International: The Spy who loves brandsIt's a new, darker James Bond, but the franchise stays true to product placement
Marketers such as the Ford Motor Co., Omega, Heineken, Smirnoff and Sony Ericsson, which have long backed the Bond franchise over its 44-year run, will return as promotional partners and spend an estimated $100 million worldwide around the 21st installment of the series.

The producers behind "Casino Royale" are trying to revamp the long-running James Bond franchise with a new actor playing a grittier character in a darker plot. But that won't mean the secret agent's favorite brands won't be back.
Marketers such as the Ford Motor Co., Omega, Heineken, Smirnoff and Sony Ericsson, which have long backed the Bond franchise over its 44-year run, will return as promotional partners and spend an estimated $100 million worldwide around the 21st installment of the series, set to hit theaters Nov. 17.
Other marketers, such as Virgin Atlantic Airways, will tie-in with the 007 character for the first time.
Brand-friendly since 1963
Over the years, the Bond franchise has become one of those rare properties in which everything the character wears, eats, drinks or drives is branded and has been since he first appeared onscreen in "Dr. No." in 1963.
"Casino Royale" is no different. In the new film:
> Bond will once again be behind the wheel of an Aston Martin, a Ford-owned brand. Not only will he drive the company's new DBS sports car, but the company's classic DB5, seen in "Goldfinger" and "Thunderball," will also make an appearance. The villain Le Chiffre drives a Ranger Rover Sport. Additionally, Ford's Mondeo sedan, Explorer SUV and F150 trucks, as well as Jaguar XJ sedans, appear in the film. Overall, Ford supplied the production with 125 vehicles, sending cars to the Bahamas, the Czech Republic, Italy and England.
> On the beverage front, Heineken is back as the franchise's official beer partner, Bollinger is still the favored champagne and Smirnoff returns as Bond's vodka of choice, replacing Finlandia, which made an appearance in the last installment, "Die Another Day."
> Omega's Seamaster watch is back on Bond's wrist.
> Virgin Atlantic has replaced British Airways as the franchise's official airline. Virgin Chairman Richard Branson will make a cameo in the film. The carrier and its crew members also play a prominent role in scenes set at Miami International Airport.
> Sony outfitted "Casino Royale's" sets with a number of the company's electronics and computer products. Sony Ericsson will use the film to promote its M600 smart phone. In fact, Sony plans to use the film to show off so many of its products that Sony Chairman-CEO Howard Stringer joked in a Fortune interview that James Bond "will carry so many Sony products that he won't be able to stand up."
Sony Pictures Entertainment, which will distribute the film, and Eon Productions, the producers of the franchise, have a lot riding on "Casino Royale."
Most successful film franchise in history
The previous 20 films have earned more than $1.3 billion in North America alone, according to Box Office Mojo, making it the most successful film franchise in history.
However, while the last outing, "Die Another Day," starring Pierce Brosnan, was the franchise's biggest earner, critics and audiences complained that the series was relying too much on expensive computer-generated effects and unbelievable gadgets such as invisible cars. At the same time, new films such as Universal Pictures' Jason Bourne franchise were introducing spy characters who were considered cooler by younger moviegoers.
Producers took note. James Bond needed an extreme makeover.
Just as "Batman Begins" rebooted Warner Bros.' Caped Crusader franchise last summer, so, too, will "Casino Royale" for James Bond this fall, opening the doors for many more sequels (Bond 22 has already been announced for May 2008).
Mr. Bond is now an edgier character played by Daniel Craig ("Layer Cake" and "Munich"). He replaces Mr. Brosnan, who played the role in four films. The plot reveals just how Bond received his 007 stripes, and sends him on his first mission. Gadget guru R is out. So is Miss Moneypenny.
Martin Campbell, who introduced Mr. Brosnan as Bond in "GoldenEye" in 1995, is in the director's chair once again to present Mr. Craig to audiences in the role.
