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Serious SPH

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SPH tipped to make job cuts, industry players mull its future
Vivienne Tay22/09/2017 Fri 11:56
newspaper-e1495513911412-700x420.jpg

Bloomberg has reported that Singapore Press Holdings (SPH), Singapore’s largest publishing house, is tipped to be cutting jobs as part of an organisational restructure. The report added that the organisation had 4,473 employees at the end of May, this was with a total wage billing of SG$276 million.

When asked by Marketing about the news, a spokesperson from SPH declined to comment. In a statement to Bloomberg, SPH said it does not comment “on market rumors”.

The move comes amid the company’s recent financial results for the third quarter, which saw the media owner experiencing a 45.2% drop in net profitwhen compared to the same period last year. The drop in profit was attributed to its declining magazine business which incurred impairment charges of SG$37.8 million, along with advertisement and circulation revenue declines. Other reasons SPH cited then for its lacklustre performance were “disruption of the media industry” and a “muted economic environment”.

The drop in ad revenue is not a new problem for SPH. On top of a 18.7% yoy drop in ad revenue in the most recent Q3 when compared against the Q3-2016 results, the company also experienced a 16.8% drop in Q2 this year, and a 13.5% drop in Q1. Last year, SPH also revealed staff reduction of up to 10% over two years following the merger of My Paper and The New Paper (TNP). This is through attrition, retirement, non-renewal of contracts, outplacement and retrenchment, the publishing house had then said.

The news of the new round of job culls come shortly after the appointment of a new CEO, Ng Yat Chung, in July this year. Ng took on the role from Alan Chan Heng Loon. Along with Chan’s departure, the organisation also saw the exit of Patrick Daniel this month. This made room for Anthony Tan, deputy chief executive officer in SPH, to take charge of both the English, Malay and Tamil Media Group and the Chinese Media Group, along with lead the media strategy and analytics (MSA) division.

However, amidst the challenging times, SPH found solace in its property segment to help bolster the dip in ad revenue. Some of this was contributed from its Orange Valley Healthcare acquisition which was partially offset by lower revenue from the exhibitions business.

An expected restructure?

Media industry veterans Marketing spoke to said the restructure did not come as a surprise. Speaking to Marketing under anonymity, one industry veteran who has closely worked with SPH said that the organisation is currently “bloated and suffers from groupthink”. As such, SPH needs to move away from its focus on diversifying its assets, and instead focus on being a content and data company.

He added that SPH needs to look towards reinventing itself by looking externally rather than internally when it comes to change and reorganisation. This needs to result in a change of culture which affects the whole hall of people in the company.

Also speaking to Marketing was Richard Bleasdale, managing partner, Asia Pacific, The Observatory International, who explained that “the move signals a period of huge change for SPH”. Hence, SPH needs to either stay relevant within its primary category, media, or to diversify further into other categories, such as property, which is something it has been looking at.

“Change is uncomfortable, challenging and costly. As such, effective change management and powerful change leadership will also be critical areas for SPH to look at,” Bleasedale added.

Melvin Kwek, former marketing professional from Citi and UBS, and now with a major international bank, said many companies are going through a transformation. As such, companies need to be ready for the digital economy and shift towards how audiences are consuming content today.

Media companies in Singapore, including SPH, have been working to adapt their business models to the digital economy.

“This will help sharpen their competitive edge in the media business. As such, any potential moves may indicate that SPH is aligning itself to its consumer base and ensuring that they remain relevant ahead,” Kwek explained.

“In banking, we have an old saying – ‘The trend is your friend’. Organisations need to evolve according to the business environment and consumers’ shifting paradigms, we all do, or get left behind,” Kwek said.

How should companies evolve to keep up with the changing media landscape?

Many say that SPH should now be taking a leaf out of South China Morning Post (SCMP)’s book, which has positioned itself as more of a content and data company as opposed to simply a publishing house. Following the publication’s acquisition by Alibaba Group last year, the company took down its paywall, with a new focus on finding the right media business model.

For media companies to stay resilient in the face of disruption today in the landscape, Bleasedale outlined three key focus areas. The first is setting a strong and clear vision for the business and ensuring employees, business partners and consumers understand it. Next is operationalising and celebrating change, which has to be part of the everyday culture, not an off-to-the-side project. Lastly, companies such as SPH need to invest in its people and take them on the journey for change.

