ON WEDNESDAY, SEYTEMBER 23, 1992, Colin Muncie
arrived at work at 8 a.m., just as he'd been doing for his close
to 20 years as editor of Marketing Magazine. Marketing, the
weekly tabloid that covers the media, marketing, and advertising
scenes, is arguably the highest profile of Maclean Hunter's trade
books-and, at 85, one of its oldest. As Marketing's widely
respected leader, Muncie was perhaps best known as a scrappy and
tenacious defender of editorial independence and integrity.
Typical was his passionate March 1992 commentary "Hell No, We
Won't Go," which lambasted the Canadian Business Press, of which
Marketing is a member, for advising editors how to help ad reps
flog their books at sales presentations. Muncie wrote, "To
suggest that the editor be trotted in like a prancing poodle on a
leash to perform at a sales pitch is as much an insult to the
sales staff as it is to the editorial staff." The piece won him
the Kenneth R. Wilson Memorial Award for editorial writing in a
competition open to all trade and business magazines, making
Muncie the only journalist to win this honour five times.
At his own magazine, Muncie was viewed by his staff as a
father figure, someone who protected them from interference, both
internal and corporate. As media editor Jim McElgunn says, "He
was one of those people who, when you retire, you mention in your
speech as one of your inspirations." Management also seemed
impressed with his work. Just weeks before, Ken Wright, then
executive publisher, had told Muncie he could expect a raise.
Wright had even recently sent Muncie a memo praising him for a
"brilliant" idea he'd had for the magazine.
At around
4:30 p.m. on that September afternoon, Muncie was meeting in his
office with two associate editors, Stan Sutter and Margaret
Bream, planning a yearend issue, when a secretary slipped a note
summoning him to the personnel department under his door. "This
is how they fire people," he joked in his thick Scots brogue. It
was no joke. Less than 24 hours later, Wayne Gooding, a veteran
business journalist who'd most recently been editor of Canadian
Business, would be introducing himself to a bewildered editorial
staff as their new boss.
"It was a terrible, terrible
day," remembers Laura Medcalf, who joined the staff in 1988 and
is now agency editor. "We were devastated." When Muncie returned
around 15 minutes later from personnel, he walked through the
newsroom calling the half-dozen or so editorial staffers into his
small office. As they filed in, Muncie didn't look at or talk to
anyone-he just stood there shifting from one foot to another,
with a look on his face of shock and incredible anger. Then he
told them matter-of-factly he'd been fired. "It had been a long
time since I had cried about anything," says McElgunn. But after
Muncie was done, "I was actually crying." So were most of the
staff.
Perhaps the dismissal shouldn't have come as
such a shock. Since Wright's arrival at Marketing in the summer
of 1990, he and Muncie were rarely at peace. Muncie says they
often fought when Wright pressured him to write "puff pieces"
about advertisers. "I sure as hell didn't cooperate with some
things because I thought they were stupid and even unethical," he
says. Typical was a 1990 episode involving Air Canada. To
illustrate a story, the magazine ran a graphic of an Air Canada
jet in a nose dive, symbolizing the article's take on the
company's financial state. When Air Canada, a long-time sponsor
and official airline of the Marketing Awards, which honour
creative excellence in the field, complained to Wright, he tried
to pressure Muncie into running an apology; Muncie refused.
When fights like the one over the Air Canada fiasco erupted
in the newsroom, they were hard to miss. "They would have
arguments that would send us literally hovering in someone's
office like little kids who hide when their parents fight. Their
screaming matches were outrageous," says one senior editotial
staffer. In the months immediately preceding Muncie's firing,
however, the two seemed to have come to some sort of truce. In
fact for more than six months, Wright had been secretly courting
his new editor. Why bother fighting when he knew the marriage was
headed for divorce?