Marketers take notice of changes
The changes didn't scare away marketers. In fact, it actually helped bring them onboard.
"I looked at it as an opportunity, not as a question," said Myles Romero, Ford's global brand entertainment manager. "I'm very familiar with Daniel Craig. He's a fine actor, but he's controversial. From a movie and entertainment perspective, that brings a lot of buzz. The more interest there is around it, it's exciting. People will end up going to see it."
Mr. Romero said it's the character, not necessarily the actor who plays him, that's the main attraction. "The franchise is extremely important to Ford," he said. "It's got fantastic brand equity. Everybody knows Bond. Males want to be Bond; they want to be with the Bond girls."
Ford's relationship with the films goes back more than 40 years. A Ford Mustang first appeared in "Goldfinger" in 1964. That's the first film in which Bond also drove an Aston Martin.
"When we purchased Aston Martin, the franchise became even more relevant for us," Mr. Romero said.
That became evident in 2002, when Ford spent a reported $35 million to replace BMW, whose vehicles had appeared in three films beginning with "GoldenEye" in 1995. In 2002, "Die Another Day" prominently featured the company's Aston Martin Vanquish V12, Ford Thunderbird and Jaguar XKR.
Smirnoff -- shaken, not stirred
As for the other marketers, Heineken first tied in with the franchise in 1997, with "Tomorrow Never Dies," and has stayed on as a partner since. Omega's watches have been worn by Bond since 1995. Bollinger has been the official champagne partner since 1979's "Moonraker." But Smirnoff's relationship with Bond goes back much further, starting with "Dr. No," when the spy was handed a martini, "shaken not stirred."
"Today, Bond is as much a part of Smirnoff's history as Smirnoff is of Bond's, and we're delighted to be part of this latest chapter," said James Thompson, president, Smirnoff Global Marketing.
Deals around the Bond franchise are brokered individually around each film. Multi-picture deals aren't signed because producers never know for sure when the next installment will be released. Or in Eon's case, which studio will end up distributing it.
"From a promotional standpoint, our partners are longtime business partners," said Keith Snelgrove, senior VP of Bond Marketing, the licensing arm of Eon Productions. "We're a family-run business and we treat our partners the same way. Because the Bond brand has been going for 40-plus years, we know they'll be here. They keep coming back."
Sony and Eon are only happy to have the marketers onboard as they prepare to launch their new Bond.
Web is key part of global promotion
Beginning in early October and running through December, promotional partners will launch global campaigns that include TV spots, in-store promotions, sweepstakes, PR efforts and websites. This time around, the web will play a more significant role to promote Bond, executives at Sony said.
Ford will focus its marketing efforts on Europe with a general-awareness campaign dubbed "Feel the Difference" that ties the automaker's blue oval moniker with the new Bond. The campaign will span 21 countries in the region mainly because of the placement of the Mondeo sedan in the film; the redesigned vehicle hits the territory after the movie bows.
In the U.S., Ford will sponsor events and launch a PR campaign to promote the history of Ford's appearances in the Bond films. Ford's campaign for "Die Another Day" was more U.S.-based, because of the appearance of the Thunderbird in the film.
Meanwhile, Heineken plans to launch a series of 30- and 45-second TV and in-theater ads featuring Eva Green, who plays Bond girl Vesper Lynd. Radio and web efforts are also planned as part of the effort that will cover more than 40 countries. Heineken had previously used Bond's go-to gadget guys Desmond Llewelyn, who played Q, and John Cleese, who played R, but "Casino Royale" doesn't feature either of the characters.
The other partners will launch similar campaigns, with Omega also set to use Mr. Craig in its ads, for example. While each effort will be different, and feature different elements from "Casino Royale," they will still tie-in with the film's new look for Bond.
Campaigns to match edgier tone
"Each one of these partners will have their own unique approach to Bond, but there will be some cohesiveness," Mr. Snelgrove said. "This is an edgier, grittier Bond. We want to make sure that our partner campaigns fit in with that strategy."
