Glossy Mags Losing Money While Editors Chauffeured to Work
LatestYears of romcoms and episodes of Sex And The City and Ugly Betty have taught us that a glossy magazine is a fabulous place to work, full of luxe perks and glamour. But publishing has taken a financial hit, and editors are being told to cut back.
Alexandra Steigrad writes about Condé Nast’s “new austerity” for WWD (subscription required):
While the company has asked publications that are not on track to hit internal projections to start “correcting” their budgets, a source said the tightening up impacts all magazines at the company, regardless of their results. This has translated into a hiring freeze through the summer, unless special circumstances call for the addition of a new hire.
[…]
Each magazine’s cost-trimming mandate is different depending on how far off the individual title is from hitting 2014 projections. Although first-half ad-page numbers were not readily available, a source said the smaller, leaner Lucky, for example, would not have to cut as much from its budget as the significantly larger Vanity Fair.
[…]
Vogue, which ended the first quarter down 1 percent, had a rough second quarter with pages declining 11 percent, a source with knowledge of the Publishers Information Bureau results said, giving the glossy a 5 percent dip in the first half of the year.
Imagine having to talk to Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour about austerity. Imagine.