“The SPH brand carries a lot of weight and prestige. It is known as a strong and powerful force within the industry. It has a celebrated history and heritage. All of these factors count strongly in SPH’s favour as it looks to stay resilient in the face of the disruption it is going through,” Bleasedale added.

SPH is also not the only media owner which is facing challenges in the media landscape. Another local media owner, Mediacorp, recently made strides to fully digitise some of its print offerings, the most recent being its decision to bring its TODAY newspaper fully digital. The move resulted in a redundancy of 40 roles. Mediacorp also recently hired Tham Loke Kheng, with senior level experience in both FTA and Pay TV, as its CEO and board director. She took over from Shaun Seow, who departed to join Temasek’s telecom, media & technology investment team, which includes Mediacorp in its portfolio.

It also brought on board Parminder Singh as its chief commercial and digital officer in March. Singh joined Mediacorp from Twitter and his role combined what were previously two separate positions in the company and follows a series of recent hires reflecting Mediacorp’s move to bolster its digital capabilities.
 
Having a monopoly still not doing well? Population has increased by a million in the last decade.

Must be too much one-sided reporting from warren fernandez
 
We've brought in the big guns to save SPH. Lt-Gen Ng is a top scholar with years of experience leading large corporations. With General Ng as CEO, I expect SPH to double its profits within a year or two.

1-72.jpg
 
Tham Loke Kheng should be good for Mediacorp. She has gotten good expose in Taiwan and Hong Kong after leaving Starhub some time back.
 
We've brought in the big guns to save SPH. Lt-Gen Ng is a top scholar with years of experience leading large corporations. With General Ng as CEO, I expect SPH to double its profits within a year or two.

1-72.jpg

He does not look like he is capable enough to rescue a sinking ship.
 
He does not look like he is capable enough to rescue a sinking ship.

He's very good at sinking hundreds of ships in one fell swoop. I'm sure he'll be able to sink his latest acquisition in no time at all.
 
Look no further than the fact that within one year of NOL being sold, the new management made profits by no small margin...
 
Why would anyone pay to listen to completely discredited media organisation with long track record of following the government line to a T. 20 years ago, their staff were the best paid evening outstripping bankers. There is nothing better cold hard cash to buy loyalty and performing animals.
 
He's very good at sinking hundreds of ships in one fell swoop. I'm sure he'll be able to sink his latest acquisition in no time at all.
So should we go short on SPH in this case?
 
Not much meat left. Early July when 10ma cross below 20ma was the best time.
 
A little red dot and yet has a propaganda machine that employs 4,473 people with a total wage billing of SG$276 million-even after a previous round of retrenchments.
Imagine what you can produce if you channel that kind of resources to something useful like pharmaceutical, medicine, IT, computers, ect2.
Eg -Rolex has 2800 employees and revenue of US$4.7 billion (2016)
Nintendo has 5,166 employees and revenue of ¥489.095 billion)
 
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Other reasons SPH cited then for its lacklustre performance were “disruption of the media industry” and a “muted economic environment”.

disruption of the media industry? Fuck la, just say you blame blogs and websites that are not govt friendly, which are getting far more readership than your 154th ranked bull crap.
 
Having a monopoly still not doing well? Population has increased by a million in the last decade.

Must be too much one-sided reporting from warren fernandez

SELLING GARBAGE NEWS.........`1
A little red dot and yet has a propaganda machine that employs 4,473 people with a total wage billing of SG$276 million-even after a previous round of retrenchments.
Imagine what you can produce if you channel that kind of resources to something useful like pharmaceutical, medicine, IT, computers, ect2.
Eg -Rolex has 2800 employees and revenue of US$4.7 billion (2016)
Nintendo has 5,166 employees and revenue of ¥489.095 billion)
 
Why does Bloomberg even concern itself with a communist propaganda arm? Do they also report on the financial results of Xinhua and CCTV? So interesting!
 
We've brought in the big guns to save SPH. Lt-Gen Ng is a top scholar with years of experience leading large corporations. With General Ng as CEO, I expect SPH to double its profits within a year or two.

1-72.jpg

He looked like he just did a hand job & was caught by his mama...
 
So should we go short on SPH in this case?

Going by past examples with companies helmed by newly appointed cmi generals, best to go in long, and wait to earn some kopi money when it is taken private by govt or sold to foreign company (unlikely for sph).
 
many of my friends and colleagues have stopped reading the world class st
nobody wants to subscribe anymore

you have sammyboys here
provding the latest and the best
the most truthful news and brilliant proposals
why read all the garbages ???
 
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