The partner campaigns will be in addition to the $30 million to $50 million that Sony is planning to spend to promote the film itself. "Casino Royale" becomes the first Bond film that Sony has ever distributed, after buying a major stake in MGM.
Neither Sony nor Eon would disclose just how much the partners are spending to promote the film, but "it's an appropriate number for the campaign," said George Leon, exec VP-worldwide consumer marketing at Sony Pictures Entertainment. "There will be big numbers as there always are. It will help us hit hard-to-reach areas."
Source: Adage
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Uber appoints Lucinda Barlow as Senior Director of Marketing for Asia-Pacific
Prior to this, Barlow was Global Marketing Director at YouTube
Uber has appointed Lucinda Barlow as Senior Director of Marketing for Asia-Pacific. Barlow will be based in Australia and will be responsible for the marketing of Uber products and businesses other than food delivery service Eats.
Prior to this, she was Global Marketing Director, YouTube. She worked for Google as head of corporate communications and public affairs and later as marketing director for Australia and New Zealand. She has also worked for Symbian, the company that created the operating system for Nokia’s range of smartphones.
‘Uber has had an extraordinary impact on the lives and livelihood of millions of people. I’m thrilled to join the Asia-Pacific team to help bring further mobility, freedom and opportunity in this exciting region,’ Barlow was quoted as saying.
‘She (Barlow) is uniquely positioned to lead Uber’s Asia Pacific brand, product marketing and reputation efforts, and support the continued growth of a stellar regional team,’ a press note from Uber said.
‘Lucinda brings over 20 years experience in internet, technology and mobile business across Asia, the United States and UK. From a former mission critical systems engineer at BHP, to leading YouTube marketing globally, to launching Symbian’s first office in China, to building marketing functions at two internet start-ups, Lucinda is an agile leader with an industry acclaimed track record of delivering impact at a staggering scale.’
Barlow wrote on twitter:
Incredibly excited for my next chapter. I'm joining Uber to lead marketing in APAC. This is a company and region I'm passionate about. https://t.co/IQB5cjfECq
— Lucinda Barlow (@lucindabarlow) October 9, 2019
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WPP AUNZ's Switched On to join AKQA, Australia
The joint entity’s emphasis will be on rich, innovative brand storytelling throughout the entire customer journey
WPP AUNZ has announced its Sydney-based digital marketing and media consultancy, Switched On, will join the Australian arm of global innovation and experience design agency AKQA.
This union is in direct response to client interest and demand for comprehensive digital solutions that help define, find, connect and inspire customers across all brand interactions, from acquisition through to retention. The joint entity’s emphasis will be on rich, innovative brand storytelling throughout the entire customer journey, bringing clients’ long-term brand purpose to life whilst maintaining a laser focus on short term performance.
John Steedman, interim CEO WPP AUNZ said: “This is two teams with momentum becoming one, and a bold move by them both. It’s driven by a burning desire to provide pioneering solutions from two highly experienced senior local teams.
“Joining Switched On and AKQA formalises the close working relationship both agencies already have. The partnership uniquely combines media, tech, data and design literally under one roof. The result is a stronger client offering and WPP AUNZ is proud to support them,” Steedman concluded.
By fusing their respective MarTech and AdTech capabilities, the driving principle will be to deliver on the unfulfilled promise of large technology platforms and connected transparent media investments.
“This initiative is a terrific example of our team’s growth mindset and a shared vision of the future. Both agencies are at the top of their game. It’s a powerful combination that offers a modern, post-broadcast perspective to the interface of customer and brand,” said Brian Vella, AKQA Managing Partner.
The new offering builds on the success of AKQA Media in San Francisco, an elite business that delivers a 360-degree view of brand experience for clients including GAP, Volvo and Uber through an integrated approach to media, technology, and data.
“AKQA Media is widely regarded as one of the world’s premier media and technology agencies, something we believe will resonate well with Australian marketers,” Vella continued.