On the surface, the upheaval at
Marketing appeared to be a simple editor-publisher clash. But
Muncie's departure was actually just part of a larger shake-up, a
shake-up that can be traced to the 1989 launch of a feisty tival
publication, Strategy. Within a year, Marketing was losing money
after years of profitability. And since Strategy's arrival,
Marketing has been redesigned twice and has seen numerous
masthead changes in addition to the editor's spot. In all, 20
staffers have quit or been fired, while the former publisher, Ted
Wilson, first had Ken Wright parachuted in over him and, more
recently, was demoted to associate publisher, sales development.
But despite all the changes, the magazine continues to show a
deficit-insiders say its losses were as much as $750,000 in 1992
and more than $1 million last year.
These days, of
course, any internal problems at Maclean Hunter are overshadowed
by the media company's own uncertain future. But the Rogers
Communications takeover means Marketing is more vulnerable-the
prospects for any unprofitable title in the current climate are
bad. Even before the Rogers deal, Maclean Hunter had been
ruthless with money-losing trade books, dropping 35 titles over
the past eight years.
However, Marketing didn't have
to end up in a situation where it is fighting for survival.
Muncie had sent up the warning flag months before, appealing to
the top brass to take Strategy's arrival seriously. But
management wasn't listening. So by the time Maclean Hunter got
around to doing anything about it - one year later - Strategy had
published close to 20 issues and was quickly making inroads into
Marketing's territory.
THE BATTLE BETWEEN
MARKETING AND Strategy actually dates back to 1986. That was when
Mark Smyka, then a senior editor at Marketing, quit to help Jim
Shenkman, a lawyer turned rookie trade publisher, launch a
biweekly tabloid coveting the broadcast and production fields.
The same month Shenkman's new company, Brunico Communications,
published Playback, Maclean Hunter's competing title, Mediascene,
debuted. Even though the MH book had high production values and
the might of a major publisher behind it, Mediascene quietly
folded less than two years later. Playback, on the other hand,
now makes a slight profit. Given that history, it is hard to
understand Maclean Hunter's snail-like pace when it first learned
in the spring of 1989 that Shenkman and Smyka planned to launch a
direct competitor to Marketing that September. Perhaps the torpor
was due to Marketing's having had the field to itself for so
long-for years its only competition was from regional
publications like Media West and Info Presse, plus Adnews, a
national fact sheet-style publication.
One result was
the magazine had become lazy editorially. As associate editor,
news, Stan Sutter says, "From '84 to '90 we ran the same reports
[on, for example, sales promotion] at the same time of the year.
They were valid to revisit, but were just repeat, dry stories-the
same stuff with updated information." Cecily Ross, who was
managing editor at the weekly in the late eighties and is now ME
at Harrowsmith, says, "It was complacent, for sure. We worked
hard, but it was a matter of throwing it together and getting it
out."
Another flaw was Marketing's deserved
reputation as an advertising-gossip rag that principally covered
the comings and goings of creative staff and the shifting of
accounts from agency to agency, even though most of Marketing's
readers come from the client side-they are with companies like
Procter & Gamble, Molson Breweries, and IBM Canada.
Nevertheless in old issues, headlines such as "Dominion moves all
to Ogilvy" or "Dare and Dad's whittle ad agency lists" were
typical.
Smyka, from his days at Marketing,
understood his former magazine's weaknesses: "I knew there were
parts of the market Marketing was not covering well enough." Gary
Prouk, chair of the Toronto agency Scali, McCabe, Sloves, and a
Marketing reader for 27 years, sums up Marketing's problem
simply: "It was very, very sleepy."
And so was
Maclean Hunter. Just days after learning about Brunico's plans
for its new magazine, Muncie sent a memo to Ted Wilson, then
publisher. In it he warned: "Let's not treat this challenge
lightly: Smyka is good. So is Shenkman. They are both consumed
with the will to succeed. And they have lots of money. We have to
fight them all out from the very beginning, so they
do not gain credibility and strength and become a serious
challenger." He also remembers talking to Wilson on numerous
occasions about reevaluating Marketing's content, design, and
advertising efforts in light of the imminent publication. He
never got the go-ahead.
