Posts Tagged ‘Rosanne Cheeseman’

Cheeseman: paywall, iPhone app coming

UPDATED: More details on the paywall for GoErie.com: “The cost for non-newspaper subscribers will be $6.95 per month, and Sunday-only customers and others who subscribe in increments less than the full seven days will be offered a discounted price of $2.95 per month.”

The paper is putting the “whoa!” on GoErie.com.

In a publisher’s column in Sunday’s Erie Times-News, President and Publisher Rosanne Cheeseman dropped the other shoe in her realignment of the Erie area’s largest news operation from a “ink and paper” based outlet to a multi-stream digital enterprise that is fighting to find a model where consumers will help subsidize the work of professional producers.

The first shoe of course is getting the Times Publishing Co. out of the newsprint publishing business. The transition to outsourcing the production of the newsprint version of their content to the Butler Eagle is expected to occur in the next few weeks, along with the loss of 40 jobs. Now the paper has their sights on the thousands of readers who consume it’s product without plunking down the obligatory six bits. Cheeseman explains:

GoErie.com will also soon launch a digital subscription program. Print subscribers will continue to have unlimited access to our website. However, nonsubscribers will be required to pay a fee for extended access to what we consider premium content — notably most of the bylined work of our professional reporters.

She goes on to say that GoErie.com will remain the community’s portal, with breaking news, obits, and blogs still free. If you take the Monday, July 25th morning version of GoErie as an example, on the five featured posts on the image rotator, one was a bylined news story, one a bylined sports story, one a link to a photo gallery (which would be free), and two were internal promos.

In her post Cheeseman announced that an GoErie app for the iPhone and iPad has been submitted for approval by Apple. It will allow the reader to view stories as if published on paper or in a story list, along with layers of video and additional content, including a voice function that will read the paper to you.

Several questions remain, with the biggest being will people who gladly fork over $80 per month for cable TV pay for a digital subscription of $8, $10 or $12 $7 or $3 a month? How will the inevitable loss of eyeballs affect display ad rates at GoErie? If print subscribers get unlimited access to GoErie, then why aren’t they getting automatic GoErie “Insider” subscriptions and the ability to make comments on stories right now (ETN circulation and GoErie are currently totally separate profit centers)?

And what about the aggregators?

Erie Times-News to print in Butler

Your daily newspaper will soon be at least two hours older than it is now.

This morning the Times Publishing Company announced that they are  in final negotiations with the Butler Eagle to print their paper, leading to the closing of the pressroom and mailroom of the Erie Times News and layoffs of 40 full and part-time positions.

The trip from Butler to the ETN’s West 12th Street location takes 1 hour and 48 minutes.

The route the Erie Times News newspapers will take when printed at the Butler Eagle, Butler PA.

From GoErie.com this morning:

Citing the age of its printing and packaging equipment and the millions of dollars it would take to maintain or replace this equipment, the company announced in March that it would exit the printing and packaging business but continue to operate the Erie Times-News as a family-owned daily newspaper.

“After thorough evaluation of potential third-party vendors, we determined that Eagle Printing Company is best-suited to partner with us in the production of our newspaper,” said Rosanne Cheeseman, president and publisher. “Like our company, Eagle Printing Company is an award-winning, family-owned business. Even more importantly, it has modern presses and other technologies that will ensure the highest-quality product for readers and advertisers of the Erie Times-News.”

Under the ownership of the Wise family, Eagle Printing Company opened its Eagle Production Center in 2003. The modern facility includes a new-technology UniLiner press line as well as mailroom capability for daily insertion of preprint packages.

The transition is expected to occur in early August. At that time, the content of the newspaper will be transmitted electronically to the Butler facility, where it will be printed, packaged and then transported to Erie for delivery. The rest of the company’s operations — editorial, advertising, circulation, finance, information technology, maintenance, human resources, administration and the GoErie.com website — will remain in downtown Erie.

Cheeseman emphasized, “Although we are changing the way we produce our newspaper, we remain as committed as ever to serving Erie and the surrounding region — just as we have for nearly 125 years. We intend to preserve the editorial and advertising excellence that has earned us first or second place as Pennsylvania Newspaper of the Year from the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association in four out of the past eight years.”

She said readers and advertisers should see no major change in content or appearance of the newspaper.

