February wasn¿t so long ago. That is when two English business papers launched Hindi business dailies and two Hindi papers announced their business daily launches. Around the same time the Outlook group launched Outlook Profit. Its publisher made a memorable statement to Agencyfaqs, "With markets pulling a rabbit out of the hat almost every day, I believe this is the perfect time to dedicate a magazine to the country¿s financial boom."
But that was February. Earlier this month, according to Mint, the same publisher was sending out a circular to the Outlook stable staff suggesting belt tightening for hard times ahead, and redeployment of excess staff in each team. And the magazine dropped two supplements which used to be distributed free with it, City Limits and Envy. India Today used to distribute supplements called Pink, Auto and Spice Solo with the main magazine. All of these have been dropped. As have two supplements which it used to distribute with its Bengali edition.
Back in February Dainik Jagran¿s business daily venture with CNBC TV18 was on the cards. Today it no longer is, and the CEO hired for the project has departed.
Business Standard¿s Gujarati paper launched in February from Ahmedabad and Mumbai with an ad line which said that over 35 per cent of stock market wealth was held by Gujaratis. Earlier this year, both editions shut shop. This paper, the Economic Times, The Times of
Welcome to a new period of sobriety in the Indian media market. Journalists take note, no longer can you switch jobs with ease, with a salary hike each time. At Forbes, which was supposed to come from the TV18 stable, more than a dozen high priced journalists are twiddling their thumbs because its launch has been postponed. As has been the launch of the new magazine from the RPG group that Sandipan Deb was supposed to bring out. Sakal¿s multi-edition plans have not seen the light of day yet either. DNA Bangalore having hired, has postponed publication and is now heard to be doing a 14 December launch. We will have to wait and see if that goes ahead.
Because, in an advertising-led industry, where are the ads now going to come from? TV bouquets brought on new general entertainment channels—over the past year we have seen the advent of three: 9X, NDTV Imagine, and Colours. Now the latest analysis from Hong Kong-based media research agency Media Partners Asia puts the revenue growth projection for broadcasting firms at 17 per cent in 2009 compared to 26 per cent in 2008. It says the short-term climate for these three new entrants "will remain difficult." (Business Standard.)
Advertising grew at 22.1 per cent in
All this is in addition to the woes caused by the film workers¿ strike, which has channels running reruns because no fresh episodes are being canned.
Company results for the second quarter for listed media companies are not cheery, NDTV reported a net loss of Rs 119 crore, HT Media¿s profits were down by 49 per cent. Sun TV Network, the highest valued TV company with a market cap of Rs 6234 crore reported a modest rise in profits. TV Today¿s profits were down from the last quarter.
TV news as well as entertainment companies are losing value sharply in the stock market, more so than print media companies, with the exception of
And what are the individual straws in the wind which point to grim times ahead?
Papers like the Hindu and Business Standard have resorted to allowing ad positioning that they did not permit before, such as half jackets eclipsing the normal page one.
A new niche publication experienced its first advertisement cancellation—a regular ad which appeared until then in every issue, was pulled out. And the same company cancelled 500 copies which they were taking of the magazine.
The chief financial officer of an education company said he had not paid his agency for advertisements released.
UTV has decided to move offices of two channels from Noida to Mumbai, presumably to save costs.
And IANS reported on November 6 that a 32-year-old journalist, fired from his job by a Hindi magazine a few days ago, committed suicide at his home in