Jim McElgunn, media editor at
Marketing, recalls, "Colin screamed, 'We've got to do something;
we've got to strangle them in the cradle,' but there was a really
complacent style here." Muncie was also stymied, staffers say, by
Maclean Hunter's bureaucracy and his meagre $400 signing
authority. But Terry Malden, executive vice-president, Canadian
Publishing, at Maclean Hunter, puts a different spin on the
company's slow response. "You don't just fly off in any direction
just because a new publication is on the horizon," he says. "I
don't think of ourselves as slow to react. We didn't feel we had
to turn our world upside down, so we didn't come up with the
changes until eight or nine months after the launch."
By then, however, Strategy was a serious contender. "Maclean
Hunter's first mistake was it didn't take the paper seriously,"
says David Chilton, a reporter at Strategy from its beginning.
"They didn't respond as quickly as they should have, and now it's
too damn late. Strategy is entrenched as part of the trade book
scene here and it's not going anywhere." Randy Scotland, an
editor and reporter at Marketing from 1980 to 1991, and now at
The Financial Post, also thinks the company made a strategic
error. "Nothing was done in a substantive way and it allowed
Strategy to get a toehold," he says. "With Maclean Hunter's
clout, I thought we could have blown them out of the water." When
MH finally acted, its first move was to appoint Ken Wright as
executive publisher. Wright, who had previously been president of
Telemedia Communication's Telemedia Results Group, the company's
recently folded direct marketing arm, swooped into the magazine
to shake things up. Rumours suggest James Warrillow, president of
Maclean Hunter, Canadian Publishing, owed Wright a favour from
their days together at the Post in the late seventies. Whatever
the relationship between the two, Wright at least had the
authority-and the budget-to start fighting off Strategy.
Within weeks of Wright's arrival, Muncie, his senior
editors, the sales manager, Wilson, and Wright began meeting to
plan their counterattack. Muncie remembers these "brain stress"
sessions that sometimes went on for two or three days at a time
at the nearby Chestnut Park Hotel. The aim of the meetings,
according to Wright, was to "find a new raison d'etre." Those
don't come cheap, but Wright had negotiated an additional
$600,000 on top of the roughly $l-million editorial budget for
1990. Some of it was used to hire two more full-time editorial
staffers, and between $15,000 and $20,000 went for a redesign.
Another portion was earmarked for freelance photographers,
writers, and international stringers. The problem was, Wright had
apparently promised management he would increase Marketing's
revenues by $1 million to cover the higher costs. But the money
never materialized. Instead of making the close to $400,000
profit projected for 1990, the book lost $300,000.
Some of the losses had to do with falling advertising revenue due
to the recession. In fact, the entire ad industry has seen
difficult times-over the past few years at least 12 agencies have
folded, merged, or been bought out. But Strategy's arrival was
also a factor. Jeff Mepham, Strategy's sales manager since last
November, confirms that some clients who used to run national
campaigns solely in Marketing began splitting their budget,
sometimes 50-50, between the two books. He should know: he was
sales manager at Marketing until May 1993-when he too was fired
by Ken Wright. (Mepham and Muncie are not the only staffers or
former staffers who aren't card-carrying members of the Ken
Wright Fan Club. Someone still on the editorial side remembers
how Wright used to keep charts on his wall and literally measure,
to the inch, the amount of copy reporters wrote for each issue.
Another staffer found it so remarkable that a birthday card was
passed around the newsroom for Wright that he had to call me at
home to tip me off to this unprecedented event.) Meanwhile, as
Marketing was busy dealing with internal politics and playing
catch-up, Strategy was hustling for readers and advertisers. From
the beginning it has run similar contests, and has copied such
Marketing traditions as the December agency-of-the-year issue and
special reports on topics such as direct marketing and what's
going on in various regions of the country. But it also brought
fresh approaches to old ideas. While Marketing's editorial
staffers decide among themselves who to feature as agency of the
year, Strategy holds a competition, getting the readers involved
and making the report more dynamic. It also encourages lively
debate in letters and columns, and often lets industry people
fight it out in its pages, an approach that gives the book an
energetic, shoot-from-the-hip feel. As writer David Chilton says,
"We have a tendency not to be timid. We're not reckless, but at
the same time we can go straight for the jugular if
necessary."