I guess no scores from the west coast and no news after the 11:00 TV shows is not considered a “major change.”

The other great irony is that the Eagle’s daily circulation is just over 26,000, but the Wise family saw to it to upgrade their presses eight years ago. Meanwhile, the ETN is nearly at 52,000 daily but the Meads did not think their press system needed to be improved. Are the presses really in that bad shape?

There are many more questions than answers on this whole deal.

Times-News: stopping the presses, 40 laid off

Erie Times-News

Erie Times-News masthead

In the beginning, the newspaper that would become the Erie Times-News was started by nine printers alienated by their old newspapers management.

Today, the newspaper announced that there would be no pressman employed at 12th and Sass, meaning 40 employees to be terminated. Citing aging presses and costs involved with improving them, the Times Publishing Co. said they will outsource the printing and packaging of the daily. From the GoErie.com post:

Even though it is exiting the printing and packaging business, the company will continue to operate the Erie Times-News as a family-owned daily newspaper.

“This was a very difficult decision but one that we believe is in the best long-term interests of the company and the community,” said Rosanne Cheeseman, president and publisher.

“Our major concern is the age of our printing and packaging equipment and the millions of dollars it would take to maintain or replace this equipment. Although we have printed our own newspaper for nearly 90 years, with today’s technologies we have decided to purchase printing and packaging services elsewhere. The world of communication is changing, and more than 50 newspapers across the country have closed printing plants just since the beginning of 2009.”

The presses currently used to produce the Erie Times-News are 41 years old.

WJET/WFXP and WICU/WSEE quoted Communication Workers of America union spokesman Dan Wasser:

I think it’s not only a slap in the face to the employees, but also to the community where they get their revenue from. They predominantly state on their newspaper, that they’ve been serving the Erie community area since 1888, and after all these years, they’ve decided to outsource this work, instead of keeping the work in Erie, PA.

It was reported that Erie Police were called to the plant upon the announcement of the layoffs, which came on the first day of negotiations of a new collective bargaining agreement between the CWA and the paper.

Paycuts, price increases arrive at the Times-News

The idea of an ombudsman or reader advocate never really suited the suits at the Erie Times-News. It seemed that the editors didn’t want to waste any ink on admitting that they sometimes get something wrong, or just might be unfair from time to time.

Sometime when Jeff Pinski had the job, they switched the title to Public Editor, and it became the role to explain controversial decisions at the paper and to field the angry calls. Over the years all of the reader advocacy has been rung out of the role, and now the current Public Editor, Liz Allen, basically is the newspaper’s PR flak and spinmeister.

The plates were spinning a couple Sundays ago when Ms. Allen attempted to justify a 50% increase in the price of the newspaper at retail stores and newsstands, bringing the cost for that daily paper from 50 to 75 cents. She compared the price of a paper to her favorite candy (Chuckles), to Buck Night popcorn, and olive oil.

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ETN’s Cheeseman speaks: We’re alive

In the past year, the Times Publishing Company, along with most other U.S. newspaper publishers, has had to ensure a severe advertising slow down, the near-evaporation of their classified advertising cash cow to the online space, leading up to employee buyouts at the end of 2008. Nearly every day, the public has heard the drumbeat of negative news about the newspaper business: Tribune Co. goes bankrupt, the Rocky Mountain News folds, the Detroit newspapers go to limited home delivery.

However, throughout this era, the publisher of our local papers, Rosanne Cheeseman, has been conspicuously quiet. Until now.
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Times-News to cut workforce by 9%; buyouts offered

The global economic crisis and national newspaper downturn has now hit our local paper hard.

On GoErie.com yesterday and in this morning’s Erie Times-News, the newspaper reports a staff reduction of 25 employees or 9 percent of its 273 workers. Publisher Rosanne Cheeseman is quoted as saying,

This is a tough business decision in the toughest economy in memory, and one that we have tried to avoid making.

According to the paper’s report, 51 employees are eligible for the buyout which includes severance pay, five years of health insurance or a cash equivalent, and a $10,000 signing bonus. If enough workers take the deal, the buyout may eliminate inevitable layoffs that could come next year.

The last sentence in the article articulates what ETN readers have been sensing when they feel the thinness of the paper lately. “Even tougher market conditions in October prompted the bailout plan, Cheeseman said.”