“As the worlds of marketing, technology, and customer experience converge, it’s clear a strategic reprioritisation of brand building is essential. We feel what’s needed is a unified proposition that straddles the need to balance this long-term vision with the reality of short-term performance in today’s digital age. That’s why we’ve come together,” said Chris Hitchcock, Managing Director, Switched On.
The combined entity’s capabilities offer an unrivalled depth and breadth of experience with more than 300 team members covering:
- Digital Consulting
- Performance Media
- Creative Strategy & Storytelling
- CX and Transformation Strategy
- Experience Design
- Communications Planning and CRM
- Technology and Engineering
- Commerce Data, Insights and Personalisation
- Innovation and R&D
- Social and Influencer Marketing
Switched On will continue to be led by Managing Director, Chris Hitchcock, responsible for the continued success of the Switched On team and its integration into AKQA. Hitchcock will join the AKQA Executive team, reporting into Brian Vella, Managing Partner of AKQA in Asia Pacific. Both agency brands will continue, with Switched On transitioning to become AKQA in the future.
AKQA operates in 28 markets globally, with over 2100 people worldwide. In APAC the studios who collaborate closely include Melbourne, Sydney, Auckland, Tokyo, and Shanghai. It most recently was awarded two Grand Prix Lions at the Cannes Lions Festival of Creativity.
AKQA and Switched On are part of WPP AUNZ, Australasia’s leading creative transformation company.
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Helena Snowdon is Publicis Media ANZ’s new business and marketing head
The former Mindshare MD, who has also been previously associated with top global media agencies like PHD, Maxus and iProspect, replaces Mandy Henry
Helena Snowdon has been appointed Publicis Media’s head of business and marketing for Australia and New Zealand, as per media reports. The former Mindshare MD replaces Mandy Henry.
Snowdon has been previously associated with my global media agencies, including PHD, Maxus and iProspect. She was managing director Mindshare Melbourne from May 2017- September 2018.
“I feel privileged to be joining Publicis Media, working with the executive leadership team in ANZ, as well as the talented teams at Starcom, Spark Foundry, Zenith and Performics,” Snowdon was quoted as saying. “Publicis Media presents a progressive and transformative model which opens up huge opportunities for clients. I’m looking forward to playing my part in communicating this message and meaning across ANZ, and driving further impact and growth for the business overall.”
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CNN International Commercial appoints Phil Nelson as Chief Operating Officer
Previously, Nelson was Managing Director, Turner North Asia and South East Asia Pacific
CNN International Commercial (CNNIC) has appointed Phil Nelson as Chief Operating Officer (COO) to lead CNN’s operational and international growth initiatives outside of advertising sales.
As COO, Nelson will oversee CNNIC’s Business Development and Strategy, Finance, Strategic Planning and International Sales Operations as well as its Content Sales and Licensing. This includes managing and growing CNN’s relationships with over 300 digital, broadcast and Out of Home content partners – from local CNN branded channels to airlines and hotels that carry CNN content live and on-demand.
Previously, Nelson was Managing Director, Turner North Asia and South East Asia Pacific. In this role, he has overseen all aspects of Turner’s business in these regions including distribution of CNN International and taking a key role in establishing local partners CNN Indonesia and CNN Philippines. Nelson has also held other business development and strategic planning roles at Turner since he joined in 2010 and has significant digital experience from his time at AOL, culminating in him being Managing Director for AOL Asia. In addition, Nelson holds an MBA from Harvard University and, prior to entering the corporate sector, was a commander in the US Navy.
Nelson will be part of the CNNIC Senior Management team, reporting directly into Rani Raad, President of CNNIC, and will work closely with a wide range of divisions across CNN and WarnerMedia. Nelson will continue to be based in Singapore in the near-term and his team is spread across the globe, particularly in key CNNIC hubs of Hong Kong, Singapore, London and Miami.