While Strategy was developing those
aggressive tactics, Marketing's make-over gamble-the first in
eight years-flopped. According to one staffer, it was a
"misfire" that was done "almost overnight," and only
involved minimal cosmetic changes. So Wayne Gooding was given
authority to commission a second redesign last fall. This latest
effort, the work of veteran designer James Ireland (who also
designs the Review) gave the book a slicker look, including a
bold new red-and-black logo. "We're serving a graphic-based
industry," says Gooding. "If you look at previous Marketing
issues, you'd never know that." And he had to keep loyal readers
like Adrian Sark, vice-president of marketing for Hershey Canada,
who has read Marketing for 20 years. "There is a quality element
to visuals. I read Strategy and heave it into the garbage, while
Marketing tends to sit on your shelf for two to three issues."
But cosmetic appeal was only one part of the September
redesign-there were also editorial changes. Gooding says, given
the competition, he had to make Marketing a must-read, the book
people turn to every week. Stories now have more insight and
relevance and there is more international coverage to reflect the
global market: for example, a January 3 cover story reported on
how, around the world, the ad business is coping in a changing
and complex field. Marina Strauss, marketing reporter for The
Globe and Mail, believes that Strategy has made Marketing more
aggressive. "I think it probably runs after stories a little
quicker knowing there is competition." Laura Medcalf confirms
this: "Knowing there's another competitor out there who's also
chasing down the same story makes you make that second, third,
fourth phone call."
Gary Prouk has noticed the
improvement. "It's more spirited; it's certainly not up to
Pulitzer Prize standards, but it's getting better." Daniel
Rabinowicz, Montreal-based vice-president of Cossette
Communication-Marketing, has also seen positive changes. "It's
like they're now trying to get more serious and more coverage of
the issues, not just news." But Cecily Ross, who worked at
Marketing during the Muncie era and did a short stint after
Gooding's appointment, believes that while the magazine has taken
on a tone of respectability, it is sometimes too serious. "It
used to be irreverent," she says about Muncie's book. "It was
like Variety saucy, funny, and snappy."
Some readers
agree. "I find Marketing a little mushy," says Bill Durnan,
senior vice-president and national creative director for Maclaren
Lintas in Toronto. "It's almost like a status report. Strategy is
much more aggressive and brings the issues to the table more
passionately." last fall, Margaret Sutcliffe, program director of
marketing at Ryerson Polytechnic University's School of Business,
cancelled the faculty subscription to Marketing after 20 years.
Now Strategy circulates to the school's professors. "Strategy is
more comprehensive; it covers more of marketing," she says.
"Marketing is a gossip magazine about what's happening in the ad
agencies. I don't think it's digging beneath the surface."
However, Strategy also has its critics. Because it has a
full-time editorial staff of seven compared to Marketing's 12, it
relies a lot on outside contributors, many of them industry
people. The result, according to some readers, are "puff pieces."
Or as Gary Prouk says, "A lot of it is not journalism. What it
really is, is a compendium of stories written by people in the
industry with self-interests." An example was last fall's
magazine industry report, which asked editors and publishers to
personify their books, and also gave them licence to gloat:
"Maclean's is not only a good friend, but he is the one source I
can rely on for the most up-to-date information"; "I [Toronto
Life] didn't think I looked too bad for a
27-year-old, but, I must say, I look quite fresh since the
redesign."
The two rivals differ in ways other than
editorial style and approach. Marketing has been backed by one of
the country's largest publishers and has a history with
advertisers and readers. But it wa~ also trapped in Maclean
Hunter's giant bureaucracy, which has meant on occasion that few
new ideas were accepted and decisions were made at a glacial
pace. By contrast, at Strategy, says Stan Sutter, "Smyka and
Shenkman can meet in the bathroom and make changes to the
magazine."
