From the category archives:

news

Yesterday we announced that our company,  Network Communications, Inc. , had opened conversations with its creditors in order to restructure its balance sheet.  The  development was reported in Business Week and has appeared in numerous news outlets across the web.

The Business Week reporter did a balanced job in describing the situation.  I think one quote sums it up pretty well.

“It’s not a company with a fundamentally broken business model,” McCarthy said. “It’s a company that’s gone through a radical adjustment in size.”

I’m not going to comment on the restructuring process.  A lot of media companies, such as  Reader’s Digest and Freedom Communications,  have gone through restructurings the last two years, emerging successfully as viable businesses with manageable capital structures.

Right now we’re focusing on communicating clearly with our core constituents about what the announcement means for our business.  The short answer is, It’s business as usual.    NCI is in the enviable position of generating more than enough cash to fund its day-to-day operations.

To help spread that message, we sent out copies of our press release and a detailed Q&A to our employees and business partners.  I’ve held a series of webinars to review the materials and address any specific questions.  We’re also reaching out to our key vendors and customers.

I’ve also focused on another message:  Our future is what we make of it.

The difficult market conditions of the past two years have driven us to be more disciplined, more resourceful and more innovative.  This approach has borne tangible business results:  We have expanded our customer relationships, we have built new products, we have strengthened existing products and we have managed in such a way that we’ve been able to sustain our business model.  We’ve been able to do this because of the remarkable focus and commitment of the people who make a difference every day:  The employees and independent distributors associated with the company.

Right now we are facing two basic facts.  Unquestionably, an economic recovery is underway.  Unquestionably, our customers have been shocked by the changes in their business and are reluctant to increase their marketing spend.

To rebuild our business, we need to help resolve the contradiction between those two facts.  We can do this three ways:

  • We have to be in front of our customers and help them see that market has improved enough for them to feel confident that they will get a return on increasing their marketing spend;
  • We have to be fluent in explaining why our traditional businesses continue to provide value to our customers, in terms of visibility, leads and business results.
  • And we have to be energized in showing our customers how our innovative new services, particularly in Internet and social media marketing, can give them powerful ways to expand their brand footprint and build their business.

Executing on these three activities is the most important thing that we can do right now.  That is how we will make our future.

A note:  I have closed comments on this post because of the sensitive nature of this dialog.  If you have any questions you can e-mail me at dmccarthy@nci.com.
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Good reads for Feb. 8, 2010

by drm on February 8, 2010

Welcome to the new week.

First, a handful of posts that look at the employment numbers from last week. Then a couple of interesting media focused reads. And finally, The Super Bowl ads, because you’ve got to be current and up to date.

The Big Picture turns to pictures to put some perspective on the employment numbers: A collection of 10 charts that show show bad the job situation has been, how it has leveled off and where some of the bright spots are.

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If we need credit to ease up to help drive new job creation, then we’ll need banks to start behaving differently. Business Insider shows, in 13 slides, how the bank market is consolidating, reducing lending to businesses and consumers and increasing purchase of government securities.

One of the interesting wrinkles in the overall employment picture is how resilient the market for college-educated workers has been. Americans with a BA or higher have just a 4% unemployment rate. (via BusinessInsider)

Jeff Jarivs has spent time with a lot of local media people over the past couple of weeks and published an important post that synthesizes a lot of what he’s been hearing and puts it in the context of the deep experience he has with Internet media. The conclusion: Don’t sell scarcity, sell service and results. The thinking is very compelling and important to read.

In the context of Jarvis’ comments, Barry Ritholtz’s dissection of the economics of his recently published, well-reviewed book is very instructive. The book doesn’t make you money; the footprint that the book gives you can create the overall value of your personal brand. But you’d better have a strategy for making money off that personal brand.

If you don’t have that kind of strategy and you write, you’ll find yourself in the position of working for virtually nothing, as Tony Silber of Folio: strongly observes.

The last little media tidbit: Josh Bernoff writes about Forrester’s recent decision to require its analysts to blog on Forrester’s platform and not build a personal digital footprint that competes with the corporate brand. It’s an interesting problem. If the economic value of content is diminishing because of the Internet dynamics, and people who have skill at writing need to be more distributed in how they earn a living, then can media enterprises — even high value enterprises like Forrester — reasonably demand exclusivity in terms of digital footprint?

And, finally, here are all the Super Bowl ads.

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Good reads for Feb. 5 2010

February 5, 2010

Sorry for the two-day absence on the Good Reads. (I just know there are a handful of you who look forward to these short summaries to fill out your day!) I’ve been traveling and working on preparing materials for our quarterly Board meeting next week, so haven’t been filtering things the way I [...]

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6 Good reads for Feb 2, 2010

February 2, 2010

The new meme? Cheer up. Mark Morford cajoles us at SFGate.com to lighten up and stop being so negative.
No lightening up for Paul Krugman, though. He’s been sharing blog posts at NYTimes.com about Obama’s budget submission. In this post, he wonders how freezing “that little wedge off to the left” is [...]

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Good reads for Feb 1, 2010

February 1, 2010

So, you ask yourself, is the entire world of social networking focused in Facebook. No, it isn’t. Here’s a good essay from the CEO of myYearbook that lays out a way to think about building a private social network in a Facebook-dominated world. (via PaidContent)
David Carr of The New York Times suggests [...]

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Good reads, Jan 29, 2010

January 29, 2010

Hope everyone is having a great Friday. The focus of the good reads today? GDP, the iPad, why consumers are forcing the integration of marketing programs, and a pointer about getting your own personal web cred in order.
The Q4 GDP report is out. I’ll be posting on a couple of trends in [...]

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Good reads for Jan. 28, 2010

January 28, 2010

Rupert Murdoch’s daughter says “Social networks are a tool with which we can tell our stories.” (Via LATimes)
An argument that says Facebook has developed so much scale as a social operating system, it’s created switching costs for users that are the equivalent of a barrier to entry. (via Reuters)
“The print reader of The New [...]

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