“The CNNIC business has continually evolved since it was created back in 2013 to optimise the revenue, brand and commercial partnerships across our dynamic offering of CNN content and products,” said Rani Raad. “I am delighted that Phil joins us as we enter the next chapter of our business in a role that brings together all the operational, strategic and non-advertising sales revenue under one leadership. Phil has a first-rate track record at Turner and will bring a unique skillset of business acumen, creative thinking and forensic focus.”
“After many successful and exciting years at Turner Asia, I am very pleased that my next move is within the WarnerMedia family to a brand as remarkable as CNN,” said Phil Nelson. “CNNIC has done a great job in innovating and adapting its business to stay ahead of the competition during a period of unprecedented change in the news and media industry. I am looking forward to contributing to this success in the years to come.”
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Giorgio Presca named Clarks CEO
Presca to join in March, will manage operational, financial and commercial aspects of the business and lead the Clarks strategy with the Executive Committee
Clarks, the global casual footwear brand, has announced the appointment of Giorgio Presca as Chief Executive Officer.
Presca will be responsible for all operational, financial and commercial aspects of the business and will lead the Clarks strategy with the Executive Committee. He will join the company in March.
Presca, born in Trieste, Italy, has more than 20 years of experience in managing and developing global premium brands, particularly in the footwear and apparel industries, working across listed, private-equity-owned, family-run, and founder-led businesses.
His most recent position was CEO at Golden Goose Deluxe Brand, where he led the operating transformation, rapid growth and global expansion of the business.
Between 2012 and 2016, he was CEO at Geox where he executed a brand and company turnaround and returned the business to profitable growth. Giorgio has built his track record in senior leadership positions in Diesel, VF Corporation Jeanswear International division, Citizens of Humanity, Levi Strauss & Co. and Lotto.
Commenting on the appointment, Tom O’Neill, Chairman, said: “I am pleased to welcome Giorgio to Clarks as our new CEO. He brings a wealth of experience, including a deep understanding of the footwear market. He will work together with interim CEO Stella David to ensure a smooth transition over the coming weeks, after which Stella will return to her previous role as non-executive director. I would like to thank Stella for stepping in as interim CEO at a challenging time for Clarks and for her tireless and engaging leadership in the role.”
Presca said, “I cannot wait to join an iconic and historic brand like Clarks and work closely with the Board, the Executive Committee, its 13,000 people and operating partners across the world. Clarks faces the challenges of today’s competitive markets, changing distribution channels and the need to adapt to a rapidly evolving consumer environment but has the competences and assets to return to sustainable growth and profitability in the course of the next few years.”
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Tupperware appoints ex-PepsiCo exec, Chris O'Leary, to its board of directors
O'Leary has more than 37 years of operational and leadership experience, having served in several strategically important executive positions at companies like General Mills & PepsiCo
Tupperware Brands has appointed Chris O'Leary to its board of directors, according to media reports.
O'Leary joins the US-based kitchen and households product company renowned for its model of direct sales as it looks to ramp up global growth. He takes up the new role immediately.
Rick Goings, Executive Chairman, Tupperware Brands said, "We are pleased to have Chris join our board. He brings more than 37 years of operational and leadership experience to Tupperware, having served in several strategically important executive positions at major global consumer product companies including General Mills and PepsiCo. We believe the combination of his deep industry knowledge, broad international experience and strong, proven leadership skills will be invaluable to the Company as we continue to execute our global growth strategy."
O’Leary previously spent 16 years at PepsiCo, Inc., where he held numerous roles, culminating in serving as Chief Executive Officer and President of Hostess, Frito-Lay, Inc. before moving to General Mills. In almost 20 years there, he became head of international business before leaving the company in 2016. He holds a Bachelor of Business Administration in marketing from Pace University and a Master of Business Administration from New York University.
Commenting on the appointment, O'Leary said, "I look forward to working closely with board members and the management team to provide new insights and perspectives as Tupperware continues to take aggressive steps to advance its performance and drive enhanced value for shareholders."