Another factor that may contribute to
Strategy making what Shenkman calls a "small profit," compared to
Marketing's continued losses, is the entrepreneurial drive that
Shenkman, who owns around 55 per cent of Brunico, and Smyka, who
owns about 10 per cent, partly sweat equity, bring to the
venture. Shenkman commonly arrives at the office as eatly as 5
a.m. and stays for 12 or more hours. And Smyka's days are
similarly long. The book also has financial backing from
Shenkman's father, a wealthy entrepreneur who founded the
International Centre, a well-established convention facility in
Toronto.
Hard work and connections, however, haven't
yet given them the biggest piece of the pie. By the end of 1993,
Strategy had 21 per cent. But Marketing is hanging on to its 31
per cent-though that number is down from the 40 per cent it had
in 1990. (Ad pages dropped from 919 to 620 over the three years.)
The two nationals now battle, as well, for readers. Strategy is a
biweekly newspaper tabloid, while Marketing is a glossy weekly
magazine, but they duel every other Monday on newsstands and
fight for attention in the offices and homes of Canadian media,
advertising, and marketing executives. And while Marketing's book
sales have been stable over the past four years, and the two,
each selling around 1,000 copies on newsstands per issue, can't
be compared by circulation Marketing has around 13,000 paid
subscriptions, while Strategy's 16,500 circulation is 90 per cent
controlled-they must now fight for share of mind.
Industry insiders wonder where this trend is headed, and whether
it's the latest example of Maclean Hunter being squeezed out by a
small, independent company. Travel Courier, once an established
Maclean Hunter trade book, is an ominous reminder of what can
happen. After losing top spot to Baxter Publishing's Canadian
Travel Press and spending a rumoured $1 million on a failed
redesign, Travel Courier was sold in July 1990 to Baxter.
And just this January, Maclean Hunter sold off three more
trade titles, including a veteran book, Canadian Hotel and
Restaurant News, which lost its number one position to
Foodservice and Hospitality, an independent owned by Kostuch
Communications. By the end of 1993, the MH title had less than 20
per cent of the ad market; it is now owned by Kostuch. "Maclean
Hunter has suffered badly at the hands of entrepreneurial
competitors over the past few years in one-magazine markets,"
says a Marketing staffer. "James Warrillow, president of the
division, came to us in 1990 and said, 'This has happened to us a
few times in the past and we don't want it happening to
Marketing.'"
Could it happen to Marketing? One
insider at Maclean Hunter thinks so. "My prognosis," he says
sadly, "is not good for the long term-and I mean the next three
to five years." His guess is the book may be in jeopardy if
profits continue to plummet. In the winter, before the Rogers
maneuver, Terry Malden predicted Marketing would one day return
to its glory days under its new publisher, Cameron Gardner.
(Gardner, who held senior publishing positions at Maclean Hunter
for a decade and a half replaced Wright when he retired at the
end of March, although Wright will stay on as a consultant.) And
what if the magazine didn't turn around? The company, Malden
said, naturally would not support a money-losing venture
forever.
FROM A SMALL CUBICLE IN THE MACLEAN
Hunter maze of trade magazines on the fifth floor, down the hall
from Marketing, Colin Muncie now freelances for The Medical Post
and Benefits Canada. Four years ago, he was an insider, trying to
face the challenge of Strategy, while still maintaining
Marketing's editorial integrity. Now he's an outsider, reflecting
on the prospects of a magazine that used to be his. The day the
Rogers and Maclean Hunter merger was announced, Muncie was
surprisingly hopeful. There is a place in the market for his old
book, he said. And Wayne Gooding shared his optimism. "I have no
doubts Marketing will be around. The only question is who will
own it."
Across town, Mark Smyka and Jim Shenkman
were wondering the same thing.