American Daily Newspapers Employ 25% Fewer People Than in 2001
I apparently caused a stir yesterday at the PRSA International Conference in San Diego. Actually, it was a disturbing fact — or an inconvenient truth — that I cited which caused the stir. So, don’t shoot the messanger.
During the Q&A part of the conference workshop, “Looking Ahead: The Nexus of Social Media and Public Relations,” Peter Himler, founder and principal of Flatiron Communication, asked a rhetorical question of the audience. I’ve known Himler for about 15 years, so I raised my hand when nobody seemed eager to speculate on when traditional media relations should be declared dead.
I’m presenting a PRSA teleseminar on Nov. 17, and I had been working on my presentation before heading to San Diego. So, I happened to have a data point at my finger tips that related to the question.
According to The State of News Media for 2009, which is published by the Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism, 5,900 full-time newsroom jobs, 11% of the total at America’s newspapers, were cut in 2008. By the end of 2009, newsrooms of American daily newspapers may employ 25% fewer people than they did in 2001.
Ad Age estimates that just under 150,000 people worked in magazines in 2008, down from about 170,000 in 2000. And in local television, news staffs, already too small to adequately cover their communities, are being cut at unprecedented rates.
So, that’s why PR people need to embrace social media as quickly as they can. If they […]
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