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International: Hottest media property that's not for sale? Time Inc.But skeptics question top execs' real long-term intentions
Time Inc. consistently makes impressive double-digit profit margins and is considered by many a good media business, a still-growing company with as-yet-unlocked potential synergy with the rest of the Time Warner operation. Yet everyone from the Time & Life Building to Wall Street and Nebraska keeps on wondering when the property is going to be dealt.
Time Warner chief Dick Parsons recently told a "town hall" meeting of 400 employees about a conversation he'd had with Omaha investment wizard Warren Buffett on the subject of selling Time Inc. "As your friend, don't do that, it's a good business," said Mr. Buffett, according to people who heard Mr. Parsons recount the story. "But," he added, "if you do sell it, sell it to me."
And there's the rub. Time Inc. consistently makes impressive double-digit profit margins and is considered by many a good media business, a still-growing company with as-yet-unlocked potential synergy with the rest of the Time Warner operation. That fact, along with Mr. Parsons' persistent denials that there are any plans to sell, ought—one might think—to kill this story. Yet everyone from the Time & Life Building to Wall Street and Nebraska keeps on wondering when the property is going to be dealt.
It's also been noted that Mr. Parsons, whose contract is up in May 2008, is not Jeffrey L. Bewkes, Time Warner's president-chief operating officer and the company's heir apparent. And Mr. Bewkes has repeatedly said that nothing is off the table. "It is constantly looked at," Mr. Bewkes said at a Goldman Sachs media conference last September. "What should we not have? Or what should we get?" Many people believe Mr. Bewkes would sell Time Inc. for the right price.
A note to skeptics: Time Inc. could probably fetch bids above $16 billion. Try finding a CEO who wouldn't at least slow down for a look.
Anyone following the ongoing upheavals in media—not to mention the jangled nerves following round after round of layoffs at Time Inc., where McKinsey & Co. is now examining areas like information technology and finance—won't be surprised to hear that questions over Time Inc.'s place at Time Warner aren't going away.
The Monday after Mr. Parsons' "town hall," as it happens, a Bear Stearns analyst raised his rating on Time Warner to "outperform" partly because he believes the company, particularly once Mr. Bewkes takes over, will get more aggressive about restructuring its portfolio. To wit: It could merge AOL with another leading web property—or perhaps could spin off Time Inc.
"We think that the publishing division is the least attractive strategic fit with Time Warner's other video-centric businesses such as cable networks, cable systems and filmed entertainment," said the analyst, Spencer Wang, in his note. Combined with challenges in the magazine business such as slow growth due to online cannibalization, he said, there could be several benefits of divesting publishing.
A year ago, Reed Phillips—managing partner at the media-investment bank DeSilva & Phillips—would have given a Time Inc. sale or spinoff no chance. "Today I would no longer say 'never,' because Time Warner has continued to change and evolve," Mr. Phillips said. "I get the clear impression that the company is focused on operating performance and measures how each division is doing and how each division contributes to the overall company. And if there's a sense that part of the company is no longer contributing in the way that top management expects, I don't think anything's sacred."
Top management at Time Warner, like that at any public company, is under pressure to improve revenue and earnings year after year, no matter the market conditions. Although Time Inc. Chairman-CEO Ann S. Moore is expanding quickly online, moving the needle with print has proved much harder. That has forced strikingly difficult decisions, most recently last week's death sentence for the Life newspaper supplement.
"Wall Street wants to see growth," said Robert Safian, the Fast Company editor and Mansueto Ventures managing director who worked for Time Inc. titles Money, Fortune and Time during the last decade. "The bigger your base, the more you need in raw terms to show it. But if you back Time Inc. out of Time Warner and there's more growth in other divisions, then the overall growth might look bigger."
