed through data collected over five years of a study I launched in collaboration with the World Association of Newspapers back in 2009 in the wake of the global economic meltdown.

We combined, cleaned and combed through nearly 1,500 responses and 500,000 data points from the 20-question survey completed by news media executives in senior, editorial, commercial and technology roles across national and regional operations in 59 countries.

The answer, we learned, is: Yes!

In fact there are several statistically significant differences between the priorities of executives at firms that report substantial profits (up 20% +) and the priorities of those at companies with significant losses (down 20%+).

One of those, you might not be too surprised to hear, was their attitudes towards technology.  Up to 2014, companies that prioritised investment in old technologies (e.g., printing technology and pre-press technology) were almost twice as likely to have reported a significant drop (more than 20%) in revenue over the past year.

Get a copy of the last report by participating in the latest study.
Conversely, companies that prioritised investment in new technologies (e.g., paid-for digital content, mobile, tablet and ipad technologies) were more than one and half times more likely to report significant increases (more than 20%) in revenue over the previous year.

But that is changing. By 2015, however, this trend was no longer statistically significant. That suggests that even if investment in technology remains important, it may no longer differentiates winners from losers.

So, this year’s study is going to be crucial to see  the roles that technologies - and other factors such as strategy, talent and organisational culture - play in corporate success.

If you’re a senior decision-maker at a news media organisation and would like to know more about what we find, you can get a free copy of the report summary (and an invitation to a WAN-IFRA webinar) by taking up WAN-IFRA CEO Vincent Peyrègne's  recent invitation to participate in the study which is now open HERE.

Besides English, the survey is also available in Chinese, French, Italian, German, Persian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. To thank you for participating, we’re  happy to send you the 2015 report summary too. Xièxiè. Meci. Grazie. Danke. Mamnoom. Obrigado. Spasibo. Gracias.

This post is republished from LinkedIn.