Plenty of people still consider the idea—first pushed to the front burner during Carl Icahn's 2006 drive to break up Time Warner—to be unlikely, impossible or ridiculous. For one thing, "Time" is the name on Time Warner's door, said Andrew Swinand, president-chief client officer at media agency Starcom USA. "I would be shocked if they sold it," he said. "For me, the biggest thing is that Time Warner as a company needs to be dynamically flexible. I still believe that the initial vision of integrated media was correct. I just believe that they haven't activated it."
The tax hit on any outright sale would be painful too, if less so in a spinoff to shareholders (which could lead in turn to a takeover). Time Inc. also owns huge stores of content that should prove valuable in a Long Tail world. And the company has been securing better position for showing growth by cutting costs, redirecting investment to digital projects, selling 19 magazines and closing two others.
"Corporate has worked closely with Time Inc. in developing its new online strategy, which is showing success," a Time Warner spokesman said. "We don't have any plans to spin off Time Inc." A Time Inc. spokeswoman referred inquiries about the company's relationship with Time Warner to the parent company.
Finally, there's the issue of price, but that could cut either way. Two media bankers said a premium property like Time Inc.—which really has no equal in its business—would command a sky-high multiple of perhaps 15 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. Last week's client note from Bear Stearns estimated that Time Warner's publishing division will have 2007 EBITDA of nearly $1.1 billion, which could put a bid close to $16.5 billion.
That is not a figure anyone would take lightly—neither a potential bidder nor the potential seller.
But the money is out there. "Private-equity firms have become so much bigger in the past year that now that kind of bite size is attainable," Mr. Reed said. "A private-equity firm could do that transaction today. It would have been much harder to do a year ago, but they've raised so much money, and you see all the time that they're looking at big media opportunities."
Time Warner shareholders wouldn't let management ignore a $16 billion offer either. "Companies can't just stiff-arm shareholders," Mr. Reed said. "They really have to listen today, more and more."
Meanwhile, the thousands of Time Inc. employees who survived the cuts of 2005, 2006 and 2007 walk the corridors occasionally wondering what Ms. Moore, Mr. Parsons and Mr. Bewkes really think of them.
"I don't think anyone is confident that Time Inc. will stay part of Time Warner," said one former Time Inc. executive, who predicts the conglomerate will eventually split up. "From the CEO down, everyone questions whether or not Time Inc. will be spun off."
There certainly could be advantages for an independent Time Inc., such as a better ability to focus on long-term strategy. Mr. Swinand, the sale skeptic, said Time Inc. would have fewer resources on its own but would be speedier and more flexible.
Mr. Reed, the agnostic, said Time Inc. wouldn't lose much if separated from Time Warner and would retain enormous clout. "They would also be able to invest much more aggressively in taking the brands into the digital realm," he said. "They're doing a pretty good job already; it's just that they're hamstrung by having to deliver earnings to the parent company."
All the talk of speed and aggression, as a matter of fact, reflects the reality of the magazine business today. It's in transformation. The business will survive, but those publishers that adapt best will thrive the most. Others will keep having to make difficult choice after difficult choice, pinned between the need to prepare for the future and the state of the field today. Even though Time Inc. owns some incredibly powerful brands, really changing the business model might take a "reset" year—which Wall Street rarely allows public companies.
As things stand, the need to make short-term numbers all the time is breeding resentment.
"Basically the dollars are going into digital at that company," the former Time Inc. executive said. "If you're not one of the four weeklies, people are very frustrated. They are not putting money behind transforming the women's lifestyle publications. Those are the ones that have had constant growth, and yet they're not getting the investment."
Another former staffer recalled the speculation among Time Inc. employees. "There was hallway chatter about it at different times," the ex-staffer said. "Sometimes it was hopeful. 'Wouldn't it be great? Will Warren Buffett buy us?' Other times people said, 'Who would buy us and what would they do with us? They might squeeze us even harder. That Midtown real estate is expensive. Maybe Time Inc. could move to Princeton, N.J.'"
Source: Adage
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